Kastner v. Southside Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Unpublished Decision (3-2-2007)

2007 Ohio 874
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 2007
DocketNo. L-06-1152.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2007 Ohio 874 (Kastner v. Southside Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Unpublished Decision (3-2-2007)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kastner v. Southside Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Unpublished Decision (3-2-2007), 2007 Ohio 874 (Ohio Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
{¶ 1} This case is before the court on appeal from a judgment of the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas.

{¶ 2} On June 20, 2001, plaintiff-appellant, Lois H. Kastner, whose age is alleged to be 80 at the time, decided that she wanted to trade in her 1996 Lincoln Towne Car ("Towne Car") for a newer model. After visiting other automobile dealerships and not finding the color, cream, of the vehicle she wanted, appellant drove to appellee's place of business, Southside Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Inc. ("Southside"). *Page 2

{¶ 3} When appellant arrived at Southside, she was approached by Emitt B. Hall, a salesperson at the dealership. Hall showed her a cream-colored 2000 Towne Car that belonged to an individual who also worked at the dealership. Hall then told appellant that he could find the same car for her at auction and save her $3,000. Appellant agreed to attend the auction with Hall. At the auction, appellant believed that she purchased a cream-colored 2000 Towne Car.

{¶ 4} Before the car was delivered, Hall called appellant every day and asked her for the purchase price, $18,0001, of the vehicle. He later went to appellant's home, and she gave him the $18,000 in cash. Hall had a handwritten Southside "Buyer's Order" with him. He told appellant to sign the order, then he would rewrite it and save her $3,000.

{¶ 5} Approximately six days later, Hall called appellant and told her to come to Southside. When she arrived, appellant was asked to sign a document identical to the first Buyer's Order, except for the fact that the terms were typed in by "Bill" at the dealership. According to appellant, Bill had no knowledge of the "arrangement" between herself and Hall because Hall expressly asked her to keep the details of their arrangement to herself. Appellant also entered into an agreement to finance the purchase of the Towne Car through Ford Motor Credit. Hall told appellant that: "[A]s soon as the financing went through, before [she] even got a payment book or anything, he would give *Page 3 [appellant] the money to send in to pay it off, and that's some way he was going to save [her] $3,000."

{¶ 6} Subsequent to the purchase and delivery of appellant's vehicle, Hall would call her and ask her to loan him some money. Some of the money was borrowed when appellant accompanied Hall to gambling casinos where appellant would sit and watch Hall gamble. The total amount of money given to Hall by appellant was $97,181.95, including the $18,000 in cash for the alleged purchase of her car.

{¶ 7} Eventually, Richard Currey, Southside's owner until October 2002, learned, from a customer who came into the dealership, that he had given Hall money for the purchase of a motor vehicle and that Hall never delivered the vehicle. Currey reviewed the customer's sales worksheet. He then checked to see if the money given by the customer to Hall was ever submitted to "the office," presumably the accounting department. It had not been submitted. Currey went to his son, who was the general manger of the dealership at that time, told him to find Hall and to send him to Currey's office.

{¶ 8} When Hall arrived at his office, Currey asked him whether he had taken the money from the customer. When Hall indicated that he did take the money, Currey immediately called the police. However, despite the fact that Currey wanted Hall arrested, the police told him that only the customer, the person who had been harmed, could have Hall arrested. The customer would not press charges, so Currey terminated Hall's employment. Currey later discovered four other customers, including Kastner, *Page 4 who had given Hall money for his own benefit when each believed he or she was purchasing a vehicle from Southside.

{¶ 9} Currey then contacted the dealership's insurance company and learned that it would settle any and all claims made as the result of Hall's actions. Upon receiving their refunds, the motor vehicle buyers, including Kastner, signed an agreement releasing Southside from liability. Kastner received $18,400 and signed a release of all claims against Southside.

{¶ 10} Apparently, appellant commenced an action against Southside in 2002, but later voluntarily dismissed that case, without prejudice. On May 23, 2005, she filed the instant case against Southside. Her claims included: (1) Southside negligently hired/retained Hall as an employee; (2) Southside fraudulently induced appellant to sign a release of her claims against the dealership; and (3) Southside violated R.C. Chapter 1345, the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act. Southside filed an answer and a motion for summary judgment on all three claims. The motion for summary judgment was supported by appellant's deposition.

{¶ 11} Appellant filed a memorandum in opposition supported by Richard Currey's deposition and a certified record of the state of Michigan showing that Hall was convicted of larceny by conversion in 1991 and placed on probation for five years. Appellant also filed a certified copy of a decision of the Sixth District Court, Eastern District of Michigan, revoking Hall's "supervised release" for a federal offense he committed in 1987. The decision does not state the exact nature of the offense. In *Page 5 addition, appellant offered certified copies of the indictment and sentencing filed in the foregoing federal court in which Hall was convicted of wire fraud and perjury in 1994.

{¶ 12} In her memorandum in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, appellant contended that, in Ohio, R.C. 4517.10 requires a motor vehicle salesperson to have a license and that appellant did not have a license during the relevant period. She supported her contention with the affidavit of the Ohio Registrar of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles who averred that a motor vehicle salesperson license was not issued in the name of "Emitt `Burt' Hall" in either 2000 or 2001. Appellant argued, in essence, that Southside knew or should have known that it was hiring a convicted felon who was an unlicensed salesperson and, therefore, negligently placed Hall in a position where he had contact with the public.

{¶ 13} Finally, appellant relied on the affidavit of Ismael Ortiz, who accompanied appellant to Southside when she signed the release in exchange for the $18,400. Ortiz swore that appellant did not know what she was signing because Currey called the document a "receipt" and had appellant sign the release without allowing her to read it.

{¶ 14} In his deposition, Currey testified that he knew Hall when they were both car salesmen, and that Hall had worked at Southside two or three times over a period of several years, the latest being Hall's hiring in June 1999. Currey further stated that he had no knowledge of the alleged fact that Hall was convicted in 1994 for wire fraud and perjury. Moreover, Currey pointed out that he had nothing to do with the hiring of sales personnel. That job was performed by the sales manager. The prospective employee was *Page 6 required to fill out an application. The potential salesperson was also required to sign a "money laundering" form and an application for insurance benefits.

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2007 Ohio 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kastner-v-southside-lincoln-mercury-sales-unpublished-decision-3-2-2007-ohioctapp-2007.