Randy Lubben v. Copart, Inc., Metro Salvage Pool, Inc. d/b/a Metro Remarketing, and Copart, Inc., Third Party v. True North Equipment Co., Third Party

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 14, 2015
DocketA15-495
StatusUnpublished

This text of Randy Lubben v. Copart, Inc., Metro Salvage Pool, Inc. d/b/a Metro Remarketing, and Copart, Inc., Third Party v. True North Equipment Co., Third Party (Randy Lubben v. Copart, Inc., Metro Salvage Pool, Inc. d/b/a Metro Remarketing, and Copart, Inc., Third Party v. True North Equipment Co., Third Party) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randy Lubben v. Copart, Inc., Metro Salvage Pool, Inc. d/b/a Metro Remarketing, and Copart, Inc., Third Party v. True North Equipment Co., Third Party, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A15-0495

Randy Lubben, Appellant,

vs.

Copart, Inc., Respondent,

Metro Salvage Pool, Inc. d/b/a Metro Remarketing, Defendant,

and

Copart, Inc., Third Party Plaintiff,

True North Equipment Co., Third Party Defendant.

Filed December 14, 2015 Affirmed; motions denied Connolly, Judge

Stearns County District Court File No. 73-CV-14-1589

Matthew C. Berger, Gislason & Hunter LLP, New Ulm, Minnesota (for appellant)

Michael C. Lindberg, Peter M. Lindberg, Johnson & Lindberg, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent) Considered and decided by Reyes, Presiding Judge; Connolly, Judge; and Reilly,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

CONNOLLY, Judge

Appellant buyer challenges the grant of summary judgment dismissing his breach-

of-contract claim against respondent seller; respondent moves this court for attorney fees

and sanctions. Because no genuine issue of material fact precluded the grant of summary

judgment and the district court did not err in its application of the law, we affirm; because

appellant’s conduct does not warrant attorney fees or sanctions, we deny respondent’s

motion.

FACTS

In November 2013, appellant Randy Lubben became a member of respondent

Copart Inc., a business providing its members with access to online auctions of cars,

trucks, and farm machinery. Lubben agreed to the Copart Membership Terms &

Conditions (T&C), which provided:

I. DISCLAIMERS

A. Vehicle Condition and History Disclaimer .... . . . Copart and its sellers expressly disclaim the accuracy or completeness of any and all information provided to Members regarding vehicles, whether provided in written, verbal, or digital image form . . . . .... II. SALE POLICIES .... B. Sale Cancellation. Copart may, in its sole and absolute discretion and with or without notice, postpone or

2 cancel a sale or withdraw a vehicle from a sale. Copart will neither have liability nor obligation to Members as a result of any vehicle withdrawal, or sale cancellation or postponement. .... G. Vehicle and Title Release. Copart reserves the right not to release any vehicle or vehicle title for any reason. .... I. Risk of Loss. Member takes full responsibility and assumes all risk of loss for all vehicles purchased from the time Copart accepts Member’s bid. . . . In the event Copart is responsible [for any loss], damages shall be limited to . . . the purchase price (in which case Member shall return the vehicle to Copart).

(Emphasis added.)

In the fall of 2013, Gudajtes Farms (GF) delivered two damaged heads (pieces of

farm machinery used in harvesting) to respondent True North Equipment Co., a John

Deere dealership that sells, leases, and services John Deere equipment (True North). One

was a bean head (John Deere 640FD, serial number ending in 745452) that GF leased

from True North; the other was a corn head (John Deere 618C, serial number ending in

755266) that GF owned.

The bean head was so extensively damaged that, rather than repair it, GF’s insurer

totaled it, purchased it from True North, and engaged an Iowa firm, Metro Salvage Pool

Inc., d/b/a Metro Remarketing (Metro) to sell it as salvage. On December 11, 2013,

Metro subcontracted the sale to Copart, which arranged to have a truck pick up the bean

head from True North and bring it to the Copart yard in Avon, Minnesota.

3 On December 30, 2013, when the truck arrived at True North to pick up the bean

head, GF’s corn head was still there, awaiting repair. The corn head, rather than the bean

head, was inadvertently loaded on the truck and transported to Copart later that day.

The corn head was photographed, listed wrongly as a John Deere 6400 (a tractor

model) and entered in an online listing of items up for auction. Because heads are not

titled property, Copart drafted a Bill of Sale for the corn head.

On January 6, 2014, Lubben called Copart to ask for the complete serial number of

the item pictured because (1) the picture showed it was not a tractor and the 6400 number

indicated that it was a tractor and (2) only the last six digits of the item’s serial number

appeared online. A Copart employee who had checked the item called Lubben with the

complete serial number, the last six digits of which were 755266, not 745452. From the

complete serial number, Lubben knew that the item was in fact a corn head, as the picture

indicated.

On January 8, 2014, Lubben visited Copart and looked at the corn head. On

January 10, 2014, he placed an online bid of $45,000 on what he then knew was actually

a John Deere 640C corn head and was informed by Copart that his winning bid on “a 12

Deer 6400 Green,” or tractor, was accepted. At that point, neither Lubben nor Copart

knew that the corn head actually belonged to GF, which had no intention of selling it.

On January 30, 2014, Copart was informed that True North’s bean head, which

Copart had been asked to sell for salvage, was still at True North and that GF’s corn head

had been wrongly loaded on the truck instead of True North’s bean head. Later that day,

Lubben arrived at Copart to pick up the corn head.

4 He spoke in person with the Avon site manager and by telephone with a Copart

dealer-services account manager in Minneapolis, both of whom told him that the corn

head could not be released to him because it belonged to a third party and that his

purchase price would be refunded.1 It is not disputed that the purchase price was

refunded to appellant.

Lubben brought this action against Copart, claiming that he is the true owner of

the corn head.2 Copart moved for summary judgment and for attorney fees and sanctions.

The district court granted summary judgment dismissing Lubben’s claims and denied

Copart’s motion for attorney fees and sanctions. Lubben challenges the grant of

summary judgment, arguing that terms in the T&C do not prevent his recovery and that

he is entitled to the corn head under the relevant statutes. Copart argues that the appeal is

frivolous and moves for attorney fees and costs; Lubben also seeks the attorney fees and

costs incurred in responding to Copart’s motion.

1 In August 2014, during his deposition, Lubben testified that the Copart representative from Minneapolis told him he could not have the corn head because “it was sold too cheap” and that he had not heard prior to his deposition that the corn head belonged to a third party. Copart’s attorney then told Lubben that, soon after the lawsuit began in February 2014, Lubben’s attorney had been informed that the corn head belonged to a third party. Lubben did not reply when asked if he received that message from his attorney. After a recess, Lubben’s attorney clarified that Lubben had been informed that the corn head belonged to a third party. The district court found that, when Lubben went to pick up the corn head, “Copart informed [him] that the wrong equipment had been sold to him.” Lubben does not challenge this finding on appeal. 2 During his deposition, Lubben replied, “That’s not my responsibility” when asked if he was comfortable having GF lose ownership of equipment it brought in for repair; he replied “Yes” when asked if he was telling the Court “that [GF] should not have been able to use [its] corn head because of somebody else’s mistake.”

5 DECISION

1. Summary Judgment

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Bluebook (online)
Randy Lubben v. Copart, Inc., Metro Salvage Pool, Inc. d/b/a Metro Remarketing, and Copart, Inc., Third Party v. True North Equipment Co., Third Party, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randy-lubben-v-copart-inc-metro-salvage-pool-inc-dba-metro-minnctapp-2015.