Smith v. Rosenthal Toyota, Inc.

573 A.2d 418, 83 Md. App. 55, 1990 Md. App. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 11, 1990
Docket1358, September Term, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 573 A.2d 418 (Smith v. Rosenthal Toyota, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Rosenthal Toyota, Inc., 573 A.2d 418, 83 Md. App. 55, 1990 Md. App. LEXIS 85 (Md. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

WILNER, Judge.

James and Carolyn Smith sued Rosenthal Toyota, Inc. in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County for fraud and for conversion of a 1981 Chevette that was owned by them. They appeal from the entry of summary judgment in favor of Rosenthal.

On July 10, 1987, after dropping his wife off at work, Mr. Smith stopped at the Rosenthal showroom to look at some trucks. He was driving the Chevette, which was titled in his name and his wife’s jointly. He found a truck that he liked but told the salesman, one Willie McAllister, that he generally did not buy anything without his wife’s consent. After some further discussion, McAllister asked Smith whether he had the title certificate to the Chevette. Smith recounted the conversation in his deposition testimony:

“I said yes, it’s at home, but why would I need the title? He said, well, it’s just a formality. We don’t have any money in the house, and at this time he expressed to me well, why don’t you take the truck home and test drive it for the weekend, and if your wife likes it, she can come back and sign and we’ll finalize the deal. I said, well, that’s the only way I can get the truck because it’s quite obvious from what you are telling me that I don’t make enough money. You know, that is what he expressed to me.” 1

At that point, the salesman drove Mr. Smith to his home so that he could retrieve the title certificate for the Chevette. On the way, Smith again asked the purpose of obtaining the certificate as it was in both names and again he was told that “it’s just a formality.” Mr. Smith got the *58 certificate and returned to the showroom, whereupon McAllister told him that Rosenthal would get the truck ready for him to take home but that he would have to sign some papers. Specifically:

“Okay. After he [McAllister] came back [from talking with the manager], he told me, he said, well, they are going to clean the truck up, you can take it home for the weekend; if your wife doesn’t like it, then you come back and, you know, if she likes it, we’ll finalize the deal. If not, then things will go back to square one, is what Mr. McAllister told me. So I said okay. I then left my car there — no. We went to the finance office where they handed me some papers, which I never read, I just signed them. It took me like about three seconds to sign them and I was on my way.”

The papers Mr. Smith so quickly signed consisted of (1) a retail installment contract under which he agreed to purchase the truck for $13,843, of which $2,800 was to be paid through the trade-in of the Chevette, $1,920 was to be paid in cash, and $9,122 was to be financed; (2) an agreement providing, in part, that if Rosenthal was unable to find a financial institution willing to buy the installment contract, it had the right to acquire the Chevette for $900; (3) the title certificate to the Chevette, which Smith endorsed in blank; (4) a written warranty that he had traded the Chevette for the truck, that he had good title to the Chevette free of all liens and encumbrances, that he would deliver good title within five days, and that he would “reimburse Rosenthal Toyota Company for the total amount of this vehicle if I cannot fulfill the above obligations;” and (5) a credit application showing his income from employment as a “houseman” for Days Inn as $16,000 and his wife’s income as $42,000.

In addition to these papers, which Mr. Smith signed, Rosenthal gave him a “Notice to Cosignor” form advising a cosigner that “[y]ou are being asked to guarantee this debt” and warning the cosigner to “[t]hink carefully before you do” because “[i]f the borrower doesn’t pay the debt, *59 you will have to.” Inferentially, this form was given to Mr. Smith so that he could have Mrs. Smith sign it. See n. 1, ante.

Mrs. Smith arrived home late that Friday and did not see the truck until the next morning. She instructed her husband to return it, which he attempted to do the following Monday. Rosenthal refused to accept the truck back, however, insisting that Mr. Smith had bought it: “I said you told me that I had to bring my wife in here for signing these papers and he said no, no, we didn’t need your wife’s signature. He said you qualified. I said how could I qualify when I was told I didn’t make enough money? He said well, we already done it. He said you bought a truck.”

Mrs. Smith was working for a law firm at the time. When her husband informed her that Rosenthal had refused to take back the truck, she discussed the matter with one of the attorneys, who then called Rosenthal. The attorney was told to write a letter which, on behalf of Mrs. Smith, he did. Mrs. Smith hand-carried the letter to Rosenthal’s manager that afternoon. According to Mrs. Smith, the manager read the letter, laughed at her, and told her that he would neither take the truck back nor return the Chevette. This action followed. 2

The court granted Rosenthal’s motion for summary judgment on essentially two bases. It first concluded that, as no promises, representations, or inducements had been made to Mrs. Smith, her action for fraud must fail. With respect to Mr. Smith’s action and Mrs. Smith’s suit for conversion of the Chevette, the court relied on clauses in two of the agreements signed by Mr. Smith on July 10: the warranty that he would deliver good title to the Chevette or reimburse Rosenthal if he was unable to do so, and the *60 concluding statement in the agreement respecting the approval of credit that “This agreement shall supercede [sic] and prevail over any prior or contemporaneous oral or written agreements entered into between the parties hereto.” Though purporting to eschew any reliance on the parol evidence rule, which it said did not apply, the court found this integration clause dispositive, holding:

“Now you are saying but he was told in order to induce him to sign the contract that that was a controlling provision. Said in legal terms, the provisions of what he was told were different than the provisions of what he signed. And that’s exactly what the case says you can’t claim; that if what you signed is clear and unambiguous and you had the opportunity to read it and understand it, and you didn’t, then that is it.”

We find no error in the court’s disposition of Mrs. Smith’s claim for fraud. We do not have the same confidence in its resolution of the other claims, however, and shall reverse the summary judgment entered as to them.

Fraud Claims

In order to prevail in an action for tortious fraud, a plaintiff must show that (1) a false representation was made; (2) the falsity was known to the speaker or the misrepresentation was made with reckless indifference to its truth; (3) the misrepresentation was made for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff; (4) the plaintiff relied on the misrepresentation, had a right to rely on it, and would not have done the thing from which the injury resulted if the misrepresentation had not been made; and (5) the plaintiff suffered loss or injury by reason of the misrepresentation. Everett v. Baltimore Gas & Elec., 307 Md.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
573 A.2d 418, 83 Md. App. 55, 1990 Md. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-rosenthal-toyota-inc-mdctspecapp-1990.