Oppenhuizen v. Wennersten

139 N.W.2d 765, 2 Mich. App. 288, 1966 Mich. App. LEXIS 750
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1966
DocketDocket 406
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 139 N.W.2d 765 (Oppenhuizen v. Wennersten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oppenhuizen v. Wennersten, 139 N.W.2d 765, 2 Mich. App. 288, 1966 Mich. App. LEXIS 750 (Mich. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

Holbrook, P. J.

Harry Oppenhuizen, plaintiffappellee, brought an action against Carl Wenner *291 sten, defendant-appellee, and Howard M. Veneklasen, defendant-appellant. Trial before the circuit judge without a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against defendant Wennersten for actual damages because of failure of consideration and against Veneldasen based on fraud for $1,768 actual damages and $500 exemplary damages. Judgment for exemplary damages of $250 was also awarded in favor of defendant-appellee Wennersten upon his cross complaint based on fraud against defendant Veneldasen.

Defendant-appellant made a motion for new trial and upon its denial, appealed to this Court.

The transactions concerning 2 so-called “Monza” automobiles make up the background for the action.

The first “Monza” was blue in color and purchased by defendant Veneldasen June 18,1963, from Weller Auto Parts of Grand Rapids and described in the purchase receipt as a “1963 Corvair, 4-door, #8258.” This car, after being taken to defendant-appellant’s junk yard, was dismantled and considered nonrepayable by one of Veneklasen’s employees and placed in the yard on top of another Chevrolet vehicle. The second was a “red, 2-door 1963 Monza” stolen from Chicago, Illinois, May 7, 1963.

Defendant Wennersten was in the salvage business and the business of buying repairable automobiles for resale.

Wennersten purchased from defendant Veneklasen a 1963 Chevrolet 2-door automobile on June 27, 1963, for $1,300, and after making necessary repairs, resold it to plaintiff Oppenhuizen July 9, 1963, for $1,700. Shortly thereafter, the Federal Bureau of Investigation identified the car as the stolen “red, 2-door Monza” and repossessed it for the true owner.

Defendant Veneldasen testified that he did not sell any red Monza to Wennersten; however, the state *292 ment of the motor vehicle sale of June 27, 1963, described a “1963 Chevrolet, 2-door vehicle, 30927-W195053,” -which appeared also on the title Vene-Idasen gave to Wennersten, and in turn on the title Wennersten gave to plaintiff Oppenhuizen.

The number tab on the “red Monza vehicle” was for the blue Corvair purchased by Yeneldasen from Weller Auto Parts. It had been removed from that vehicle and glued onto the 2-door red Monza. Plaintiff Oppenhuizen and defendant Wennersten charged defendant Veneldasen with forging the title to the “red, 2-door Monza” knowing the same had been stolen and by representing the false title as valid invited not only Wennersten to rely thereon, but also any purchaser from Wennersten.

It was further claimed that Veneldasen knew that, but for the probability of a resale, Wennersten would not have purchased the “red, 2-door Monza.” Veneklasen was convicted in Federal court in 1964 on a charge in connection with being a member of a car theft ring.

The learned trial judge made these pertinent findings of fact: That plaintiff purchased from Wennersten in July of 1963, a “red Monza automobile” and received a purported title for the same. Wennersten had previously purchased this red Monza from defendant Yeneldasen. The red Monza was a stolen automobile, that Yeneldasen knew it, but sold it to Wennersten without revealing this fact.

The blue Monza purchased by Veneldasen from Weller Auto Parts was not repairable. The identification tab on the.blue Monza put on by the manufacturer was found on the “red Monza” by the authorities.

Yeneldasen set the whole sequence of events in operation knowing that Wennersten was in the business of repairing and selling cars having dealt *293 ■with him on that basis for nine months. It was foreseeable that someone beyond Wennersten would he hurt if the true facts were discovered concerning the “red Monza.” The true facts were discovered and plaintiff suffered damages to the extent of the purchase price of the car together with the embarrassment that he endured by the fact that he was in a deal, although innocently, with a convicted member of a car theft ring, and resulting liability for costs of collecting his damages. Wennersten had no knowledge that the “red Monza” was a stolen car and that Veneklasen had no legal title to it. Wennersten was likewise damaged by Veneklasen’s fraud.

Defendant-appellant raises several issues on this appeal: (1) that judgment should not have been rendered in favor of plaintiff-appellee against him because there was no privity of contract between them; (2) that the decision for plaintiff Oppenliuizen and defendant Wennersten against defendant Veneklasen was against the great and ovei’whelming weight of the evidence; (3) the court erred in awarding exemplary damages to plaintiff-appellee; and (4) the court erred in awarding exemplary damages to Wennersten.

Appellant in support of his position that there must he privity of contract between the parties in an action based on fraud in order for recovery, cites T2 Michigan Law and Practice, Fraud, § 10, pp 408, 410:

“In order to authorize an action for fraud, the plaintiff must be the one who has suffered injury .from the fraud, and the defendant must have induced the plaintiff’s act. * * *
“A person cannot he held liable for a fraudulent misrepresentation unless he made it himself or authorized another to make it for him or in some way -participated therein.”

*294 In the same authority under the same title and section on p 409 appears the following:

“One who, by fraudulent representation, induces another to act to his damage is liable for the damages suffered, and it is not essential that there should have been privity of contract or other personal dealings. A declaration from which it appears that the fraudulent representations of defendant were made for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to make a contract, and did induce him, indicate a sufficient connection on defendant’s part with plaintiff’s loss to make him liable, though he took no part in making the contract.”

The general rule on the subject appears in 23 Am Jur, Fraud and Deceit, § 118, pp 903, 904, which reads in part:

“While some connection, direct or indirect, between a party charged with making false representations and a party relying thereon must be shown, it is not essential, in support of a cause of action for damages resulting from false representations, that the false representations be shown to have been made directly to the party claiming to have relied upon them. It has been repeatedly held that where a party makes false representations to another with the intent or knowledge that they be exhibited or repeated to a third party for the purpose of deceiving him, the third party, if so deceived to his injury, can maintain an action in tort against the party making the false statements for the damages resulting from the fraud. Such holdings conform to the principle that the rule that representations must have been intended to influence the complaining party is equally applicable whether they are made to him directly or indirectly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.W.2d 765, 2 Mich. App. 288, 1966 Mich. App. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oppenhuizen-v-wennersten-michctapp-1966.