Queen v. Lynch Jewelers, LLC

55 P.3d 914, 30 Kan. App. 2d 1026, 2002 Kan. App. LEXIS 778
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 13, 2002
Docket87,151
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 55 P.3d 914 (Queen v. Lynch Jewelers, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Queen v. Lynch Jewelers, LLC, 55 P.3d 914, 30 Kan. App. 2d 1026, 2002 Kan. App. LEXIS 778 (kanctapp 2002).

Opinion

Green, J.:

Travis Queen appeals the dismissal of his claims against Lynch Jewelers, LLC, and James Lynch for conversion and for violations of the Federal Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and the Kansas Consumer Protection Act (KCPA). We affirm.

On Januaiy 27, 2000, Travis Queen shopped for a diamond engagement ring at Lynch Jewelers, a jewelry store in Wichita, Kansas. Queen selected a loose diamond weighing 1.03 carats and a *1027 semimount diamond setting as an engagement ring for his girlfriend, Shannon Ham. The purchase totaled $6,142.20.

Lynch Jewelers arranged for Beneficial Credit Services Corporation (Beneficial) to finance Queen’s purchase. Queen attempted to finance the entire amount of his purchase, but was only approved to finance $2,500 through Beneficial. Lynch Jewelers made arrangements to accept Queen’s down payment of $1,000 and extended an oral, interest-free loan covering the remainder of the purchase price. The interest-free loan is not at issue in the instant appeal.

The $2,500 financed through Beneficial was initially memorialized in a January 27, 2000, installment contract filled out by James Lynch, an employee of Lynch Jewelers. The January 27, 2000, installment contract indicated that the annual percentage rate of interest (APR) for this transaction was 18.29%, resulting in a $767 finance charge and total payments of $3,267 over the 36-month repayment period. Each of these terms was stated in the contract. James Lynch arrived at the 18.29% interest rate after checking the “red book,” a resource given to Lynch Jewelers by Beneficial. The red book contains tables of mathematical calculations which are used to determine the monthly total of payments, the finance charge, and the APR for loans assigned to Beneficial.

James Lynch filled out the January 27,2000, installment contract in Queen’s presence. James Lynch reviewed the credit terms, including the APR, finance charge, amount financed, total payments, and total sales price with Queen before asking Queen to execute the installment agreement. Queen testified that after the January 27, 2000, installment agreement was filled out, he was neither confused nor misled by its terms. After reading the installment contract, Queen signed it, and James Lynch removed the top copy of the contract marked “Buyer l’s copy” and gave it to Queen. Queen did not receive a separate copy of the credit disclosures before signing the contract.

Beneficial did not accept assignment of the January 27, 2000, installment agreement because the applicable APR had increased to 21%. This change in the APR caused corresponding changes to *1028 the finance charge, total payments, and the total sales price on Queen’s installment contract.

Queen returned to Lynch Jewelers on February 1, 2000, to relay Ham’s ring size. Mary Ellen Lynch, an employee of Lynch Jewelers, assisted Queen during this visit. Queen testified that Mary Ellen Lynch told him that James Lynch had made a mistake on the first contract and that he would need to sign a second one. Queen testified that Mary Ellen Lynch retrieved a retail installment contract from a drawer. This document had been completely filled out in typewriting and was dated February 1,2000. The February 1, 2000, installment agreement disclosed the APR as 21%, with finance charges totaling $890.84. The second installment agreement also reflected appropriate changes to the total sales price and the monthly payments. All other terms remained the same.

Mary Ellen Lynch told Queen that his monthly payments increased to $94.19, but did not explain that the payments increased because James Lynch inadvertently listed the wrong APR on the first contract. Queen reviewed the new contract and executed it. Mary Ellen Lynch gave Queen his copy of the second agreement after he signed it. Queen did not receive a separate copy of the second retail installment agreement before signing it. Beneficial accepted assignment of the February 1, 2000, installment agreement.

Queen picked up the ring from Lynch Jewelers on February 10, 2000, and gave it to Ham on February 20, 2000. On March 20, 2000, while visiting her mother in Nebraska, Ham noticed that the center stone was missing from the band and located it a few feet from where she had been sitting. The next day, Queen and Ham looked at the band and stone under a jeweler’s microscope and observed that none of the band’s retaining prongs were bent, broken, or missing and saw no chips in the diamond.

On March 24, 2000, Queen returned to Wichita and examined tire stone under two other jeweler’s microscopes. The stone and band were also examined by a certified diamondologist, who did not observe any chip in the stone or unusual abrasion on the band. *1029 Later that day, Queen took the band and stone to Lynch Jewelers and questioned why the solitaire dislodged from the setting.

Lynch Jewelers requested a chance to repair the ring, but Queen said that he would have to discuss that option with Ham. Queen told Lynch Jewelers that he would call diem that same evening with his final decision and left the ring at the store. After discussing the issue with Ham, Queen called Lynch Jewelers that evening and demanded a return of his money. James Lynch told Queen that the diamond was chipped and that there was an abrasion to the band.

On March 25, 2000, Queen hand delivered a memorandum to Lynch Jewelers wherein he rescinded the purchase and demanded a refund. Lynch Jewelers refused to refund the money Queen had paid on the ring. In addition, James Lynch told Queen that he would not get the ring back until it was paid off. On March 27, 2000, James Lynch and John Lynch, another Lynch Jewelers employee, sent a signed letter to Queen wherein they stated that Queen would have to pay his account in full before the ring would be returned to him. Lynch Jewelers repaired the ring by removing scratches from the band, removing a chip from the center stone, and resetting the stone into the band.

Queen brought suit against Lynch Jewelers and James Lynch (collectively referred to as the defendants), wherein he asserted several grounds for relief. Specifically, the claims brought by Queen against the defendants were revocation of acceptance, fraud, conversion, and violations of the KCPA and the TILA. Before trial, Queen moved for summary judgment on his conversion claim and on the TILA violation. The defendants also moved for summary judgment on Queen’s claims for the KCPA violation, conversion, fraud, and the TILA violation. The trial court denied Queen’s motion for summary judgment and granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the conversion, fraud, and KCPA claims.

After hearing the evidence at trial, the trial court granted a directed verdict against Queen on his TILA claim. As such, the only claim submitted to the jury was revocation of acceptance. The jury found that Lynch Jewelers breached its contract with Queen and *1030 awarded him damages in the amount of $4,507.84, the total amount he paid for the ring to the date of trial.

Federal Truth in Lending Act

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.3d 914, 30 Kan. App. 2d 1026, 2002 Kan. App. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/queen-v-lynch-jewelers-llc-kanctapp-2002.