Sanders v. Chaddick

267 S.W. 248
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1924
DocketNo. 563-4016
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 248 (Sanders v. Chaddick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Chaddick, 267 S.W. 248 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

BISHOP, J.

Defendant in error, C. Chad-dick, filed suit against the plaintiff in error, H. E. Sanders, in the district court of Nue-ces county on January 25, 1922, to recover on a note in the sum of $1,245, of date September 1, 1920, and due two months after date, and to foreclose. a chattel mortgage given by Sanders on. one Hudson four-passenger speedster automobile.

Sanders answered by general denial and plea of failure of consideration. He also, by cross-action, alleged that on the date of said note Chaddick sold him said Hudson automobile, representing that it was a new car, in good condition, and in good running order, and of the then price and fair and reasonable value of $2,995; that he purchased said automobile relying on said representations and believing them to be true, and paid therefor one Oldsmobile car, of the reasonable value and at the agreed price of $1,750, and executed and delivered said note and mortgage; that thereafter, on the 18th day of November, 1920, he paid Chaddick the sum of $58.50, and all interest on said note to January 2, 1921, and on November 23, 1920, the sum of $441.50; that said Hudson automobile was not a new car, and was not in good condition and running order, and was not of the reasonable price and value of $2,995, but was a used car, and not of thp value of more than $500, all of which was well known to Chaddick; that he did not learn that said automobile was not a new car until January 14, 1921, and that he would not have executed said note and mortgage and made said payments, nor would he have transferred to Chaddick his said Oldsmobile car, had he known said representations so made to him were untrue; that when he discovered he had been defrauded he demanded that Chaddick cancel and deliver to him his note, and . return the consideration paid by him for said Hudson automobile, which was refused. He alleged that said Hudson automobile was defectively constructed, and contained weak and defective parts, and was in such poor condition and repair that he was compelled to expend $500 in order to be able to use it. In his plea, he made tender of the Hudson car and prayed for rescission and damages.

By trial amendment, Chaddick alleged that at the time he sold the Hudson automobile to Sanders it was of the reasonable market value of $2,845; that Sanders paid the sum of $1,600 by his transfer of the Oldsmobile car, and thereafter, on November 18, 1920, the sum of $58.50, and on November 23, 1920, the further sum of $441.50, leaving a balance due of $745, with interest at 6 per cent, and prayed that, if for any reason he was not entitled to recover as alleged in his original petition, he have judgment for said sum of $745, with interest thereon.

Plaintiff in error, Sanders, in answer to the trial amendment, alleged that Chaddick had not complied with the requirements of the law when he repurchased the secondhand Hudson automobile from T. D. Ward, to whom he had sold same prior to his sale to Sanders, and that he did not comply with the requirements of the law when he sold said secondhand car to Sanders. The evidence shows that Chaddick, who was an automobile dealer, had, prior to the sale of the Hudson car to Sanders, sold said car to T. D. Ward and thereafter repurchased, same.

The case was submitted to a jury, and on special issues they found that ati the time T. D. Ward resold the Hudson ear to Chad-dick, although he had in his possession the tax collector’s receipt for license tax, he did not deliver it to Chaddick nor transfer it, and did not deliver a bill of sale to the car to Chaddick; that at the time Chaddick sold the car to Sanders he did not transfer the receipt, and did not deliver a bill of sale; that Chaddick represented to Sanders that the Hudson automobile was a new car, and that Sanders believed that representation to be true at the time he purchased the car; that, though the car was secondhand, it was of the reasonable market value of $2,845 when sold to Sanders; and that at that time no replacements and repairs on said car-were necessary.

On motion of Sanders, the trial court rendered judgment that Chaddick take nothing by his suit, but that Sanders recover from Chaddick the sum of $1,750, the value of the Oldsmobile car traded by Sanders to Chad-dick, with 6 per.cent, interest from September 1, 1920, and the sum of $100 paid by Sanders to Chaddick on November 18, 1920, with 6 per cent, interest from said date, and the sum of $441.50 paid by Sanders to Chad-' dick on November 23, 1920, with 6 per cent, interest from said date, said sums with interest aggregating the sum of $2,542.24. The judgment also required Sanders to deliver to Chaddick the Hudson ear on the payment of said last-named sum, and decreed and fore-closed a lien on said car to secure said sum.

On appeal by Chaddick from said judgment to the Court of Civil Appeals, the judgment of the district court was reversed and the cause dismissed; that court holding that “the evidence showed that H. E. Sanders bought the secondhand car from appellant (Chaddick) without obtaining a bill of sale or transfer of the license, and also sold an Oldsmobile car to appellant without giving a bill of sale or transfer of the license,” in violation of a criminal law making it unlawful to buy or trade a secondhand motor vehicle without demanding arid receiving the tax collector’s receipt for the license fee issued for said motor vehicle for the year that [250]*250same is bought, or to sell or trade such vehicle without transferring and delivering such receipt, and without delivering to the purchaser' a bill of sale, as provided by the Acts of the 36th Legislature, c. 138, pp. 258-256 (Vernon’s Annotated Penal Code Supplement 1922, arts. 1617%-1617%k); that in the transaction both Chaddick and Sanders violated the provisions of the statute, and for that reason neither should be allowed to recover. 250 S. W. 722.

Plaintiff in error, Sanders, by his assignments complains that the Court of Civil Appeals is in error in holding that he violated the law in either failing to obtain a bill of sale or. transfer of license to the Hudson car or in failing to give a bill of sale or transfer of license on his transfer of the Oldsmobile car.

We think these assignments should be sustained. On the trial there was no contention that the Oldsmobile car was transferred without complying with the statute requiring delivery of bill of sale and license receipt. There was no evidence raising or tending to raise this issue. From the absence of evidence, the court was not warranted in assuming that in the transaction Sanders had violated a criminal law. The evidence showed, and the jury found, that at the time Sanders purchased the Hudson car it was represented to him as being, and he believed it to be, a new, and not a secondhand, car. This being true, he should not be held to be a guilty participant in the crime of transferring a secondhand motor vehicle without complying with the requirements of the law.

The undisputed evidence shows that, after Sanders learned and knew of the fraud practiced in the sale of the Hudson car to him, he retained the car and continued to use it, and was using it at the time of the trial. By reason of this act, he was not entitled to a judgment rescinding the contract and recovering the original purchase price of the car. Plouston Motor Car Co. v. Brashear (Tex. Civ. App.) 158 S. W. 233; Southern Gasoline Co. v. Adams (Tex. Civ. App.) 169 S. W. 1143; Hallwood Cash Register Co. v. Berry, 35 Tex. Civ. App. 554, 80 S. W. 857.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-chaddick-texcommnapp-1924.