United Consumer Discount Co. v. Paulovich

38 Pa. D. & C.2d 718, 1965 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 19
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County
DecidedDecember 27, 1965
Docketno. 724
StatusPublished

This text of 38 Pa. D. & C.2d 718 (United Consumer Discount Co. v. Paulovich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Consumer Discount Co. v. Paulovich, 38 Pa. D. & C.2d 718, 1965 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 19 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

McDonald, J.,

This matter is before the court upon petition of defendants to open judgment confessed by plaintiff on a note which they executed to obtain a consumers’ loan for the purchase of carpeting from a copartnership, known as Qualified Carpet Company (hereinafter referred to as “Qualified”). They contend plaintiff is not a holder in due course, and, therefore, they may assert against it defenses of fraud and failure of consideration.

On April 26, 1965, defendants executed a purchase order with Qualified for carpeting to be installed in their home. The inducement for this purchase, and without which it would not have been made, since husband-defendant was unemployed, was a “Customers Commission Agreement”, exhibit no. 3, wherein Qualified agreed to pay defendants the sum of $50 for each name submitted as a prospect, whether a purchase was made or not, and an additional $50 for each prospect submitted by any of those whom defendants had named when that person purchased carpeting. [720]*720They were led to believe the carpeting could be- paid for in this manner. On the same day, the security agreement and note, payable at United Acceptance Corporation of Ligonier, allied with plaintiff, were executed. The note was never discounted or returned to defendants.

On April 28, 1965, the carpeting was installed and that evening Adam Zubas, a partner in Qualified, called on defendants and explained the method of securing and submitting names for commission payments. He then drove them to Ligonier, where they met with Donald R. London, manager of plaintiff, and also United Acceptance Corporation of Ligonier. This was “late at night” and after plaintiff’s business hours. Mr. London prepared, and signed by defendants, a “Customers Statement of Contract”, which set forth the purchase price of the carpets, and in addition the sum of $645.70 as discount, service, insurance and recording charges. They also executed a note in the amount of $2,520, payable to plaintiff. A check was prepared by London, endorsed by husband-defendant, and turned over to Zubas. According to defendants, after the papers had been executed, husband-defendant asked London where to bring the commission payments which were to be made by Qualified. He was advised to send them directly to plaintiff, since, in the words of London, “You never know these people, they could be fly-by-night affair people”.

Defendants prepared a list of 16 names, and actually contacted two prospects. No one called for the list, as had been promised, and telephone calls to Qualified were not answered. No address appears on any of the Qualified papers. Alarmed, defendants contacted Attorney Patrick Gleason, who wrote to Qualified and determined it had moved without leaving a forwarding address. Zubas and the representatives of Qualified have not been heard from since. The attorney also [721]*721wrote to plaintiff, denying liability on the note. It was after this that judgment was entered in the amount of $2,520.

On April 28,1965, when Zubas called at defendants’ home, wife-defendant complained about loops on the carpeting which were loose. He advised her this was a minor imperfection in the loom, and it could be corrected by merely cutting the loops. Exhibits nos. 2-A, B and C, photographs taken by defendants, indicate the imperfection was rather widespread. The carpeting has since been removed and stored.

It isn’t difficult to conclude Qualified left the area on or about April 28, 1965, thus justifying the appellation of Mr. London that it was a “fly-by-night” concern. It is significant that one of the witnesses, Mrs. Doris Swindell, who had also purchased carpeting and complained to London that no commission payments were made, testified that Zubas, or a representative of Qualified, had left a $50 check at her home during her absence, and it was returned by the bank marked “account closed”. It was dated April 28, 1965, the same date as defendants’ loan.

Testimony offered by defendants indicates that other purchasers, as early as January 1965, and as late as April 14, 1965, had complained to London about the sales method of Qualified; i.e., that they were led to believe the carpeting would be paid for by commissions on names submitted under the “Customers Commisson Agreement”; the high rate of interest on the notes when it was learned they had been discounted by United Acceptance Corporation of Ligonier or plaintiff; and the failure of Qualified to pay the commissions agreed upon. It appears that Zubas, Robert Hudson, both partners of Qualified, and a man named Gerald Melady, had operated at least from January 1965, until March as “Associated Carpet Co.” (hereinafter referred to as Associated). Thereafter, accord[722]*722ing to Mrs. Antoinette Safina, Zubas said the name was changed because Melady “skipped town”. Six of defendants’ witnesses testified London had called them on the day the carpeting was installed (one said the call was a week later), and asked if they were satisfied. He did not discuss financing. Shortly thereafter, they received a payment book from either United Acceptance Corporation of Ligonier or plaintiff. This usually prompted an immediate call to London and a subsequent meeting with him.

These witnesses testified that at meetings with London, he referred to Associated or Qualified as “crooks”, “shysters”, and that they were “fly-by-night” concerns. Mrs. Mary Scalia met with London on April 12, and told him that Qualified had not paid commissions agreed upon, and he replied they must be “shysters”, but he thought they would be around for a year. He advised her to work on the referrals and get her carpeting' paid off. Mrs. Lura Mellott, at her meeting with him on April 14th, also attended by Mrs. Scalia, told him a news article had appeared in her area, Bed-ford County, critical of the carpeting agents then operating and warning persons to beware of purchases. Further, that there were rumors people in the Roaring Springs and Martinsburg areas of Blair County had been “taken”, and that Qualified was not reliable. She said that he replied, “He thought they were shysters ... and you people aren’t going to get hurt too bad because you are in on the ground floor. He said it was the ones on the end who are going to get hurt, but he said that they are going to be around here long enough that you will get some money out of them, he said even if it is only a couple hundred dollars it will pay your interest. . . .”

London testified he is manager of United Acceptance Corporation of Ligonier and plaintiff, and that Qualified representatives had contacted his Pittsburgh office [723]*723to discount notes. He then talked to someone at Hollidaysburg Trust Company, and learned the three men, Melady, Hudson and Zubas, were from Chicago, had discounted $150,000 of notes with the Trust Company and that they had an excellent reputation. He said his firm began to discount notes and had no complaints until Qualified left the area. He admits some of the men in Qualified were with Associated when he processed loans. The loans were generally of the direct consumer discount type, although some were discounted through United Acceptance Corporation of Ligonier. At present, the firm has about 25 loans on its books. He denied he referred to the representatives of Associated or Qualified as “crooks” or “shysters”, and he said he made an effort, unsuccessfully, to contact the person named in the newspaper article referred to by Mrs. Mellott. He does not favor the commission sales plan because the lending agency has no control over payments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Pa. D. & C.2d 718, 1965 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-consumer-discount-co-v-paulovich-pactcomplcambri-1965.