Hindelang v. Collord Motors, Inc.

8 So. 2d 600, 200 La. 569, 1942 La. LEXIS 1223
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 1942
DocketNo. 36531.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 8 So. 2d 600 (Hindelang v. Collord Motors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hindelang v. Collord Motors, Inc., 8 So. 2d 600, 200 La. 569, 1942 La. LEXIS 1223 (La. 1942).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The ’plaintiff instituted’ this action for damages in the sum of $2,346.80 against the defendants, Collord Motors, Inc., and the General Finance Company of Louisiana, Inc., in solido, alleging that their agents and representatives conspired to wrongfully deprive him of his Dodge automobile and $586.80 cash, representing the consideration for the purchase price of a new Plymouth four-door sedan; that the defendants recklessly held out James L. Evans (proprietor of the Evans Sales Company), an irresponsible and dishonest automobile dealer, as their agent, thereby placing Evans in a position to defraud him of his above described property; and that thereafter defendants, as a result of the manipulations between themselves and Evans, illegally seized and sold the Plymouth sedan in foreclosure proceedings, under an alleged chattel mortgage. The plaintiff also claims the sum of $1,000 for the embarrassment, humiliation and injury he suffered because of the unlawful seizure of the Plymouth sedan, and $300 for his illegal deprivation of its use. He further alleges that for a paltry considera *574 tion of a $50 check, he was induced to sign a release of the Plymouth automobile in favor of the alleged foreclosing creditor, upon the misrepresentations by its representative that the purported chattel mortgage had been recorded prior to the time of the sale of the Plymouth sedan to him on December 9, 1938.

The defendants separately filed exceptions of vagueness, of no right and no cause of action, of misjoinder of parties defendant, and an exception as a bar to plaintiff's right to recovery based upon the alleged compromise with the plaintiff. The exceptions were argued before one of the judges of the Civil District Court and several months later he referred the one founded upon the compromise agreement to the merits, and overruled all of the remainder of them. Each defendant then filed a separate answer, reserving the benefits of the exceptions, denying the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, and specially pleading the compromise agreement in bar to the plaintiff’s right to recover, denying that it was obtained by .misrepresentation.

On the day the case was set for trial on the merits, before another judge of the Civil District Court, and after the plaintiff had taken the stand and started to testify, the defendants’ attorneys requested permission to reargue the exceptions. After granting this request the trial judge stated that he would reserve his ruling thereon until after he heard the evidence. Counsel for the defendants, under their exceptions, objected to the introduction of any testimony by the plaintiff. The plaintiff tendered the uncashed $50 chock to the defendants and the radio that had been placed in the Plymouth automobile at his own expense, both of which were recited as the consideration for entering into the alleged release or. compromise agreement. The defendants refused this tender.

After hearing the evidence, the district judge overruled all of the exceptions and found that the sale of the Plymouth automobile was completed between the Evans Sales Company and the plaintiff on December 9, 1938, at 11:30 a. m.; that delivery of the automobile was. made to the plaintiff on the above date and hour in the Parish of Orleans; that the recordation of the chattel mortgage took place subsequently on the same day or at 1:50 p. m. in the Parish of Orleans; that the chattel mortgage was not recorded in the Parish of Plaquemines until April 27, 1939, or one day after the* seizure of the Plymouth automobile was effected thereunder, in the foreclosure proceedings; that, as the plaintiff was an innocent purchaser in good faith for value, prior to the recordation of the chattel mortgage in Orleans and Plaquemines Parishes, the mortgage did not affect the plaintiff’s automobile; that the release of the automobile by the plaintiff for the check of $50, and the return of the radio was not binding upon him because he was misled by the repeated statements of the defendant Finance Company’s representative made in good faith that the chattel mortgage had been properly and timely recorded, and having relied upon these erroneous statements the plaintiff acted to his detriment and to the Finance Company’s advantage; that the plaintiff’s Plymouth car was il *576 legally seized by the foreclosing creditor, the General Finance Company of Louisiana, Inc., and the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages in the full sum of $1,-046.80, representing the trade-in value of the plaintiff’s Dodge automobile, i. e., $460, and the cash consideration of $586.-80; and that the evidence showed that the Collord Motor Company’s representative was free from any wrongdoing in causing the plaintiff’s loss and that the suit should be dismissed as to it. Judgment was rendered accordingly. The Finance Company appealed suspensively from this judgment and the plaintiff answered the appeal asking that the amount of the award of damages be increased.

In this Court, counsel for the defendant Finance Company reargued the exceptions.

The exceptions of vagueness and no right and no cause of action are without merit, because the petition in rather great details sets forth the alleged transaction from the beginning to the end. Accepting the allegations of the petition as being true, which we are required to do in order to consider the exceptions, the plaintiff unquestionably alleged a right and a cause •of action.

With reference to the exception of misjoinder of parties defendant under the allegations of the petition, the two corporations were proper parties because the petitioner charged that their representatives conspired to wrongfully deprive him ■of his property and recklessly permitted this to"be done by holding out a dishonest and irresponsible person as their agent, and leading him to believe that he was dealing with their representative upon whom he could rely. The petitioner also charged that the defendants, as a result of their deceptive actions and relations with Evans, illegally seized and sold his automobile.

As to the exception that the alleged compromise agreement was a bar to the plaintiff’s right to recover, the record shows that the plaintiff, in his petition, attacked the validity of this so-called release or compromise agreement on the ground of misrepresentation. The defendants then specially pleaded, by way of exception, the compromise agreement in bar. The exception was heard by two district judges who refused to sustain it, and the defendants, in their answers, again specially pleaded the compromise agreement in bar, denying that it was obtained by misrepresentation.

Conceding that plaintiff’s attack in his petition upon the compromise agreement on the ground of misrepresentation is a collateral and not a direct one, but without deciding that issue, a view most favorable to the defendant Finance Company, let us consider whether or not it is entitled to have this suit dismissed and the plaintiff relegated to an action for the annulment of the alleged compromise agreement before suit can be brought for damages.

In the case of Russ v. Union Oil Company, 113 La. 196, 36 So. 937, 940, the plaintiff instituted a suit for damages for personal injuries against his employer, without alleging that the claim had been previously compromised but that the compromise agreement had been obtained by *578 coercion.

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Bluebook (online)
8 So. 2d 600, 200 La. 569, 1942 La. LEXIS 1223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hindelang-v-collord-motors-inc-la-1942.