Hnilica v. Rizza Chevrolet

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 25, 2008
Docket1-06-1992 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Hnilica v. Rizza Chevrolet (Hnilica v. Rizza Chevrolet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hnilica v. Rizza Chevrolet, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION JUNE 25, 2008

1-06-1992

RADOMIL HNILICA and RADOMIRA HNILICOVA, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) Cook County. ) v. ) ) RIZZA CHEVROLET, INC., ) ) No. 04 L 1450 Defendant ) ) ) (General Motors Acceptance Corporation, ) Honorable ) Brigid Mary McGrath, Defendant-Appellee). ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE CUNNINGHAM delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs, Radomil Hnilica and Radomira Hnilicova1, appeal from the dismissal with

prejudice of their fifth amended complaint against General Motors Acceptance Corporation

(GMAC). Their claims against defendant Rizza Chevrolet, Incorporated (Rizza), are still pending

in the circuit court of Cook County. The trial court made a finding pursuant to Supreme Court Rule

304(a) that there was no just reason for delaying enforcement or appeal of the order dismissing the

fifth amended complaint with prejudice. 134 Ill. 2d R. 304(a).

The plaintiffs are only appealing the dismissal of three of the counts in their fifth amended

complaint: count I, alleging that GMAC defamed them by reporting negative and false credit

information; count II, alleging that GMAC violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive

Business Practices Act (815 ILCS 505/1 et seq. (West 1994)); and count III, alleging that GMAC is

1 Radomira Hnilicova’s last name is also spelled Hnilica in the record. 1-06-1992

derivatively liable for the $4,000 given to Rizza by the plaintiffs as what they claim was a security

deposit for their weekend test drive of the vehicle that they were considering purchasing. We affirm

the trial court’s order as to the defamation and derivative claim counts (I and III), but reverse and

remand for further proceedings on the consumer fraud count (II).

BACKGROUND

In pertinent part, the plaintiffs alleged the following in their fifth amended complaint. On

Thursday, May 23, 2002, the plaintiffs visited Rizza to shop for a car. At that time plaintiff Hnilica

could neither speak nor write English. Plaintiff Hnilicova had only a very limited ability to speak

and read English. Rizza’s salesperson convinced the plaintiffs that over the weekend they should

take home and test drive a van being sold by Rizza. The salesman told them they could return the

van the following week if they decided not to buy it. He also convinced them to sign papers which

he asserted were designed only to ensure that they returned the van. At the salesman’s suggestion

the plaintiffs also left their intended trade-in vehicle at Rizza, along with two postdated checks

totaling $4,000. The salesman told them these checks were merely to be used as security and would

be returned to them if they chose not to buy the van and returned it to Rizza. The documents signed

by the plaintiffs were in fact a buyer’s order and a finance contract. When they attempted to return

the van after the weekend, Rizza refused to take it back and also refused to return their checks and

their own car to them. The plaintiffs retained an attorney and, among other actions, attempted to

cancel the contract, pursuant to its terms, because no financing had been obtained for them within

15 days of the date of the contract. Rizza refused to cancel the contract. GMAC twice declined to

2 1-06-1992

accept assignment of the contract2, but did accept it on August 15, 2002, almost three months after

Rizza and the plaintiffs signed the contract. That same week, GMAC received two payments

totaling $1,391.94 from Rizza, purportedly on behalf of the plaintiffs pursuant to the contract. The

plaintiffs’ attorney subsequently, on September 24, 2002, orally notified GMAC that his clients

considered the contract to be void because of the failure to obtain financing within the required 15-

day period. He specified that his clients had, on July 26, 2002, cancelled the contract pursuant to that

clause.

On October 3, 2002, the plaintiffs’ attorney sent a letter to GMAC, expressly advising it that:

“The contract was cancelled based on no financing. The

purchase agreement states the dealership must provide financing at

the agreed rate within 15 business days of the date of signing. If they

can’t, then my clients have the right to cancel the agreement. No

financing was available and none was provided. My clients have

numerous denial letters regarding Rizza’s numerous attempts to

finance the contract. Rizza continued to submit these requests after

the 15 days had elapsed, and after we had formally notified them that

we were cancelling the contract *** (although we continue to dispute

its validity) and after we ordered them to stop attempting to finance

2 The acceptance-of-assignment document is contained in the record on appeal. However in the appendix to their opening brief, the plaintiffs have included a purported copy of this document in which the acceptance portion has been deleted.

3 1-06-1992

the van.” (Emphasis in original.)

Plaintiffs’ counsel also informed GMAC in that letter of the Rizza salesman’s alleged fraud and

misrepresentations in which he convinced the plaintiffs that they were merely trying the van out for

the weekend and that they were only signing documents for the rental of the vehicle over the

weekend.

GMAC subsequently repossessed the van and reported to four credit agencies that the

plaintiffs had an account with GMAC; that plaintiffs had failed to timely pay on that account; and

that the van was repossessed. GMAC’s internal investigation revealed that the plaintiffs did have

the right to cancel the contract under its 15-day financing requirement, but it made no finding as to

whether the plaintiffs had in fact legally done so. It also made no credibility determination

concerning the plaintiffs’ claim that they had not understood that they were purchasing a van when

they signed the purchase documents. The GMAC employee who investigated the matter internally

recommended that GMAC investigate the matter further, but also reported that Rizza told him that

its dealings with the plaintiffs had been “above-board.” During the course of the pretrial proceedings

in the circuit court, GMAC tendered to the plaintiffs the amount paid to it by Rizza ($1,391.94) on

the plaintiffs’ account, but the plaintiffs refused to accept the money.

ANALYSIS

We first consider the plaintiffs’ contention in count I that GMAC defamed them by reporting

to credit agencies that the plaintiffs had an account with GMAC (thus adding about $40,000 to the

plaintiffs’ debt as reported in credit agency data files) and that GMAC had repossessed the van and

had written off the account as a bad debt. Harmful statements are defamatory only if they are false.

4 1-06-1992

J. Maki Construction Co. v. Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters, 379 Ill. App. 3d 189, 203, 882

N.E.2d 1173, 1186 (2008) (statement that plaintiff had been convicted of defrauding a union was not

defamatory where the plaintiff had been so convicted in internal union proceedings). Here, even

according to the allegations of the plaintiffs’ complaint, all of these statements are demonstrably true.

Truth is an absolute defense to defamation; true statements cannot support a claim of defamation.

Altman v. Amoco Oil Co., 85 Ill. App. 3d 104, 107, 406 N.E.2d 142, 144 (1980). However, what

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