Martin v. Stewart Motor Sales

73 N.W.2d 1, 247 Iowa 204, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 391
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 15, 1955
Docket48800
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 73 N.W.2d 1 (Martin v. Stewart Motor Sales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Stewart Motor Sales, 73 N.W.2d 1, 247 Iowa 204, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 391 (iowa 1955).

Opinions

Thompson, J.

The plaintiff, a minor, brought his action by his next friend asking that a contract which he had entered into with the defendant for the purchase of an automobile be annulled and set aside and the defendant be required to refund to him the money paid. James Caldwell Martin, the minor, will be hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff.

The action is based upon the undisputed fact of the plaintiff’s minority. The only defense which we find necessary to consider was that he had misrepresented his age to the defendant and so could not avail himself of the provisions of section 599.2, Codes of 1950, 1954. This section gives the minor the right to disaffirm contracts made, during his minority, with certain exceptions not material here, within a reasonable time after reaching his majority. But the following section, 599.3, provides:

“No contract can be thus disaffirmed in cases where, on account of the minor’s own misrepresentations as to his majority, or from his having engaged in business as an adult, the other party had good reason to believe him capable of contracting.”

[206]*206It is this section upon which the defendant relies, and the decision of the learned trial court was based upon it.

I. There is some uncertainty as to whether the action was at law or in equity. As the trial court commented, the only real issue was whether the plaintiff had misrepresented the facts as to his age. His demand was in essence for a money judgment only. We are of the opinion, however, that the case was in effect tried in equity, and so is triable de novo here. McCulloch Investment Co. v. Spencer, 246 Iowa 433, 67 N.W.2d 924.

II. During the month of July 1953, when the plaintiff was about 18% years of age, he purchased a used automobile from the defendant-company. Jt appears he first agreed on terms and paid $250 in cash; and a few days later went to the sales rooms of the defendant in Keokuk, and gave a check for the remainder of the agreed price in the sum of $540, making a total of $790. At this time he drove the car away.

There is some contention as to whether the plaintiff signed the written instrument upon which the defendant relies at the time he paid the first installment or just before he took the car away after paying the balance due. We consider the point immaterial. Admittedly he signed the contract before he was permitted to take possession of the automobile. He kept the car for more than eight months, drove it some 10,000 miles, returned it on March 22, 1954, at which time he was still a minor, and demanded the return of the sum paid.

The automobile was purchased under a written contract, which is in evidence as Exhibit 1 and as defendant’s Exhibit A. It is in the form of an order for the described automobile. After the printed words “Please enter my order for one used” and the description of the car are the words, apparently stamped in a blank space: “I understand that liability insurance coverage which will protect me under the Iowa Motor Vehicle Financial and Car Responsibility Act is not included in my purchase of the above described motor vehicle. I have received a copy of this statement.” The price of the car — $790—is set out in the margin, and underneath the quoted statement appears the admitted signature of the plaintiff. Below this appears further printing, the important part of which is this statement: “I certify that I [207]*207am twenty-one years of age or over * * The admitted signature of the plaintiff appears again below this printed matter. At the top the contract is dated July 16, 1953.

III. Some comment upon the pleadings is material here. The plaintiff’s petition refers to “the contract under which he had purchased said automobile”; and of course the written order above referred to, which was signed twice by the plaintiff and once by the defendant, constituted a written contract, and the only contract shown by the record, setting out the terms of the agreement. The defendant in its answer pleaded the affirmative defense of misrepresentation of .age by the plaintiff. In reply to this allegation the plaintiff denied that he so misrepresented, but pleaded no fraud, duress or mistake which induced him to sign the contract. The burden to prove the misrepresentation was of course upon the defendant; but if the plaintiff sought to rely upon fraud or other legal excuse which induced the signing of the contract, the burden was equally upon him to plead and prove it.

IY. The correctness of the decision of the trial court becomes obvious with a statement of the facts. The Iowa law on disaffirmance of contracts by minors is statutory. This distinguishes our holdings from those in other jurisdictions which follow the common law. The plaintiff cites and relies upon International Text Book Co. v. Connelly, 206 N.Y. 188, 99 N.E. 722, 42 L. R. A., N. S., 1115, and Conroe v. Birdsall, 1 Johns. Cas. (N. Y.) 127, 1 Am. Dec. 105. They hold that misrepresentation of age does not prevent disaffirmance.’ Apparently at the time of these decisions New York had no statute such as ours which provided the minor would be bound by his contract if he had misrepresented the facts as to his age and the other party relied upon such representations. The casés give us no aid in determining the issues here.

The burden was upon the defendant to establish the affirmative defense of misrepresentation and reliance thereupon. 43 C. J. S., Infants, section 117a. It carried this burden by showing the written statement of the plaintiff in the contract of sale of the automobile that he was twenty-one years of age or over, and by the testimony of its agent and officer who [208]*208made the sale that he relied upon that statement. We applied this provision of the statute in Eckrich v. Hogan Brothers, 220 Iowa 755, 263 N.W. 308. The governing rule is well stated in Friar v. Rae-Chandler Co., 192 Iowa 427, 429, 430, 185 N.W. 32, 34, in these terms:

“The misrepresentation which will enable a party who has contracted with a minor to invoke the statute must be ‘the minor’s own misrepresentation as to his majority:’ that is, it must be some affirmative or definite statement, intended to mislead and to create a belief in the mind of the other party that the minor is capable of contracting.”

We can conceive of no more definite statement by the plaintiff here or one more calculated to mislead the other contracting party than his written certification that he was twenty-one years of age or more. The statement is a part of the written contract, and the defendant had the right to rely, and the evidence shows it did rely, upon it. The plaintiff attempts to counter this defect in his case by testifying that he did not read the contract before he signed it; that it was presented to him when he was about to leave with the car; he was in a hurry, and “he had me sign it to prove that they didn’t have any — I mean, he brought out the fact that they didn’t have any insurance to cover that. I would be assuming full responsibility of the car when I drove it out of the garage.”

We have pointed out that there is no pleading of fraud by the plaintiff inducing him to sign the contract without knowing its contents. This was essential if it is claimed there was such fraud. We said in In re Estate of Kinnan, 218 Iowa 572, 576, 255 N.W.

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Martin v. Stewart Motor Sales
73 N.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.W.2d 1, 247 Iowa 204, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-stewart-motor-sales-iowa-1955.