Richardson v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.

68 S.E.2d 874, 221 S.C. 14, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 9, 1952
Docket16579
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 68 S.E.2d 874 (Richardson v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 68 S.E.2d 874, 221 S.C. 14, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 65 (S.C. 1952).

Opinion

StukeSj Justice.

In this action for conversion of a Buick automobile respondent, as plaintiff, recovered verdict for $300.00 actual and $1,500.00 punitive damages, and from the judgment thereupon the defendent appealed.

Respondent is a Negro domestic servant and at the time of the trial was cooking at a Clinton hotel. She purchased the used car on December 21, 1949, from Smith Motor Company of Laurens for the total time price of $1,737.36, of which $540.00 was paid at the time. The deferred balance of $1,197.36 was payable $66.52 on the 21st day of each succeeding month until paid; and the usual conditional sales contract or chattel mortgage was executed and delivered to the Motor Company which assigned it for value to appellant and guaranteed the payment.

Respondent met the first two monthly payments and then fell into arrears. According to her testimony she was visited by a representative of appellant, a Mr. Nash, on April 24, 1950, and she paid him $70.00, his receipt for which was in evidence. It specified that it was applied $66.52 to principal, which was the March payment, and $3.48 to a collection charge. She testified unequivocally that Mr. Nash agreed that she should have one month from that day to make another payment. Nash testified conflictingly which made an issue for the jury and their verdict indicates that they resolved it favorably to respondent.

On May 17, 1950, another representative of appellant, whom respondent mistakenly identified in court as the same Mr. Nash, called with a colored man and demanded payment or possession of the car. Respondent protested that it was not time for another payment according to the extension which had been granted to her. She testified that he said one of the Smith brothers instructed him to get the money or the car and that she surrendered possession by giving him the keys because, quoting, “I wasn’t going to *18 get into no confinement with him, I didn’t want to come in contact with him.” This because, she said, he was a white man. She further testified that they had an argument and she refused to sign a paper which he brought, which latter this representative corroborated in testimony by saying that she refused to sign, quoting, “the surrender form.” Respondent was told that the car would be stored at Smith Motor Company and put on sale from which she would get, quoting from her testimony “some partial out of it.” The colored man who had accompanied appellant’s representative then got in the car and drove it away; Respondent afterward went to the Motor Company where she saw the car on the sale lot and it was being offered for sale but she heard nothing more and afterward consulted the attorney who later brought this action. He addressed two successive letters to appellant asking for public sale and accounting but received no answer to either.

A colored preacher testified for respondent that he saw the car after repossession on the sale lot of Smith Motor Company and it was priced, quoting him, “somewhere in the teens.”

The version of Nash in his testimony for appellant was that when he interviewed respondent on April 24 and collected $70.00 he understood the resulting extension of time for further payment to be until May 15, not until May 24, as contended by respondent and as evidently believed by the jury. A Mr. Smith, not of the Motor Company but a representative of appellant, testified that it was he who took possession of the car but he said that it was on May 23rd instead of May 17th as was insisted by respondent. Both dates fell before expiration of the extension as contended for by respondent in her complaint and testimony. This representative of appellant testified that respondent did not protest his demand for possession and voluntarily gave him the keys but he admitted that she refused to sign the surrender form which he had for her execution.

*19 A member of the firm of Smith Motor Company was also offered as a witness by appellant but he did not fix the date of repossession. His Company made needed repairs to the car of $69.00 and thereafter sold it about June 3rd to a used car dealer in Greenville for $925.00 which he testified was its fair value. He admitted, however, that he had priced the car to respondent’s preacher-witness at $1,295.00. If the car had been sold at public sale and brought less than the mortgage debt, Smith Motor Company would have had to pay the deficit the same as if sold privately, as it was.

Appellant has briefed three questions as follows:

1. Was it error to submit question of an extension of time to jury when there was no evidence of consideration for such extension, no evidence that extension was in writing as required by contract, no evidence of agent’s authority to modify contract and no evidence of waiver by defendant?

2. There being no evidence of malice, willfullness, intimidation or oppression in the repossession and sale, should the Court have submitted the question of punitive damages to the jury?

3. Was the verdict excessive ?

The first question, which was omitted but expressly not abandoned in oral argument, is composed of issues which were not raised by the pleadings and, therefore, were not decided by the trial court. They cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. Applicable is the following from the opinion in the recent case of Franklin Savings & Loan Co. v. Riddle, 216 S. C. 367, 374, 57 S. E. (2d) 910, 913: “This ground of appeal is not responsive to the issues raised by the pleadings, nor does it appear to have been presented to or passed upon by the trial judge; and therefore is not properly before this Court. Prosser v. Avery Lumber Co., 162 S. C. 159 [160], 160 S. E. 431.”

The vital issues made by the complaint, answer and evidence were, first, whether the extension Expired on May 15, as contended by appellant, or May 24, not *20 whether there was an extension; and, if May 24, whether the repossession was accomplished against the will of respondent or with her consent. There was ample evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury which concluded these factual issues against the contentions of appellant; and they were submitted upon clear and appropriate instruction by the Court. If appellant conceived error in the statement of the issues at that time, its duty was to raise the question or questions then and not await appeal from adverse verdict and judgment. “It is well established by numerous decisions of this court that any error on the part of the trial judge in the statement of the issues will be deemed' waived if counsel fail to bring it to his attention.” Per Lide, A. A. J., in Coleman v. Lurey, 199 S. C. 442, 20 S. E. (2d) 65, 66. There is, therefore, no occasion to further discuss appellant’s purported first question.

Turning to the second question, the assumptions of fact which it contains are unwarranted as is seen by the foregoing summary of the evidence. Submission to the jury of the issue of punitive damages was justified on the record by the authority of the leading case of Parker v. General Motors Acceptance Corporation (the identical appellant here), 204 S. C. 547, 30 S. E. (2d) 589, 591, 153 A. L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E.2d 874, 221 S.C. 14, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-general-motors-acceptance-corp-sc-1952.