Glenn Thomas v. Valpo Motors Inc.

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 2025
Docket24S-PL-00286
StatusPublished

This text of Glenn Thomas v. Valpo Motors Inc. (Glenn Thomas v. Valpo Motors Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn Thomas v. Valpo Motors Inc., (Ind. 2025).

Opinion

FILED May 13 2025, 10:34 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 24S-PL-286

Glenn Thomas, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Bernadette O’Malley, Appellant (Plaintiff below)

–v–

Valpo Motors, Inc., Appellee (Defendant below)

Argued: October 10, 2024 | Decided: May 13, 2025

Appeal from the Porter Superior Court No. 64D01-2104-PL-3631 The Honorable Michael A. Fish, Judge

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 23A-PL-2391

Opinion by Justice Goff Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa, Slaughter, and Molter concur. Goff, Justice.

Designed to promote high standards of business conduct, discourage unscrupulous dealing by sellers, and protect consumers against economic loss arising from defective goods, the implied warranty of merchantability is a “cornerstone of commercial law.” Accordingly, state law requires any warranty disclaimer by the seller to be clear and conspicuous. And as an added layer of protection for those who invoke it, the federal Magnuson- Moss Warranty Act (or MMWA) provides consumers with a right of action to sue for damages and attorney’s fees when the seller breaches the implied warranty.

The seller here, a used car dealer, expressly disclaimed all warranties in a written “buyers guide,” selling the vehicle “as is.” But given ambiguities in that document, we hold that the dealer did not effectively disclaim the implied warranty of merchantability. We further hold that, on the record here, fact issues remain as to whether the dealer had a reasonable opportunity to cure its failure to comply with its implied-warranty obligation. We thus vacate summary judgment for the dealer, direct the trial court to enter partial summary judgment for the buyer on the warranty-disclaimer issue, and remand for determination of whether the dealer had a reasonable opportunity to cure. Finally, should the buyer ultimately prevail in his action, we further direct the trial court to assess damages and reasonable attorney’s fees to which he may be entitled.

Facts and Procedural History In late 2019, Bernadette O’Malley bought a used 2007 Dodge Caliber (the Car) from Valpo Motors, Inc. (or just Valpo). At the time of the sale, Valpo gave O’Malley two important documents: the Buyers Guide and the Sales Agreement. The Buyers Guide stated that the Car was being sold “AS IS” and that the “DEALER DOES NOT PROVIDE A WARRANTY FOR ANY REPAIRS AFTER SALE.” App. Vol. 2, p. 105. The Sales Agreement incorporated the Buyers Guide by reference, expressly stating that information from the latter document “OVERRIDES ANY CONTRARY PROVISONS” in the former document. Id. at 73. The Sales

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-PL-286 | May 13, 2025 Page 2 of 15 Agreement also disclaimed all express or implied warranties “UNLESS THE SELLER EXTENDS A WRITTEN WARRANTY OR SERVICE CONTRACT WITHIN 90 DAYS FROM THE DATE OF THIS CONTRACT.” Id. at 76.

The same day she bought the Car, O’Malley purchased a Service Contract. Though ultimately administered by and financed by third parties (Wynn’s Extended Care, Inc. and Indiana Credit Acceptance Corp., respectively), the Service Contract reflects the signature of a Valpo representative as the “selling dealer.” Id. at 78. At some point during the sale, a handwritten note was added to the Buyers Guide, stating, just under the “DEALER WARRANTY,” that “Customer has purchased a 24/24,000 mile Wynn’s warranty.” Id. at 105.

About a month after the transaction, the Car broke down. O’Malley’s son-in-law, Glenn Thomas, took the Car to a repair shop. But given the pervasiveness of mechanical issues affecting “almost every system” in the Car, only some of which were covered by the Service Contract, the shop concluded that the Car wasn’t worth repairing. App. Vol. 3, pp. 126–27. After Valpo refused to arbitrate the matter, O’Malley sued for breach of implied warranty of merchantability under the MMWA.

Valpo moved for summary judgment, arguing (1) that the MMWA doesn’t bar them from disclaiming warranties; (2) that O’Malley didn’t give them a reasonable opportunity to repair the Car, as the MMWA requires; and (3) that the plain language of Valpo’s warranty disclaimer bars O’Malley’s claim. O’Malley argued in response (1) that, even if the Sales Agreement could be read to disclaim the implied warranty, the Service Contract into which the parties entered rendered the warranty disclaimer ineffective under the MMWA, entitling her to summary judgment; and (2) that evidence showing Valpo had an opportunity to cure its breach of the implied warranty entitled her to summary judgment or, at the very least, presented genuine issues of material fact to preclude summary judgment in Valpo’s favor.

O’Malley died during the summary-judgment proceedings and Thomas substituted himself as plaintiff in his capacity as personal representative of

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-PL-286 | May 13, 2025 Page 3 of 15 the estate. The trial court later granted summary judgment for Valpo without entering factual findings or conclusions.

The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that the Buyers Guide, given its disclaimer of all warranties without exception, overrode any contrary suggestion of an exception in the Sales Agreement. Thomas v. Valpo Motors, Inc., No. 23A-PL-2391, slip op. at 6 (Ind. Ct. App. May 2, 2024). In so holding, the panel rejected Thomas’s argument that the hand-written notation on the Buyers Guide amounted to an admission that O’Malley’s purchase of the Service Contract negated Valpo’s warranty disclaimer. Id. at 6–7. The panel also found improper Thomas’s reliance on Universal Auto, LLC v. Murray, which held that a dealer’s facilitation of a third-party service contract for the buyer triggered an exception (like the one found in the Sales Agreement here) to the dealer’s warranty disclaimer. Id. at 7 (citing 149 N.E.3d 639 (Ind. Ct. App. 2020)). Unlike here, the panel explained, nothing in Universal suggested that the sales documents in that case included an unequivocal warranty disclaimer or language indicating that the unequivocal warranty disclaimer controlled in the case of conflicts with other provisions. Id.

Judge Felix dissented. In his view, (1) the Sales Agreement disclaimer, with its specific terms, trumped the Buyers Guide disclaimer, with its more general terms; (2) even if the Buyers Guide controlled, it was ineffective under the MMWA; and (3) there was a genuine issue of material fact over whether Valpo had a reasonable opportunity to cure its breach of the implied warranty of merchantability. Id. at 9, 12.

Thomas petitioned for transfer, which we granted, vacating the Court of Appeals’ decision. See Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).

Standard of Review The interpretation of a contract is a question of law to which a de novo standard of review applies. Land v. IU Credit Union, 218 N.E.3d 1282, 1286 (Ind. 2023). The same standard applies to a trial court’s summary- judgment ruling. Hughley v. State, 15 N.E.3d 1000, 1003 (Ind. 2014). On appeal from such a ruling, this Court draws all reasonable inferences in

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-PL-286 | May 13, 2025 Page 4 of 15 the non-movant’s favor and carefully assesses the trial court’s decision to ensure that the non-movant was not improperly denied his day in court. Id. Summary judgment is “especially appropriate” in cases of contract interpretation “because the construction of a written contract is a question of law.” N.H. Ins. Co. v. Ind. Auto. Ins. Plan, 176 N.E.3d 514, 521 (Ind. Ct. App. 2021).

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