Lanners v. Whitney

428 P.2d 398, 247 Or. 223, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 369, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 465
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 428 P.2d 398 (Lanners v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanners v. Whitney, 428 P.2d 398, 247 Or. 223, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 369, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 465 (Or. 1967).

Opinion

REDDING-, J.

(Pro Tempore).

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a decree dismissing their suit to rescind a contract for the purchase by plaintiffs of a Beechcraft Bonanza airplane.

Plaintiffs, George R. Lanners and Alice M. Lanners, husband and wife, are residents of Portland, Oregon. George R. Lanners is engaged in the insurance business. The defendant is the owner and operator of the Newberg Sportsman Airpark and is engaged in the business of selling new and used airplanes.

While Alice M. Lanners is named as a party plaintiff, it would appear from the record that she did not participate in any manner in the negotiations for the *226 purchase of said plane, nor did she testify at the trial. Thus, there will be no occasion in this opinion to refer to the plaintiff, Alice M. Lanners, and we will therefore use the singular in referring to the plaintiffs.

As finally agreed upon, under the terms of the oral contract of purchase, the plaintiff was to pay the defendant $7,800 in cash and deliver over to defendant plaintiff’s Cessna 175 airplane valued by the parties at $6,200. The Cessna was almost immediately sold by defendant for $7,300. In exchange, the plaintiff was to receive a used 1955 Beechcraft Bonanza airplane equipped with a new Mark-6 radio. Defendant represented to plaintiff that the Beechcraft aircraft was in an airworthy condition. In addition, one of the terms of the sale and as part of the consideration therefor, defendant agreed to conduct, at his expense, a “100-hour inspection” on the Beechcraft airplane to insure its airworthiness and to replace all defective parts revealed by such inspection.

As the subject matter of the sale was a used airplane, it was of significance to the plaintiff that it be in airworthy condition. A 100-hour inspection is a periodic examination of an aircraft prescribed by the Federal Aviation Agency for all aircraft. The inspection, can be made only by mechanics licensed by the FAA and requires replacement or repair of defective parts and correction of malfunctions of the air-frame or engine. Upon completion of a 100-hour inspection, the mechanic performing such inspection is required to certify to the fact of the inspection and that the craft is in airworthy condition. Plaintiff testified as follows regarding his reason for insisting upon the 100-hour inspection:

“Well, as a buyer, it, shall I say, protects me, because if it goes through the hundred-hour inspec *227 tion, the aircraft is completely gone through and if there is anything wrong it is repaired at that time, so when I get this airplane I’m assured that I’ve got an airworthy aircraft.”

As a basis of his right to rescind the contract to purchase, plaintiff asserts that the representation that the aircraft was airworthy was false and that he relied upon such representations in making his purchase. By way of answer, defendant admitted “* * * prior to the sale of said aircraft a 100-hour inspection of the aircraft was conducted by Bichard M. Austin, a duly licensed mechanic, [an employee of the defendant] and he declared said aircraft airworthy and this information was given to the plaintiff, George B. Lanners.” Defendant, however, denied all other matters alleged. After a trial, the court entered its decree denying plaintiff’s right to rescind. In a memorandum opinion preceding said decree, the court concluded :

“In view of all the circumstances and the evidence presented at the time of trial, I am of the opinion that the defendant (sic) has an adequate remedy at law for damages or at law in assumpsit, and therefore, the plaintiff has failed to sustain the burden of proof required to justify the extraordinary power of a Court of equity to grant equitable relief in this ease.”

The sole question presented on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in denying the remedy of rescission sought by plaintiff. As this is a suit in equity, this court must review the entire record de novo, making its own findings and conclusions. While the findings of the trial court are to be considered, they are not binding on this court.

The evidence reveals that on August 13, 1964, the *228 defendant received the Beechcraft from Houston, Texas. The airplane first came to the attention of plaintiff as a result of a Portland newspaper advertisement offering the airplane for sale at $12,400. Between August 15 and 20, negotiations were had and an oral contract for the sale of said plane, equipped with a new Mark-6 radio, for $14,000, was entered into between the parties on the terms hereinabove referred to.

Between August 15 and 19, the defendant’s mechanic, Bichard M. Austin, pursuant to the instruction of the defendant, purported to conduct a 100-hour inspection on the Beechcraft. Defendant instructed his mechanics to * * Give it whatever it needed and put it in airworthy condition * * On August 19, the craft was delivered to the plaintiff together with Austin’s certification that a 100-hour inspection had been conducted and the aircraft was in an airworthy condition. At the time of delivery, defendant assured plaintiff that the 100-hour inspection had been made. Plaintiff testified that in taking delivery he relied upon this representation together with the certificate of airworthiness of defendant’s mechanic.

On the evening of the date of delivery, plaintiff returned the craft, after a few hours of flight, for some minor adjustments and repair which were undertaken by defendant at no charge to plaintiff. On August 21, the Beechcraft was finally turned over to plaintiff, who on August 22, 1964, commenced a flight to Chicago.

It was on this trip that plaintiff first had difficulty with the aircraft. In Burley, Idaho, it was necessary to overhaul the magneto. Oil consumption was abnormally high. On the return trip, on September 6, the motor controlling the propeller pitch became *229 inoperative, and there was abnormally high pressure in the cylinder head. These problems and certain other malfunctions were corrected in Des Moines, Iowa. Another stop was made in Burley, Idaho, to repair a broken cable. Between Burley, Idaho, and Ontario, Oregon, the engine became overheated so that the plaintiff was required to set down in Ontario until the cool of the evening. The trip was then continued to Portland with “cowl flaps” open, since, if operated normally, the engine overheated. The defendant admitted that neither the excessive use of oil nor the overheating of the engine were normal conditions.

On September 7, Labor Day, 1964, the day after plaintiff returned from Chicago, he contacted the defendant regarding the problems encountered on the trip. It was the testimony of the plaintiff that defendant refused to make any adjustment with plaintiff. Defendant admitted that plaintiff stated he had had more trouble than he expected and that “* * * it couldn’t go on this way * * but denied that plaintiff made demands for adjustment.

Subsequently, on September 18, at the instance of the plaintiff, the Beecher aft was inspected by Al Evans, an PAA licensed mechanic employed by Plight-craft. The list of defects in the aircraft found by Evans covers five pages of the transcript.

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Bluebook (online)
428 P.2d 398, 247 Or. 223, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 369, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanners-v-whitney-or-1967.