Travis Spaulding v. Troy Sumrall

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2018
Docket09-16-00153-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Travis Spaulding v. Troy Sumrall (Travis Spaulding v. Troy Sumrall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travis Spaulding v. Troy Sumrall, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

___________________

NO. 09-16-00153-CV ___________________

TRAVIS SPAULDING, Appellant

V.

TROY SUMRALL, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 118028 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The main issue we are required to consider in resolving this appeal is whether

lay testimony about the value of a classic car, which was acquired by trade, offers

any probative value to prove what a car like the one the plaintiff claimed he had

acquired in the trade should have been worth. The trial court employed a benefit-of-

the-bargain measure of damages when awarding damages, and based its award on

1 the plaintiff’s testimony about what a car like the one he believed he acquired in the

trade should have been worth.

We conclude the testimony before the trial court regarding the value of the

classic car was incompetent to prove the car’s market value on the date the trade

occurred. Because the plaintiff’s lay opinion about the car’s value was the only

evidence admitted in the trial regarding the car’s value, we conclude the plaintiff

failed to meet his burden to establish that he suffered any damages due to the trade

he agreed to make to acquire the classic car. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s

judgment and render a take-nothing judgment in the defendant’s favor.

Background

This appeal stems from a dispute between the two parties who made a trade

involving a 1974 Corvette Stingray. In the trade, the plaintiff exchanged his 25-foot

power catamaran in return for the defendant’s foreign sports car, a 1974 Corvette

Stingray, and $20,000. In the suit, the plaintiff claimed that the Stingray had been

represented as having all original equipment, including a 454-cubic-inch engine,

when the car had been modified with an aftermarket 454-cubic-inch engine that

replaced the car’s original 350-cubic-inch engine.

The evidence from the trial shows Troy Sumrall purchased the catamaran for

$55,000 from a bankruptcy estate. After Sumrall acquired the catamaran, he

2 advertised it for sale on the internet for $65,000. Sumrall’s listing indicated that he

would consider both cash proposals and trades. When Travis Spaulding, the

defendant in the proceedings in the trial court, learned the catamaran was for sale,

he called Sumrall and asked if he could look at it. Eventually, Spaulding traveled

from his home in Blanco County to Sumrall’s home in Jefferson County to examine

the catamaran. After discussing the amount of cash that Sumrall wanted for his

catamaran, the parties settled upon an agreement that involved a trade. The

agreement the parties made required Sumrall to convey his catamaran to Spaulding

for Spaulding’s foreign sports car and a fishing boat, and required Spaulding to give

Sumrall between $20,000 to $25,000 in cash, with the understanding that the exact

amount of cash that would change hands would be decided after Sumrall had

examined Spaulding’s sports car and fishing boat, items that were located at

Spaulding’s home in Blanco County.

Subsequently, Sumrall took his catamaran to Blanco County where he

inspected Spaulding’s fishing boat and sports car. During the trial, Sumrall testified

that his inspection revealed that the fishing boat was in poor condition, which led

him to decide that he did not want it. After looking at Spaulding’s fishing boat,

Sumrall inspected the sports car, and he determined that it was in a condition he

found acceptable for the purposes of the trade.

3 As the agreement was about to fail due to the condition of Spaulding’s fishing

boat, Spaulding offered to substitute a 1974 Corvette Stingray that he and his wife

owned in the transaction as a replacement for trading his fishing boat. During the

trial, both parties agreed that Spaulding first mentioned the Stingray when Spaulding

was in Jefferson County, and that the Stingray was not included in the trade that the

parties had settled upon when they made the agreement they reached in Jefferson

County regarding the trade. Nonetheless, according to Sumrall, when Spaulding first

mentioned that he owned the Stingray while the parties were in Jefferson County,

Spaulding said the car was “all original,” and that it had a factory installed 454-

cubic-inch engine. After Sumrall went to Blanco County and Spaulding offered to

substitute the Stingray to save the parties’ trade, Sumrall agreed to an exchange that

required him to exchange the catamaran for Spaulding’s Stingray, a foreign sports

car, and $20,000 in cash.

After acquiring the Stingray, Sumrall offered to sell it on the internet for

$32,000. During the trial, Sumrall testified that he determined what he should ask

for the Stingray after reviewing advertised prices for Stingrays like the one he

believed he had acquired from Spaulding. According to Sumrall, the Stingray was

listed as having “all original” equipment in the listing that he used to advertise the

car for sale. Sumrall received several inquiries in response to the listing for the

4 Stingray, but got no offers. According to Sumrall, one of the individuals who

contacted him informed him that the Stingray had originally been equipped with a

350-cubic-inch engine, and he also learned from the same caller that the engine now

in the car was not the engine the car came with when it was originally sold. Sumrall

explained that the caller told him that this information could be determined by using

the car’s vehicle identification number (VIN),1 from information that was widely

available.

After learning that the Stingray was not equipped with its original engine,

Sumrall changed his listing on the Stingray, disclosing that the Stingray was

equipped with an aftermarket, 454-cubic-inch engine and aftermarket badges.

Sumrall ultimately sold the Stingray for $14,000, $18,000 less than the price he

originally asked for the car when it was first listed for sale.

In February 2011, Sumrall sued Spaulding in Jefferson County alleging that

Spaulding had misrepresented the car as being equipped with all original equipment

1 The testimony indicates that before Spaulding obtained the Stingray, the engine, car badges, and emissions sticker had been replaced with aftermarket equipment to reflect that the Stingray was equipped with a 454-cubic-inch engine. The testimony also indicates that a person who knew about classic cars could determine by examining the car’s VIN whether the currently installed engine was the one that was originally installed in the car when it came out of the factory.

5 when it was not. The theories in Sumrall’s petition include claims for breach of

contract, deceptive trade practices, negligent misrepresentation, and fraud.

Spaulding filed a motion asking that the case be transferred to Blanco County

in response to Sumrall’s suit. According to Spaulding’s motion, the agreement for

the Stingray occurred in Blanco County, not Jefferson County, and he claimed that

Jefferson County was not a county of proper venue for the suit. When Sumrall

responded to Spaulding’s motion, he alleged that “[w]hile it is true that [he] traveled

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