Standard Motors Finance Co. v. Mitchell Auto Co.

293 S.W. 1026, 173 Ark. 875, 57 A.L.R. 877, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 2, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 1026 (Standard Motors Finance Co. v. Mitchell Auto Co.) 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
Standard Motors Finance Co. v. Mitchell Auto Co., 293 S.W. 1026, 173 Ark. 875, 57 A.L.R. 877, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 270 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellant is a’ corporation residing in and operating ont of New Orleans, and is engaged in the business of buying notes given in partial payment of used automobiles. It deals with authorized sales agents of automobiles who take used cars as part payment of new ones, and its plan of operation is as follows: It furnishes to the dealer a blank sales contract, which contains questions to be answered by the dealer and certain other questions to be answered by the purchaser of a used car from the dealer. This contract requires the dealer to add a certain per cent, of the cash price to the sales price when the car is sold on credit, and a statement is furnished the dealer by appellant showing what this amount shall be. This addition to the dealer’s cash selling price is referred to as a “service charge.” Identical contracts ar-e used in all cases, and the contract signed by Daniel Sherman, who bought a used car from appellees, will show the system employed. The cash price of the car bought by Sherman was $224, and to this ■ the dealer added $26, making a credit sales price of $250. The purchaser was required to pay 40 per cent, of the credit sales-price, which in Sherman’s case amounted to $100. The balance of $150 due by him was divided into monthly payments, and the title to the car was reserved until all payments were made.

The .questions which t'he purchaser was required to answer gave information as to the purchaser’s age, present and previous employment, property owned and incum-brances thereon, earnings, and from what sources, and references, with addresses. Attached- to these question ■ blanks was a promissory note, reserving title to the car sold, and providing that the installments should bear interest after their maturity at the highest lawful rate.

It was the theory of appellant that, if the purchaser paid 40 per cent, of the credit selling price of the car, the interest therein thus acquired would be sufficient to induce him to make the monthly payments of the balance of the purchase money as they matured.

When these blanks had been properly filled and the note signed by the purchaser, the contract, and the note would be sent to appellant, which was given thirty days in each case to determine whether it would purchase the note offered, and, if accepted within that time, appellant remitted to the dealer the balance due on the note, dess the “service charge.” Appellant’s profit in the transaction was represented by the service charge, which, as we have said, was the difference between the dealer’s cash selling price and the credit price. Appellant was allowed tlie thirty days for sueli investigation as it cared to make, including inquiry concerning the purchaser.

Appellant’s managing officers testified that its uniform and invariable rule was not to buy any note unless it was affirmatively shown that the purchaser had made a cash payment of 40 per cent, of the purchase price, and that all dealers, -including appellees, were so advised.

Appellees, who are brothers, doing business as the Mitchell Auto Company, in making sales of new cars trade in used cars, which they sell for the best price obtainable. W. A. Taylor had charge for appellees of the sale of these used cars, and he was allowed a commission of 40 per cent, of the price received, and Taylor was required by appellees to collect as much as 40 per cent, of the purchase price of the cars sold by him, and appellees charged Taylor’s account with 40 per cent, of the used car which Taylor sold.

The contract and note of Sherman, together with other similar notes and contracts of other purchasers of used cars from appellees, were sent to and accepted by appellant, who remitted to appellees the amount of all the notes, less the total of the service charges. Only a few payments were made on any of these notes, whereupon appellant sent a representative to Stephens, the place of appellees’ business, to collect the notes. This representative interviewed the makers of these notes, and found that none of them had paid 40 per cent., as recited in the sales contract, in cash. For instance, it was shown in the Sherman contract that Sherman had actually paid only $10 in money, but had agreed to pay Taylor the balance of $90, which the sales contract recited as paid. Appellees testified that they knew nothing about the arrangement between Sherman and Taylor, or between the other purchasers and Taylor, and supposed that the $100 cash had been paid to Taylor by Sherman, and that the 40 per cent, had been paid by all of the other purchasers, and that these were cash transactions so far as they were concerned, as they charged Taylor’s account with that amount of money. Taylor testified that he did not report to appellees that Sherman and the other purchasers of cars had not paid him the 40 per cent, cash payment; that he did not consider it necessary to do this, as he was selling the cars on commission, and the transaction was, as between him and appellees, a cash transaction, as he was charged in each instance with the cash reported by him as having been collected from the purchasers.

Taylor was the agent of appellees, and they are charged with any knowledge acquired by him while acting-in the discharge of his agency. Pie knew that appellant bought these notes on the assumption that 40 per cent, of the sales price had been paid, and that the representation to that effect contained in the sales contract was false. Upon discovering the falsity of this representation appellant demanded a cancellation of the sale of the notes, and tendered them to appellees, and, when this demand was refused, immediately brought this suit to enforce rescission, judgment being prayed in the alternative for the amount paid appellees for the notes, less the collections made thereon. The complaint was dismissed as being'without equity, and this appeal is from that decree.

We think a case for rescission was made. Appellees may not have personally known that the purchasers had not made the 40 per cent, cash payment, but Taylor, their agent, knew this, and they are charged with his knowledge. The note which they tendered appellant contained the affirmative recital that 40 per cent, of the sales price had been collected, and this statement was false. This representation was highly material in inducing the purchase of the notes, and its falsity affords ground for rescission.

In 12 E. C. L., at page 345, § 100, of the chapter on “Fraud and Deceit,” it is said:

“False representations which are made with knowledge- of their falsity, and with a fraudulent intent, are, of course, ground for relief in equity as well as at law. As a general rule, however, courts of equity will grant relief in sncli cases by way of rescission or otherwise, even though no fraudulent intent on the part of the person making the representations is shown, and though he made them innocently, as a result of misapprehension or mistake. All that need he shown under such circumstances is that the representations were false and actually misled the person to whom they were made.”

Appellees insist that the decree should he affirmed for the reason that appellant does not come into court with clean hands, it being’ alleged that the transaction in its inception was usurious and void on that account, for the reason that the service charge exceeded 10 per cent, per annum on the money advanced by appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 1026, 173 Ark. 875, 57 A.L.R. 877, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-motors-finance-co-v-mitchell-auto-co-ark-1927.