Left Gate Property Holdings, Inc. D/B/A Northside Texas Direct Auto and Ed Williams Individually v. Temeasha Scott

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 2011
Docket01-10-00334-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Left Gate Property Holdings, Inc. D/B/A Northside Texas Direct Auto and Ed Williams Individually v. Temeasha Scott (Left Gate Property Holdings, Inc. D/B/A Northside Texas Direct Auto and Ed Williams Individually v. Temeasha Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Left Gate Property Holdings, Inc. D/B/A Northside Texas Direct Auto and Ed Williams Individually v. Temeasha Scott, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 7, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-10-00334-CV

———————————

Left Gate Property Holdings, Inc. D/B/A Northside Texas Direct Auto and Ed Williams, Appellants

V.

Temeasha Scott, Appellee

On Appeal from the Harris County Civil Court at Law Number Two

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 890,770

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellants, Left Gate Property Holdings, Inc., doing business as Northside Texas Direct Auto (“Texas Direct”), and Ed Williams, challenge the trial court’s judgment entered, after a jury trial, in favor of appellee, Temeasha Scott, in her suit against appellants for breach of contract and violation of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“DTPA”).[1]  In the first five of their six issues, appellants contend that there is no evidence of a breach of contract by Texas Direct, there is no evidence of a deceptive act by Texas Direct or Williams, and the evidence is “factually insufficient to support the conclusion that Scott was harmed by or as a result of any activity” of Texas Direct or Williams.  In their sixth issue, appellants contend that the trial court erred in awarding Scott attorney’s fees.

          We affirm.

Background

Williams testified that in 2005, he, while working as a salesman for Texas Direct, “listed” a 2005 Pontiac Firebird for sale on eBay.  He prepared the advertisement, “generated it,” and uploaded the information onto eBay’s website by “manually” entering it through “a wizard,” selecting various options to describe the car.  Williams explained that a buyer can “end” an eBay auction by (1) bidding and having submitted the highest bid at the end of the auction or (2) using the eBay “Buy it Now” feature and paying a set price immediately.  He noted that eBay allows a seller “to edit the information” originally posted “until someone makes a bid on it”; however, once a bid is placed or the “Buy it Now” option is exercised, the advertisement cannot be changed.  Williams explained that eBay has this “safeguard” in effect because “once an auction has closed . . . it would be in eBay’s best interest to lock down that record and not let anyone edit it.”  

Williams asserted that his eBay listing contained a link to a “CARFAX” report to allow consumers to “get a reasonable history” of the car.  The CARFAX report listed the Firebird as having a “3.8-liter,” “V6” engine.  The trial court admitted into evidence a copy of the eBay advertisement and the CARFAX report, both revealing an “April 30, 2007” timestamp, which, according to Williams, was the date that he had printed the documents from his computer.  He explained that there were “no physical document[s]” created at the time that he listed the Firebird on eBay because the process “was all electronic,” but the copy of the eBay advertisement in evidence was of the “original” as it had appeared electronically.  However, the copy of the CARFAX report in evidence was not how Scott would have seen the report in 2005 because it had since been updated to indicate her ownership of the car.  Williams noted that CARFAX is a reporting service that obtains information about cars from government records.  He explained that there is “no way to go back and change the old information on [a] CARFAX” report, and, had Scott “clicked [on] and received the CARFAX,” she would have seen the report as admitted into evidence without “the new information” about her ownership of the car.  The eBay advertisement admitted into evidence contains only five of the twenty-five pages noted at the top of the document because, as Williams explained, when he requested the copy from eBay, the eBay “representative” who retrieved the copy from its archives told him that eBay only stored the text and not the photographs contained in the advertisement.  Williams asserted that the absence of the photographs “made up for” the missing pages. 

Williams further testified that he did not “advertise[] the vehicle as a V8 to sell to the public or anyone” and the car “was always registered as a V6.”  Scott chose the “Buy it Now” option on eBay and, after she had purchased the car, she and Williams exchanged a series of emails, from which Williams learned that Scott was in Iraq at the time of her purchase and would not be returning to the United States until September 23, 2005.  He noted that the emails did not reference the car’s engine.  Williams sent the documents concerning the car and Scott’s purchase of it to her address in Kentucky because he knew that she would be returning there soon and, “typically,” soldiers “have someone at their address” who has a power of attorney and can sign their legal documents. 

Williams, in order to transfer title of the car to Scott, signed, on behalf of Texas Direct, an “application to transfer title” to a Kentucky title in Scott’s name.  The application listed the car as having an “eight cylinder” engine.  Although Williams, in his answers to interrogatories, stated that no one at Texas Direct had placed this information on the application, he, at trial, testified that he was “fairly confident” that he did not place the information on the application.  He noted that the writing does not “look like [his] handwriting,” but he was “not sure” because there is “no way of knowing” after his having sold “1500 cars” since the time he had sold the Firebird. 

          Scott testified that when she was on active duty in the U.S. Army in Iraq in 2005, she became interested in purchasing the 2002 Pontiac Firebird listed in the Texas Direct online eBay advertisement.  She explained that when she searched for a Firebird online, using eBay’s various field options, she specifically selected the year, make, and model for a 2002 Pontiac Firebird. 

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Left Gate Property Holdings, Inc. D/B/A Northside Texas Direct Auto and Ed Williams Individually v. Temeasha Scott, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/left-gate-property-holdings-inc-dba-northside-texas-direct-auto-and-ed-texapp-2011.