Stracener v. Nunnally Bros. MoTor Co.

121 So. 617, 11 La. App. 541, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 260
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 1929
DocketNo. 432
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 121 So. 617 (Stracener v. Nunnally Bros. MoTor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stracener v. Nunnally Bros. MoTor Co., 121 So. 617, 11 La. App. 541, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 260 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

ELLIOTT, J.

This is a redhibitory action brought by, Elbert H. Stracener against Nunnally Bros. Motor Company, a commercial firm composed of Charles F. Nunnally and Boyce Nunnally, to rescind the sale of a secondhand automobile, on the ground that one of the cylinders of the motor had been scored, and injuring it to the extent, that it was practically useless; and on the further ground that in addition to the injury to the motor, the differential gear in the rear axle housing broke into fragments and ground to pieces due to the fact that it was in such a worn condition at the time he acquired the car it was unable any longer to stand the strain of ordinary use.

On the trial the lower court permitted the plaintiff to testify that defendant Boyce Nunnally and J. P. Williams, defendant’s salesman,, had each warranted to him that the car was in good mechanical condition and that the salé was consummated as a result of said warranty; that he was not aware that the written act of sale contained a clause to the effect that no warranties had' been made by the vendor. The defendants contend that this ruling was erroneous. The ruling in our opinion was correct. The plaintiff alleges, in addition to the facts stated, that the injury to the motor and the differential gear were not discoverable by simple inspection; that he was not aware of their existence at the time of the sale and that they prevented the car from functioning properly; that the defendants in selling him the car, warranted it to be in first-class mechanical condition; that in buying it he accepted and acted on their representations; that their representations on the subject were false and constituted, on their part, fraud and bad faith toward him in the matter of said sale.

Defendants allege that they sold the car to the plaintiff by written act, and without warranty, under the stipulation: “No warranties have been made by the vendor, unless indorsed hereon in writing.” They deny in their answer the fraud, bad faith, and misrepresentations charged against [543]*543them by the plaintiff. The questions of fraud and of warranty are put at issue by the pleadings of the parties.

No warranties are indorsed on the act, whereby defendant sold the car to the plaintiff. The act therefore purports to have been a sale, without any stipulation on the subject of warranty. Consequently, if the sale was made with warranty as alleged by the plaintiff, it follows that the act, to the extent stated, contains a false declaration. In such a situation, parol evidence was admissible and properly received in order to show the truth and fact. Greenleaf on Evidence (I2th Ed.) vol. 1, Subject, “Admissibility of Parol Evidence,” sec. 284, p. 320.

It was also proper in connection therewith for the plaintiff to show by his parol testimony that he was not aware that the act of sale contained the clause quoted therefrom. The plaintiff not only so testified, but there is no evidence to the contrary. He is, in fact, supported by defendant. Boyce Nunnally likewise admits in his testimony that he did not know that the act of sale contained such a clause. As both buyer and seller were unaware that such a clause was contained in the act, it cannot be said to have been stipulated by them, and cannot be given effect, the Code providing that: “Consent being the concurrence of intention in two or more persons, with regard to a matter understood by all, reciprocally communicated,” etc. C. C. art. 1819. The Civil Code, arts. 2235, 2236, 2242, 2276 cited by defendant, do not have reference to such a situation. The case Lyons vs. Fitzpatrick, 52 La. Ann. 697, 27 So. 110, is for the same reason not an authority against the ruling. The printed clause mentioned appearing in the act of sale will, therefore, not be given any effect, but the question of warranty will be determined, according to the pleadings and the oral testimony on the subject.

The plaintiff testified that Boyce Nunnally and J. P. Williams declared to him that the automobile was in good mechanical condition and that ■ he bought it on that understanding. Boyce Nunnally testified that he did not warrant the car to be in first-class condition, that he told plaintiff he did not guarantee used cars. Mr. Williams, however, defendants’ witness and the salesman who represented them in selling the car to plaintiff, admits in his testimony that he guaranteed to the plaintiff that it would run as good as any other car that had been used, for the price asked for it. In answering the next question, he says he did' not guarantee the mechanical condition of the car, but that he knew it to be in good running condition, and told plaintiff that it was in good running condition, and that in so saying he was representing the defendant. The evidence shows that plaintiff is an automobile mechanic; that he inspected the car, ran it some, had another automobile mechanic look at it, and required defendant, before he would agree to buy it, to furnish him with new cylinder rings and a piston pin, without charge, to be by him put into the car. We see nothing in this which should weaken plaintiff’s position in the case. He knew that a used car likely needed or would soon need new cylinder rings and a new piston pin. His requirement amounted to nothing more than a reasonable provision, and there is no reason why he should not — and, as he says, he did — suppose the ear to be otherwise in good condition, and that in buying it he acted on defendant’s guaranty that it was in first-class condition. And it is our conclusion that defendant sold this car to the plaintiff, with warranty against injuries, such as it was subsequently found [544]*544to have sustained. The situation is therefore different from that which existed in the case Ash vs. Hale, 137 La. 149, 68 So. 389. The evidence shows that this car was practically worthless, because of its condition at the time it was acquired by the plaintiff. The defendant made no effort to show otherwise. The injuries which rendered it so were not apparent nor discoverable by simple inspection, nor as the result of the short trial given it by plaintiff before buying. They manifested themselves on the first trip, which amounted to a real test in the matter of condition, but the actual trouble could not be definitely ascertained except by taking 'the engine apart. The plaintiff did that some ten days after the sale and discovered that the trouble was because the cylinder had been scored, and soon after-wards made the further discovery that the differential gearing had been worn out. These injuries were not of recent date. They existed at the time plaintiff acquired the car. It is very probable that they existed at the time defendant acquired it and that the defendant was not aware of their existence and sold the ear to plaintiff in good faith. But when the vices of the thing sold renders its use so inconvenient and imperfect, that it cannot be supposed that the buyer would have bought it had he been aware of the vices, the good faith of the seller, when there has been no renunciation of warranty, affords no reason under the law why he should not be compelled to restore the price received in the sale. The law provides that it must be restored. “A declaration made in good faith by the seller, that the thing sold has some quality which it is found not to have, gives rise to a redhibition, if this quality was the principal motive for making the purchase.” C. C. art. 2529; Fuentes vs. Caballero, 1 La. Ann. 27; Foster & Co. vs. Baer & Co., 7 La. Ann. 613; Fuller vs. Cowell, 8 La. Ann. 136, 58 Am. Dec. 676; Peterkin vs. Martin, 30 La. Ann. 894; George vs. Shreveport Cotton Oil Co., 114 La. 498, 38 So. 432.

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Bluebook (online)
121 So. 617, 11 La. App. 541, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stracener-v-nunnally-bros-motor-co-lactapp-1929.