Jacobi v. Claude Nolan, Inc.

122 So. 2d 783
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 8, 1960
DocketB-339
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 122 So. 2d 783 (Jacobi v. Claude Nolan, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobi v. Claude Nolan, Inc., 122 So. 2d 783 (Fla. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

122 So.2d 783 (1960)

Derald J. JACOBI and Mary Charett, Appellants,
v.
CLAUDE NOLAN, INC., a Corporation, Appellee.

No. B-339.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. First District.

September 8, 1960.

*784 Marks, Gray, Yates, Conroy & Gibbs, S. Perry Penland and Morgan F. Jones, Jacksonville, for appellants.

Howell, Kirby, Montgomery & Sands, Jacksonville, for appellee.

SEBRING, Associate Judge.

Derald J. Jacobi, the plaintiff below, instituted a personal injury suit to recover damages from the defendants Mary Charett and Claude Nolan, Inc., a corporation. On motion, the trial court entered a summary judgment dismissing Claude Nolan, Inc. from the cause and the plaintiff appealed.

The defendant, Mary Charett, joined in the appeal for the purpose of questioning a portion of the summary judgment which dismissed her cross claim against her co-defendant. See Appellate Rule 3.11, subd. b, 31 F.S.A.

As appears from the pleadings, the plaintiff was injured in an automobile accident when an automobile owned by Mrs. Charett, and operated by one Pinkerton, collided with a motorcycle on which he was riding. The plaintiff instituted suit for damages against Mrs. Charett, the owner of the car, Pinkerton, the driver, and Claude Nolan, Inc., a corporation engaged in the sale and repair of automobiles. Parenthetically, Claude Nolan, Inc. was made a party to the suit on the theory that it was liable to the plaintiff in damages because Mrs. Charett had entrusted her automobile to this defendant for repairs and it, in turn, had authorized Pinkerton to drive the car after the repairs had been made.

The defendant, Charett, filed her answer to a fourth amended complaint, admitting that she owned the automobile involved in the collision and had delivered it to Claude Nolan, Inc. for repairs, and denying that at the time of the accident the automobile was being operated with her knowledge and consent. With her answer, the defendant filed a cross claim against her co-defendant, Claude Nolan, Inc., pursuant to Rule 1.13 (7) Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, 30 F.S.A. claiming the right to exoneration on the ground that if she should ultimately be held liable to the plaintiff she would be entitled to indemnification from Claude Nolan, Inc. because of the delivery of her automobile to her co-defendant for repairs and the subsequent occurrence of the accident while the automobile was in the possession and control of the Corporation.

The defendant, Claude Nolan, Inc., filed its answer to the complaint and to the cross claim, denying the material allegations alleged. It also moved for a summary judgment against the plaintiff, on the grounds that at the time of the accident Pinkerton was not the agent, servant, or employee of Claude Nolan, Inc. acting in the course of his agency or employment; that at the time of the accident, Claude Nolan, Inc. was neither exercising actual or constructive control over the operation of the automobile, nor was it a bailee or bailor thereof; that at best the record discloses only an issue of fact as to whether Pinkerton was an agent, not of Claude Nolan, Inc., but of one John Sanuta, an employee of Claude Nolan, Inc.; and that consequently Claude Nolan, Inc. was entitled to a summary judgment dismissing it from the cause.

After a hearing on the motion, pleadings, and depositions, the trial court entered the summary judgment appealed from, dismissing the defendant Claude Nolan, Inc. from the suit, and dismissing Mary Charett's cross claim against said defendant, for the reason that since Claude Nolan, Inc. had been dismissed as a defendant and hence was no longer a party in the cause, a cross claim against said Corporation was no longer maintainable, under Rule 1.13(7), Florida Rules of Procedure, which allows the filing of cross claims only against "co-parties."

The evidence upon which the trial court entered its decision was contained in depositions given by Mary Charett, the defendant, Conner Brown, president of the defendant, Claude Nolan, Inc., and John Sanuta, a salesman employed by the defendant *785 corporation. The plaintiff produced no testimony on his own behalf but chose to rely upon the evidence produced by the defendants.

In her deposition, Mary Charett testified, in substance, that she purchased the automobile involved in the accident from Claude Nolan, Inc. on March 5, 1958. Throughout all negotiations connected with the sale, she dealt directly with Pinkerton, at her place of employment in Ponte Vedra, Florida. When Pinkerton first approached her about trading in her old car for the automobile she later purchased, he represented that he was connected with Claude Nolan, Inc., and worked for, or with, John Sanuta, a used car salesman for the Corporation. In connection with the sale, Pinkerton demonstrated two Pontiac automobiles to Mrs. Charett, quoted prices to her, secured her signature to a retain title contract to the car she eventually purchased, saw to it that she was furnished a copy of the retain title contract properly executed by Claude Nolan, Inc., delivered the purchased car to her, and assured her that as a condition of the sale certain minor repairs would be made to the car free of charge. When, during the period Pinkerton was demonstrating the cars, she voiced some dissatisfaction with the price quoted her as a trade-in on her old car, Mary Charett, at Pinkerton's suggestion, called Sanuta, at the offices of Claude Nolan, Inc. in Jacksonville, Florida, and Sanuta agreed to allow an additional $100 on the trade-in price on her car for the Claude Nolan, Inc. car being shown her by Pinkerton.

After the Pontiac car had been purchased and delivered, Mrs. Charett saw Pinkerton and Sanuta at Ponte Vedra, at which time, Sanuta talked to her about the purchase she had made and remarked to a female companion, with Mrs. Charett at the time, who had expressed some interest in buying a car, "Well, you come up and see me. If your credit is as good as [Mrs. Charett's] you can have a car."

Several weeks after the car had been purchased and no move had been made by Claude Nolan, Inc. to make the repairs that had been promised by Pinkerton, Mrs. Charett called Sanuta, at the offices of Claude Nolan, Inc., and requested him to come for the car and repair it. Sanuta assured Mrs. Charett that someone would come for the car, and a short time later Pinkerton arrived at Ponte Vedra driving a red Vauxhall automobile — a make of automobile for which, according to the evidence, Claude Nolan, Inc. was an authorized dealer — announcing that he had come to get the car and was leaving the Vauxhall for her use while her car was being repaired. Pinkerton then left with the car and Mrs. Charett knew nothing further about the matter until she was called from the police station late in the afternoon and told that her car had been involved in an accident at Jacksonville Beach, Florida, — on a highway which, incidentally, was normally used by motorists travelling from Jacksonville to Ponte Vedra.

Upon receiving the message, Mrs. Charett, and a friend, one Mary Parsons, drove to the police station in the Vauxhall car that had been left with her by Pinkerton. There she recovered her automobile, and left the Vauxhall at the station with the request to the officer in charge that he call Claude Nolan, Inc. and ask them to come and get it.

The testimony in the depositions of Brown and Sanuta, the president and salesman, respectively, of Claude Nolan, Inc., was at sharp variance with the testimony given by the defendant Charett.

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122 So. 2d 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobi-v-claude-nolan-inc-fladistctapp-1960.