Harris v. Halligan

23 So. 2d 332, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 415
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 3, 1945
DocketNo. 2737.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 So. 2d 332 (Harris v. Halligan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Halligan, 23 So. 2d 332, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 415 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Plaintiff bought a used Plymouth automobile from the defendant on December 22, 1943, and executed a chattel mortgage on the automobile for $837.75, payable in monthly installments of $55.85. This amount included carrying charges. The sale price of the automobile was $995, the defendant allowing plaintiff a credit of $335 on a tradein, leaving $660 balance due on the price of the car to which was added the carrying charges to make up the amount of the mortgage. The mortgage note was transferred to a finance company on the day the sale was completed.

Plaintiff filed this suit in April, 1944, about three and a half months after the sale, asking that the sale be rescinded and set aside and that the defendant be required to refund the sum of $335 represented by the cash payment on the car; that the defendant be required to deliver back to him the mortgage note, and that he be required to re-imburse plaintiff for sundry items paid or lost by him because of defects in the car, together with a refund of three installments which he had paid on the note, with interest, reserving to plaintiff the right to sue for the refund of any future installments as they mature.

The ground for setting aside the sale is that the automobile was mechanically defective at the time of the sale which vices and defects rendered it useless for the purpose for which it was bought. The defects are listed as a flat crankshaft, cracked cylinder head, universal joint out of line, leaky radiator, timing gear worn out, and left rear spring broken. Defendant admitted in his answer that there was a broken cylinder head gasket and a broken spring in the car at the time of the sale, but he alleges that plaintiff was advised of these defects at the time of the sale and accepted the automobile as it was. He denied that the car had a flat crankshaft at the time of the sale, and alleged that the car was in good mechanical condition when sold, and that the car was sold without warranty.

The trial judge dismissed plaintiff's suit and he has appealed.

With reference to the warranty by defendant, the act of mortgage which both parties signed declares that the automobile was sold "with full warranty," which of course would include a warranty that the car was free from such mechanical defects as would render it unfit for the purposes for which it was bought. It does not appear just how many miles the car had been run, but it was a 1941 model and might well have been expected to be in fairly good mechanical condition. Defendant testified that at the time of the sale the kind of a car sold plaintiff was selling for $1,300 to $1,400 if the car was in first class condition and had low mileage on it. As the car sold plaintiff was sold for only three or four hundred dollars less than this top price it must be assumed that the plaintiff had a right to expect a reasonably good car for the price which he paid.

Plaintiff testified that the day he took possession of the car it was driven out to a station owned by defendant some half mile from the sales office in order to change the tires; that when he got to the station he called defendant, who had gone to the finance office to negotiate the notes, and told him to call off the deal as he had decided *Page 334 that he did not want the automobile. On being asked if he made any mechanical discovery about the car at that time he replied: "At that time we discovered the spring broke, and on raising the hood we listened to the motor pretty close. Several fellows around gave their opinion on the automobile before I called Mr. Halligan." He said in another place that he told Halligan that the motor did not sound right, and mentioned other things he did not like about the car. The defendant admits that he had this telephone conversation with plaintiff at this time but he denies that plaintiff said anything about being dissatisfied with the car but that he wanted to get out of the deal because he did not think he would be able to meet the notes.

[1] While in some respects plaintiff did not make a very impressive witness, yet it seems to us that much of his testimony is corroborated by other testimony and circumstances connected with the transaction. For instance, he said that he took the car to a mechanic named Warren the same day he bought it, and this mechanic and another one who saw the car on the same day told him that the motor sounded like it had seen its best days. Warren testified that he did not take any of the motor apart, but he raced it and listened to it run, and told plaintiff he had a bad motor. It is generally known that a mechanic can listen to a motor run and tell whether or not there is something wrong with it without taking it apart, althought he might not be able to ascertain the exact nature of the trouble.

So that when plaintiff states that he first suspected something wrong with the car less than an hour after he purchased it and called the defendant from the station after getting an expression from some of those around the station about the motor, his statement seems consistent with his acts in getting the opinion of two mechanics on the car immediately thereafter, and his reason for calling defendant when he did was prompted because of his doubt as to the mechanical condition of the car rather than from a doubt which had arisen in his mind as to his ability to meet the notes. He had just signed the papers, and it hardly seems reasonable that this doubt had arisen in his mind in such a brief time unless it was caused from some apprehension on his part as to the condition of the car.

Plaintiff states that a few days after he bought the car he attempted to make a trip in it to Ponchatoula, and when he was about five miles out of Baton Rouge the motor began to knock terribly bad; that he checked the oil and water which were all right; that when he proceeded slowly the motor continued to knock, and when he speeded up to a certain point the noise would cease, but when his speed reached a certain point it began to knock again. He said that there was a slow leak in the radiator and the water would leak out in about twenty four hours when the car was running, and that oil leaked out on the motor. Plaintiff testified to several efforts to run the car after he bought it and the trouble he had with the motor. In many instances the motor would stop and he would have to have it sent to a garage.

About three months after he bought the car plaintiff had his brother-in-law who is a mechanic in Jeanerette to work on the car. This mechanic found several defects in the car at that time, a flat crankshaft, a cracked cylinder head, a broken rear left spring, together with several other defects not so serious in nature. The mechanic stated that the car was in poor condition at that time, and that he would not buy it for his use. He made repairs on the car for which he charged $70, and put the car in such condition that it would run, but he admits that there was the likelihood of motor trouble if the car was run at a high speed.

Defendant undertook on cross examination of plaintiff to show that his brother-in-law was shown the car on New Year's Day, a few days after it was purchased, and that at that time plaintiff made no complaint about the car. From the testimony of both the plaintiff and his brother-in-law it is shown that plaintiff did suspect at that time that there was something wrong with the motor. His brother-in-law testified that plaintiff told him on January first when he showed him the car he had just bought that he wanted to change the rings in the car because it was using too much oil and had a knock in it; that plaintiff asked him to listen to the motor as he thought it had a knock in it. The mechanic says that he just heard the motor run and it did have a little knock in it at that time.

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Harris v. Halligan
25 So. 2d 111 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 2d 332, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-halligan-lactapp-1945.