Murray v. J & B International Trucks, Inc.

508 A.2d 1351, 146 Vt. 458, 1 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1140, 1986 Vt. LEXIS 330
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 3, 1986
Docket83-362
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 508 A.2d 1351 (Murray v. J & B International Trucks, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. J & B International Trucks, Inc., 508 A.2d 1351, 146 Vt. 458, 1 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1140, 1986 Vt. LEXIS 330 (Vt. 1986).

Opinion

Hayes, J.

This is an appeal by three defendants, International Harvester Credit Corporation (IHCC), J & B International Trucks, Inc. (J & B), and North Country Motors, Inc. (North Country), from a judgment against them in favor of plaintiff-appellee, Roger Murray. The questions on appeal relate to the trial court’s award of damages for wrongful repossession and conversion of a truck that plaintiff purchased from J & B.

The facts are long and complicated. In the summer of 1979, plaintiff was in the business of trucking wood to mills. As part of his business, he owned a 1968 truck, a body attached to the truck to haul logs, a loader to lift logs, and a tag axle placed under the truck body to support extra weight. In July of that year, plaintiff *461 signed an order to purchase a new 1979 International truck from J & B. The purchase order provided that plaintiff would trade in his 1968 truck, and that the loader, body, and tag axle from the old truck would be attached to the new truck.

When he signed the purchase order, plaintiff estimated to William Cleary, the J & B salesman, that he owed a balance of $7,500.00 on his truck to New England Merchants Bank (NEMB) and about $2,300.00 to Orleans County Community Services Association (OCCSA). Actually, the 1968 truck was subject to a security interest in favor of NEMB for $7,037.29. Plaintiff also owed $2,820.42 to OCCSA in connection with his logging equipment. Plaintiff told the salesman that he could not afford payments of more than $1,200.00 per month. Plaintiff, however, agreed to make a payment of $1,381.43 each month on the new truck for the first sixteen months. After that time, the payments were to drop to $1,208.75 per month.

Plaintiff was given a trade-in allowance of $1,475.00, based on his estimate that he owed $7,500.00 to NEMB on the 1968 truck which had a value of $8,975.00. Plaintiffs trade-in allowance was increased to $1,937.71 when the bank debt was found to be $462.71 less than he had estimated. Plaintiff, however, received no benefit because J & B raised the cash price set forth in the retail installment contract from $42,630.00 to $43,092.71.

On August 2, plaintiff delivered his trade-in truck to J & B so that the truck body, log loader, and tag axle could be removed from it and installed on the new vehicle. After some delay, J & B delivered the new truck to plaintiff on August 22, 1979. On his way home, plaintiff experienced transmission difficulties, and he returned the new truck to J & B the next day. J & B replaced the defective transmission. On August 30, plaintiff again picked up the truck.

The next day, plaintiff hauled his first load of wood using the new truck. After a second pick up, while heading toward a Canadian mill, the engine seized. Plaintiff called J & B, who arranged to have the truck towed to a garage at North Country Motors, an International Harvester Company dealer in Newport, Vermont. North Country determined that a defective bearing had caused the engine failure. It began to repair the engine, without charge, in accordance with the limited warranty, and completed the work on September 20, 1979.

*462 While the truck was at North Country, IHCC, to whom plaintiffs contract had been assigned, discovered that it had mistakenly calculated the charges to plaintiff by not including a $4,530.00 physical damage insurance expense figure in its computations. An IHCC employee called North Country and instructed it to hold onto the truck and not deliver it to plaintiff. A finance sales supervisor from IHCC wrote to plaintiff indicating that, because of the mistake, his monthly payments would have to increase to $1,491.62 or $110.19 per month more than he had agreed to. Alternatively, plaintiff was offered the option of keeping the payments at the same level, but providing his own insurance. Plaintiff was informed that he would either have to sign a new contract at the higher monthly rate or provide proof of insurance before he could remove his vehicle from North Country Motors. Plaintiff could not obtain physical damage insurance coverage elsewhere at a comparable rate, and he could not afford to increase his payments by $110.19 per month.

William Cleary, the salesman from J & B who had sold the new truck to plaintiff, asked plaintiff to sign a new contract which reflected the higher payments. Plaintiff declined, and demanded return of his down payment, his truck body, loader, and tag axle.

Counsel for plaintiff wrote to IHCC seeking rescission of the contract. IHCC advised plaintiff that it had corrected the error in the retail installment contract by reducing the cost of insurance from $4,530.00 for four years to $1,370 for one year, and by making other adjustments which reduced the first sixteen monthly payments from $1,381.43 to $1,350.17. The finance charge, however, was increased from $8,572.12 to $11,481.88. Plaintiff decided he could not agree to the proposed changes because it appeared that ultimately he would have to provide his own insurance and he could not afford the total monthly cost.

IHCC advised J & B during September and October that 1) if plaintiff did not agree to a corrected retail installment contract, IHCC would repossess the truck, and 2) if plaintiff did not redeem the truck, IHCC would require J & B to purchase the truck pursuant to a recourse obligation of J & B under its agreement with IHCC.

In February 1980, IHCC sent to J & B the truck’s certificate of title and an affidavit of repossession. Soon after, IHCC gave to J & B a bill of sale for the vehicle. J & B then paid plaintiff’s indebtedness to OCCSA for $2,820.42 and obtained a release of *463 OCCSA’s lien on the truck. J & B then sold the truck to a third party for $43,000.00. J & B’s repurchase obligation to IHCC was for $42,458.46.

Plaintiff subsequently filed suit against J & B, IHCC and North Country alleging conversion, and seeking consequential and punitive damages. J & B filed a counterclaim against plaintiff alleging losses sustained in the truck resale. J & B also filed a crossclaim against IHCC and North Country, alleging that it was entitled, to indemnity for any adverse judgment.

The trial court: 1) held that plaintiff was entitled to receive $1,303.00 in consequential damages, plus interest, from defendant J & B for breach of warranty; 2) found all three defendants jointly and severally liable for conversion and awarded plaintiff $20,438.00, plus interest, which represented the value of property converted and lost profits; 3) awarded plaintiff $5,000.00 in punitive damages against IHCC; and 4) awarded J & B $2,820.00, plus interest, on its counterclaim against plaintiff, which represented the amount of plaintiff’s indebtedness to OCCSA, but disallowed J & B’s claim of indemnity.

I.

A.

Appellant IHCC, arguing in support of J & B, asserts that the trial court erred in calculating the counterclaim amount awarded to J & B. The trial court awarded J & B $2,820.00, which represented the amount J & B paid out to release plaintiff’s OCCSA loan. J & B, however, claimed its adjusted total loss in connection with the resale of the truck was $5,306.67.

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Bluebook (online)
508 A.2d 1351, 146 Vt. 458, 1 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 1140, 1986 Vt. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-j-b-international-trucks-inc-vt-1986.