Sawyer v. Pioneer Leasing Corporation

428 S.W.2d 46, 244 Ark. 943, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 841, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1520
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 3, 1968
Docket5-4501
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 428 S.W.2d 46 (Sawyer v. Pioneer Leasing Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. Pioneer Leasing Corporation, 428 S.W.2d 46, 244 Ark. 943, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 841, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1520 (Ark. 1968).

Opinions

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

This case involves an ice machine. Appellant, Guy -Dwight Sawyer, is an independent grocer, operating in Little Eock. Appellee, Pioneer Leasing Corporation, is a Delaware corporation, which instituted suit against Sawyer for the sum of $2,039.40, pursuant to a written instrument termed “Master Lease Contract.” The instrument recites that the lessor is Pioneer Leasing Corporation and the lessee is Guy Dwight Sawyer d/b/a Sawyer’s All Star Poods. The parties agreed that lessee was leasing a Lineo lee Station, and provided:

“This schedule is for a period of 60 months, at $45.32 per month beginning July 23, 1963. First and last 4 payments payable at time of signing this Schedule in the amount of $226.60.”

Section 5 of the agreement recites:

, “No warranties or representations regarding the items herein leased or their condition, quality or suitability, or their freedom from latent defects, have been made or shall be deemed to be made by the Lessor, and Lessee has selected the items leased and the same have been delivered to Lessee at Lessee’s sole risk and discretion. ’ ’

Section 8 states:

“At the expiration of the term of this lease for any item(s) leased hereunder, Lessee shall immediately redeliver such item(s) at Lessor’s place of business or such other reasonable place as Lessor may designate within the State where the item)(,s) was leased, in like-condition as it was received, less normal wear, tear and depreciation; properly crated with freight prepaid.”

Section 9, a rather lengthy section provides, inter alia, that in ease of default in payment for a period of •ten days, lessor is authorized to take immediate possession of the leased property, and lessee shall remain liable for the payment of the total rental, all such rental being immediately due and payable. Both pages of the instrument provide, “This lease cannot be cancelled.”

The contract commenced on July 23, 1963, and appellant made his down payment, and several monthly payments, the last payment being made in May, 1964. Upon default, the suit was filed, and Sawyer, in his answer, asserted that the performance of the machine had been misrepresented at the time he entered into the contract, and that it was not suitable for the purpose for which he desired to use it, though represented to be suitable, and that there had been an implied warranty of fitness upon which he l-elied; that such warranty had been breached, since the machine had ceased to operate, and was incapable of being repaired. On trial, appellee moved for a directed verdict at the conclusion of the evidence, which motion was granted, the jury returning its verdict for appellee in the amount of $2,039.40. From the judgment so entered, appellant brings this appeal.

Sawyer testified that he had a number of customers who desired that he acquire an ice maker, in order that they might obtain packaged ice. He made inquiry, and subsequently, a man named Don Barnett from Benton (evidently learning of Sawyer’s inquiries) contacted him about a machine. Barnett showed appellant pictures of a Lineo ice making machine, and advised that the machine would work either inside or outside of the building. They decided the best location would be the front porch. Sawyer further stated that Barnett told him that the machine would manufacture 400 pounds of ice per day, and appellant, in agreeing to take same, stated that he understood that he was purchasing the property. Subsequently, Barnett brought back the lease agreement, heretofore referred to, and when Sawyer inquired why he was being asked to sign a lease agreement, instead of a purchase agreement, was told, according to the witness, “Well, it was just like buying a car, after you pay so many payments, it is your box.” Sawyer testified that he did not read the provisions of the contract in detail, and that he had only a sixth grade education.

Still further, according to the witness, the machine, after being installed, worked satisfactorily for about six months, in fact, until “the first cold spell came.” It then ceased to function. Appellant called Barnett to get the name of the mechanic for the company, and was advised that the company did not have one, and that Sawyer should call any refrigeration company. Ralph Henderson, a refrigeration man, was contacted, and the witness related that Henderson worked for over a month on the machine, and was paid “around $100.00 for his work,” but Henderson was unable to get the machine to produce more than fifty pounds of ice per day. Nothing further was done until spring, when a man named Byers was contacted; Byers, too, was unable to get the machine in any better working order, and only charged around $100.00 for his work, instead of the original intended charge of $150.00. After the unsuccessful efforts of Byers, appellant testified:

“Well, I called Mr. McCoy . . . well, I first call Mr. Barnett and in turn called Mr. McCoy, then I called Mr. 'Carter from Memphis and I called a fellow from Warren, then I called the ice making company itself, down in Texas . . . tried to get all of them to do anything about the box, tried to get it to operate. * * * None of them would do anything.”

Thereafter Sawyer quit making payments, and the suit followed.

C. H. Turner of Memphis, Treasurer of Pioneer Leasing Corporation, and in charge of all the records of tlio company, testified that Pioneer Leasing Corporation is in the equipment leasing business. He stated that his company buys equipment after it has been selected by the lessee, and he has signed lease agreements; that all items are delivered to a lessee at the latter’s sole risk, and that the company only purchased the ice making machine because Sawyer had selected it. Turner testified that he had no idea what Sawyer was told at the time he signed the lease; that Barnett had never been an employee of appellee, hut rather, was a sales agent for the supplier of the equipment; that the machine Ijad been purchased from the Tri-State Ice Machine Company, and Sawyer had paid a total of $679.80. The company official said that the expected life of the machine was eight or ten years, and at the end of the five-year lease period, Pioneer “more than likely would have offered to sell it to Mr. Sawyer” for a price that would have to be negotiated. He stated that appellee had had no leases on ice machines that had expired.

John P. McCoy, who had been employed by Pioneer in 1964, 1965, and 1966, stated that prior to the transaction, he had never met Sawyer or Barnett; that he did not write up the agreement and did not know who did write it. The witness had directed a letter to Turner, relating that Sawyer was very unhappy with the machine, had spent money endeavoring to have it repaired, and had expressed the thought that Pioneer should “put the pressure on Tri-State to get the machine working. He claims lie is not going to make any more lease payments until the machine is fixed. I told him that maintenance was not our problem.” McCoy had no idea what Barnett might have told Sawyer about his relationship with the company. These were all of the witnesses who testified.

Of course, the only question before this court is whether appellant offered sufficient evidence to warrant the submission of the case to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
428 S.W.2d 46, 244 Ark. 943, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 841, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-pioneer-leasing-corporation-ark-1968.