Quigley v. Sears

726 P.2d 293, 11 Kan. App. 2d 468, 1986 Kan. App. LEXIS 1437
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 9, 1986
DocketNo. 58,580
StatusPublished

This text of 726 P.2d 293 (Quigley v. Sears) 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
Quigley v. Sears, 726 P.2d 293, 11 Kan. App. 2d 468, 1986 Kan. App. LEXIS 1437 (kanctapp 1986).

Opinion

Parks, J.:

This appeal arose out of plaintiff s small claims action to recover money paid defendant for the purchase of a car. Plaintiff prevailed in both the small claims proceeding and on defendant’s appeal to district court. She now appeals the amount of the judgment awarded and the district court’s failure to award punitive damages or attorney fees.

On January 5, 1985, plaintiff Cherri Quigley bought a 1974 Ford Torino from Larry Sears, the defendant and owner of Central Auto Credit. Plaintiff paid the purchase price of $450 plus $22.50 in sales tax. Defendant gave plaintiff a car title and sales receipt but made marks on the title altering it.

Plaintiff immediately began to experience mechanical difficulties with the car and by January 15 had paid $84.66 in repairs. On February 7, plaintiff incurred an additional $10.45 in car repairs.

Sometime at the end of January, plaintiff went to the county clerk’s office to obtain license tags for her new car. However, [469]*469when she presented the title supplied by defendant, the clerk explained that the title was no good. The clerk called a uniformed police officer to the office and plaintiff was asked to accompany him to the district attorney’s office. Plaintiff testified that she was worried and humiliated by the incident. She went with the officer to the district attorney’s office, where she met with Mr. Nick Tomasic, the district attorney, and Mr. Dan Doyle, an assistant district attorney. The car title was retained by the district attorney’s office and Ms. Quigley was told that her title was no good.

Following this incident, Ms. Quigley testified that she called the defendant and demanded her money back. The defendant refused to return the money and asked Ms. Quigley to get the car title back from the district attorney.

After the defendant refused to return the $472.50 to Ms. Quigley, she filed an action in small claims court, where she obtained a judgment against him for $450 and costs. On July 22, 1985, Ms. Quigley sent a letter by certified mail to the defendant wherein she enclosed the key to the 1974 Ford Torino and asked the defendant to pick up the car.

Defendant appealed from the small claims judgment and plaintiff responded by filing, with the assistance of counsel, a new petition. In addition to the cost of the car itself, plaintiff also prayed for the $95.11 spent in repairs on the car, $1,135 punitive damages, and attorney fees. On the day of trial, plaintiff filed a motion for attorney fees of $1,200 accompanied by affidavits claiming 15 hours of work at $80/hour. Also accompanying the motion were copies of the informations and journal entries of nolo contendere pleas entered by defendant in five separate charges of the crime of failure to deliver title in violation of K.S.A. 8-135(6), 8-135(7), and 8-149. One of these convictions arose out of the facts of this case, two involved sales of cars in 1984 and the remaining two convictions arose out of sales which took place after the sale to plaintiff. All five convictions were entered on April 10, 1985.

This case was tried on August 19,1985, before a judge pro tem. Plaintiff established without rebuttal by defendant that the title supplied by defendant was ineffective because it had been improperly altered. Plaintiff failed to offer the evidence of defendant’s criminal convictions into evidence but, according to [470]*470counsel, they were referred to in argument concerning the propriety of awarding punitive damages. These arguments were not transcribed. The court refused to award any of the additional damages claimed by plaintiff in district court. Judgment was entered for $450 plus $10 for the cost of filing the small claims action. The court made no findings of fact or conclusions of law in the record.

Plaintiff contends on appeal that the district court erred in failing to award her damages for all of'the actual damages she sustained as a result of defendant’s failure to deliver good title to the car and in failing to award punitive damages for fraud. Defendant argues that the court’s action was justified because, since plaintiff filed her suit as a small claims action, she was limited on the appeal to a recovery of the $500 maximum permitted in such a case at the time this action was filed. K.S.A. 61-2703(a). See L. 1986, ch. 224, § 1 (amending K.S.A. 61-2703 to increase a “small claim” from $500 to $1,000). Defendant contends that the district court’s jurisdiction on appeal is derived from the small claims suit so that he may not be subjected to the possibility of damages in excess of $500 even though the trial itself is de novo. Plaintiff argues that the significance of the statutory provision for a de novo trial is that the district court proceeding is not so much an appeal but a completely new proceeding. The plaintiff may rely on her original pleadings but because this is the first time she can be represented by an attorney, she may also file a new petition stating additional claims for relief.

This issue of whether a plaintiffs recovery in an action originally filed as a small claims action is limited on defendant’s appeal to district court to the amount plaintiff could have recovered in the small claims proceeding was recently decided in Armstrong v. Lowell H. Listrom & Co., 11 Kan. App. 2d 448, 725 P.2d 540 (1986). In that case, a panel of this court vacated a judgment in excess of the small claims limit and held that a plaintiff who elects to proceed under the small claims procedure act, K.S.A. 61-2701 et seq., waives the right to recover an amount in excess of a small claim. The court concluded that a district court sitting as small claims appellate court may not award the plaintiff a judgment beyond the scope of small claims jurisdiction. Therefore, in order to be consistent with the opinion [471]*471in Armstrong, we conclude that the district court was limited in the amount that it could award plaintiff by the $500 maximum in effect when the small claims suit was initiated. However, since the court’s judgment in this case was less than this maximum, plaintiff s contention that she was entitled to additional damages is not completely resolved.

The district court awarded plaintiff judgment for actual damages of only $450 but her evidence established without contradiction that in addition to the price of the car, plaintiff incurred expenses of $22.50 for sales tax and $84.66 for repairs on the car prior to discovering the defect in the title certificate. Our law clearly provides that the “sale of a vehicle required to be registered under the laws of this state, without assignment of the certificate of title, is fraudulent and void.” K.S.A. 1985 Supp. 8-135(c)(7). In addition, case law provides that violation of the registration provisions of the motor vehicle law creates a cause of action for fraud as well as supporting an action for breach of the implied warranty of good title (K.S.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
726 P.2d 293, 11 Kan. App. 2d 468, 1986 Kan. App. LEXIS 1437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quigley-v-sears-kanctapp-1986.