Haines Commercial Equipment Co. v. Butler

522 P.2d 472, 268 Or. 660, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 496
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 522 P.2d 472 (Haines Commercial Equipment Co. v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haines Commercial Equipment Co. v. Butler, 522 P.2d 472, 268 Or. 660, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 496 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This ease was filed as an action for the unpaid balance due under a contract of sale by plaintiff *662 to defendant of an International combine harvester and for the conversion of a John Deere combine which had originally been the “trade in” on the purchase of the International combine. The owner, as an affirmative defense and cross-complaint, alleged that the sales contract had been rescinded by mutual agreement, with the International combine returned to plaintiff and the John Deere combine returned to the defendant, and asked for restoration of the status quo by judgment against plaintiff for the amount paid by defendant on the sales contract, $3,232.26.

The court tried the issues arising from that defense separately, without a jury. The court first heard the testimony on the question of rescission. An interlocutory order was then entered that there had been a mutual rescission of the contract. A supplemental hearing was then held, at which evidence was offered by both parties on the issue of the reasonable rental value of the International combine and how much credit, if any, the defendant should have.

The court then entered a finding of fact that “the net.equities are in favor of plaintiff and against defendant in the sum of $1,376.74 over and above all amounts previously paid by defendant, said sum being the amount required to restore the parties to their status quo to the extent that it is equitable.” Judgment was then entered in that amount. Defendant appeals. We affirm.

Defendant has assigned as errors (1) that the court erred in finding that the “net equities” were with the plaintiff and that the sum of $1,376.74 was required to be paid by defendant to restore the status quo, and *663 (2) that the findings are not supported by any substantial, competent evidence, but were contrary to the great weight of the evidence.

In support of those assignments of error defendant contends that restoration of the status quo required the repayment to defendant of the amounts paid on the contract, $8,232.24, less the reasonable rental value of the International combine while used by defendant; that the maximum rental value if the combine had operated properly would have been four dollars per acre for the 500 acres of grain combined by defendant, or $2,000, but that this combine was a “lemon” and had so many breakdowns and was so defective that it had no rental value, but cost defendant money in repair bills and other expenses and in loss of income, and that “when those equities are considered” defendant was entitled to the return of all or substantially all of the payments made by him on the purchase price.

1. The court is not hound hy defendant’s testimony relating to the extent of the defects of the combine or its rental value.

Defendant offered extensive testimony to support his contention that the combine was so defective and broke down so frequently that it had no rental value and that, as a result of such defects, he was unable to harvest all of his own grain and was also able to do very little contract work. That testimony, however, was not uncontradicted.

Thus, plaintiff offered testimony to the effect that although there were some “problems” with the combine, the cost of at least some of the repairs was paid by plaintiff or “under the warranty”; that de *664 fendant kept ánd operated the combine’for three years during which he-frequently complained, but never démanded his money back; that’at" the' end of ’the three, years the combine w.as worn out as the result of abuse and poor-maintenance. .. . ..

As a: shit in equity, we hear this ’ appeal de novo, with the result that we are not bound by the findings of fact by the trial judge. Nevertheless, we accord great weight to such findings when, as in this case, the testimony was conflicting. The testimony of defendant and his witnesses, when read as a cold record, makes a persuasive case. It would serve no useful purpose to summarize that testimony’in detail, but we have carefully read the entire record. We must bear in mind, however, as we once recognized in Coleman v. Coleman, 236 Or 73, 76, 386 P2d 811 (1963), that:

■“* # * [T]his court has access, generally, to nothing concerning the parties except- the silent, unspeaking record. The record displays no warmth or feeling. None of its words has more color than any other. * ■ * The record rarely-reveals anything of the parties except the words they, .employ while testifying. A moment in the courtroom such as the trial judge experienced is a superior index to the truth-than the transcript -of-what the witnesses said. * ® *’•’ . . . . • .

For these reasons, after noting the direct conflict in the testimony; and after according what we believe to. be proper weight to the findings of the trial judge, we conclude that we must agree with his apparent conclusion, that the combine- was. not so defective as to .have no- rental value.

For’ the same reasons, we agree with his apparent rejection' of defendant’s testimony to the effect *665 that its maximum rental, value for three years was $2,000, to be.computed on.the basis of four dollars per acre for harvesting the 500 acres for which the combine was used by defendant during the three year period.

It may be true that .for .the purpose of the custom harvesting of grain a combine can be rented for a price of four dollars per acre. It is obvious, however, that the trial court was not required to accept that evidence as reliable evidence of the rental value of equipment such as this for a period of three years, including both harvest seasons and off seasons, because under such evidence the rental value of such equipment for a three year period would depend upon the extent to which it is used by a particular purchaser or lessee despite the fact that he retains possession of it during the entire period.

2. Testimony offered by plaintiff was competent to support the findings by the trial court.

This brings us to the question whether the evidence of rental value as offered by plaintiff ivas, if competent, any more reliable as evidence to support the finding by the trial court that the sum of $1,376.74 was “the amount. required to restore the parties to their status quo to the extent that it is equitable.”

Defendant has also assigned as error the denial of defendant’s motion to strike the testimony of Richard Camp, president of plaintiff corporation, who admitted that he had no “background or knowledge as to the reasonable rental value' of this, type of a machine for. combining grain in this county.” Thus, because plaintiff offered no other evidence of rental value, defendant contends that there was no evidence of rental *666 value other than defendant’s testimony that the maximum rental value of the combine was $2,000, even if it had operated properly.

The admission of the testimony of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
522 P.2d 472, 268 Or. 660, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-commercial-equipment-co-v-butler-or-1974.