Ratterree v. General Motors Corporation

460 S.W.2d 309, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 513
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1970
Docket8957
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 460 S.W.2d 309 (Ratterree v. General Motors Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ratterree v. General Motors Corporation, 460 S.W.2d 309, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 513 (Mo. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

This is a jury-tried bailment case flowing from an aborted arrangement to replace a torn headliner in a new 1968 Chevrolet Bel Air sedan purchased by plaintiffs, Charley Ratterree and Brexine Ratterree, his wife, from defendant, Carl Honeycutt Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Company, a corporation, the Chevrolet dealer at Houston, Missouri. At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence, the trial court directed a verdict in favor of defendant, General Motors Corporation, the propriety of which is not here in question. At the close of all the evidence, the jury returned a verdict against defendant Honeycutt in the sum of $2,201 and, from the judgment entered thereon, that defendant appeals. The insistence that plaintiffs did not make a submissible case, as well as certain complaints about instructions, necessitates a factual review.

When plaintiffs’ new automobile was delivered to them at defendant’s place of business on March 13, 1968, there was “a three-cornered tear . . . about an inch each way” in the headliner. Plaintiff Charley’s father, Clyde Ratterree, then defendant’s “shop foreman,” told Carl Honeycutt, the president of defendant corporation, about this tear, and Mr. Honey-cutt “agreed to replace the headlining with a new one.” According to plaintiff Charley, “they said they would order . . a new one and have it installed,” and his father Clyde stated “we agreed to put a new one in ... or have it done . . Chevrolet or us was to furnish the headliner.” Defendant “had a place . for body work . . . but no one employed as a body man,” so it was contemplated by Mr. Honeycutt that the headliner “would be replaced by an outside body shop [in Houston], Sillyman’s Reliable Auto Body Shop.” At the time of trial, neither plaintiff Charley nor his father Clyde remembered whether, on March 13 when the tear was discovered, there was any mention of or discussion about the fact that Kyle Sillyman would install the new headliner when it became available. However, plaintiff Charley knew that defendant’s “body repair work [was] done at other garages” and that Sillyman “did some of it”; and, at some time within the month following March 13, he became possessed of knowledge “that [defendant] was aiming to turn it [the 1968 Chevrolet] over to Mr. Sillyman,” which “was all right with [him].” But there was no discussion or arrangement between plaintiff Charley and Sillyman; and, as the latter confirmed upon trial, his agreement for installation of the new headliner was with defendant Honeycutt and, if the headliner had been replaced, defendant would have paid the bill.

The next relevant event chronologically, as pleaded in plaintiffs’ petition, was “that defendants . . . through their agents requested plaintiff (sic) to deliver said 1968 automobile to the place of business of defendant [Honeycutt] ... on April 13, 1968, for the purpose of replacing said defective headliner and that plaintiffs, pursuant to said request did deliver to the regular place of business of defendant [Honeycutt] . . . said 1968 Chevrolet automobile on April 13, 1968,” at which time and place "defendants . . . through their agents took delivery of said 1968 Chevrolet automobile from plaintiffs . . . and agreed to return said automobile to plaintiffs on demand.” (All emphasis herein is ours.) In its answer, defendant Honeycutt admitted “that it requested the plaintiffs to deliver said 1968 automobile to its place of business in Houston, Missouri, on April 13, 1968, for the purpose of having said headliner replaced with a new headliner” but denied the other above-quoted averments in plaintiffs’ petition to the *311 effect that the automobile was so delivered or that “defendants . . . through their agents took delivery” thereof.

Plaintiffs resided in Springfield, Missouri, where plaintiff Charley was employed in a manufacturing plant from 5 P.M. to 1:30 A. M. The record does not disclose how, when or by whom defendant Honey-cutt’s request to deliver plaintiffs’ Chevrolet to defendant’s place of business on Saturday, April 13, was given; but it is undisputed that, after plaintiff Charley got off work at 1:30 A.M. on that date, he and his wife drove to the home of his parents about one mile north of Houston, arriving there about 3:30 to 4 A.M. Plaintiffs left their automobile there “for [Charley’s father Clyde] to take it to have this headliner put in” and borrowed Clyde’s automobile in which they drove to the home of plaintiff Brexine’s parents and later to Mountain Grove. Both plaintiff Charley and Clyde stated, in substance, their understanding that the latter “was supposed to bring [plaintiffs’ Chevrolet] into town and it was supposed to be fixed that day,” that Clyde would return the automobile to his home the same evening “if it was ready,” and that plaintiffs would “pick it up” there that evening or “at church” the following morning.

Defendant Honeycutt did not furnish transportation to Clyde, and he usually drove his own automobile to work, leaving home about 7 A.M.; but, since plaintiffs had borrowed his automobile on the morning of April 13, he drove to work that day in their Chevrolet and parked it “on the street.” While working in defendant’s “garage” later that day (the time of day not being revealed in evidence), Clyde “pulled” his pants and, using plaintiffs’ Chevrolet, drove home to change into another pair. On the return trip, he drove by Sillyman’s Reliable Auto Body Shop. Sillyman was not there but Clyde talked with one Tom Stanton, not then known to Clyde but “apparently . . , employed there — he looked like it.” In response to Clyde’s inquiry whether “there was someone could come up with me and take the car [plaintiffs’ Chevrolet] back to the body shop,” Stanton said that he would. Clyde “drove back up in front of the garage with [Stanton] . . . got out of the car and turned it over to him.” At that time Carl Honeycutt, the president of defendant corporation, and Kyle Sillyman were talking together inside defendant’s place of business and both of them saw Stanton drive away in plaintiffs’ Chevrolet. Upon trial, Sillyman testified that Stanton had been employed at the body shop a “very short time . . . two, maybe three weeks,” and was not authorized to drive a customer’s vehicle without his (Sillyman’s) express permission. When the interested parties next saw plaintiffs’ Chevrolet later that day, it was “demolished.” Upon trial it was stipulated the damage thereto was $2,301, of which plaintiffs had collected $100 from Stanton.

A bailment is essentially a contractual arrangement [8 Am.Jur.2d Bail-ments § 43, p. 950] ; and, as generally used, the term “bailment” signifies a contract resulting from delivery of a thing by the bailor to the bailee on condition that it be restored to the bailor in accordance with his directions as soon as the purposes for which it was bailed are satisfied. Equity Mutual Ins. Co. v. Affiliated Parking, Inc., Mo.App., 448 S.W.2d 909, 914; Weinberg v. Wayco Petroleum Co., Mo.App., 402 S.W.2d 597, 599(4); Nuell v. Forty-North Corp., Mo.App., 358 S.W.2d 70, 75(3); Samples v. Geary, Mo.App., 292 S.W. 1066, 1067(2).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
460 S.W.2d 309, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratterree-v-general-motors-corporation-moctapp-1970.