Valincenti v. Central Motors Inc.

174 A. 799, 115 Pa. Super. 74, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 392
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 7, 1934
DocketAppeal 249
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 A. 799 (Valincenti v. Central Motors Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valincenti v. Central Motors Inc., 174 A. 799, 115 Pa. Super. 74, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 392 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

Carmela Valicenti brought this action of trespass in the county court of Allegheny County to recover damages for the unlawful conversion of her automobile by the defendant. She recovered a verdict on which judgment was duly entered. Defendant appealed.

Pour issues of fact were raised by the evidence: (1) Was plaintiff the owner of the automobile? (2) Did *76 she make a tender to defendant of the balance dne on the automobile? (3) Had defendant repossessed itself of the automobile before the tender was made? (4) The damages she suffered by the unlawful conversion, if there was one. But only one substantial question of .law was involved, viz., whether plaintiff’s ownership was sufficiently proved to sustain the action.

On this the plaintiff averred in her statement that on or about April 1, 1932 she was the owner ofi a certain Hupmobile sedan automobile, bearing Serial No. L-11507, Motor No. 11643. In its affidavit of defense, filed under the rules of the county court — the Practice Act of 1915, P. L. 483, is limited by its title and terms to practice in the courts of common pleas — the. defendant admitted “that the plaintiff was the owner of that certain Hupmobile sedan, described in the plaintiff’s statement of claim,” but averred “that such ownership was subject first to the lien of a certain bailment lease agreement existing between the said plaintiff and the defendant corporation, a true and correct copy whereof is hereto annexed, marked Exhibit ‘A’ and made a part hereof.” By rule 12 of the county court, averments in the plaintiff’s statement in actions of trespass as to the ownership of the vehicle involved are taken to be admitted unless denied, and matters expressly admitted are not put in issue.

The evidence showed that plaintiff’s husband, Prederico Yalicenti, had negotiated with the defendant for the purchase of this automobile on June 16, 1931 for $1,450; that not having the full purchase price available he made a down payment of $1,200 and executed a bailment lease to the defendant by which he agreed to pay “the balance, $250, in three monthly instalments of......dollars each, secured by a judgment note, payable to the order of the bailor;” that *77 on December 17, 1932, when this balance had been reduced to $200, defendant agreed that Valicenti might transfer to the plaintiff his interest in the car, and thereupon defendant executed a bailment lease for the car to the plaintiff for the period of four months, for which plaintiff agreed to pay, for rent and use of the same, $200 payable in four monthly instalments of $50 each, secured by a, judgment note payable to the order of bailor. Both bailments provided for the sale of the car to the bailee, after all instalments had been paid, for one dollar. The term of this second bailment lease extended to April 17, 1932, but .the judgment note, given as security, was made payable in sixty days. At the expiration of this date, (60 days), plaintiff paid $40, and gave a new judgment note, with her husband as surety, for $160, payable in thirty days, or a month before the last instalment of rental was due and payable. Plaintiff contended that this second note was given by her and accepted by defendant in payment of the balance due by her under the lease. The evidence is not as strong as it might be, but there are circumstances in connection with it that the jury might take into consideration. While the original contract with Prederico Valicenti was one of bailment in form, he made a down payment of over four-fifths of the purchase price of the car, and the ‘rental’ called for was the balance of the purchase money, $250, payable in three months. See Bowser v. Franklin Mortgage & Investment Co., 305 Pa. 459, 158 A. 170, as to the right to inquire into ,the real nature of the contract in such cases. WThen his interest in the car was transferred to his wife, the plaintiff, and a bailment lease given for four months, — expiring April 17, 1932 — the judgment note taken as security under the contract did not run to the expiration of the term, but was payable in sixty days, and when *78 it fell due, demand was made on behalf of defendant, not for the rental which had accrued for two months, but for the entire amount. Pursuant thereto plaintiff paid $40 and gave the new judgment note, with her husband as surety, for $160, payable in thirty days, or a month before the term of the lease expired, and when it fell due, defendant made demand, not for the instalments of rental then due and payable under the lease, but for the entire note, $50 of which,- under, the bailment, was not due until the expiration of the term, a month later. But apart from these circumstances, there was other evidence of plaintiff’s title to the automobile, arising out of the facts in connection with the tender hereinafter referred to, sufficient to take the case to the jury.

The plaintiff and her husband testified that on March 28, 1932 the automobile was delivered to the defendant to have some carburetor trouble fixed. Defendant’s witnesses did not deny this, but on the contrary admitted that the carburetor had been leaking and that they had repaired it.

There is no dispute that previous to this date, March 28,. 1932, defendant had not availed itself of its right under the bailment lease to repossess itself of the car for default in payment of rental; nor is it averred by defendant that when so delivered to it for repairs, it refused to accept the car for repairs and claimed the right to repossess and hold it for default in rental. The delivery on March 28, 1932 was by virtue of a locatio operis faciendi, — using the old terms, which better describe the object of the bailment by plaintiff to defendant, — for such it was — a bailment to have work and labor, by way of repairs, performed or bestowed upon it: 6 Corpus Juris 1100, sec. 16-B; 3 R. C. R. 79, sec. 8. Such a bailment imposed on the bailee in this particular locatio, the defendant, — the *79 obligation, inter alia, “to surrender tbe property on which, the labor has been expended, on payment for the work done”: Zell v. Dunkle, 156 Pa. 353, 357, 27 A. 38.

With affairs in this situation, defendant on April 6, 1932 wrote plaintiff a letter, as follows: “This is to advise you that Hupmobile Sedan, Serial No. L-11507, Motor No. 11613 which we leased to you under date of December 17,1931 for the sum of $200, and which lease is now in default, will be considered repossessed and sold by us at the best price obtainable unless we are in receipt of remittance in full within the next three days.”

Plaintiff produced evidence that on April 9, 1932, within the three day limit fixed in this letter, her husband, on her behalf, tendered the defendant payment in full of the note and interest, and charges for repairs, and demanded the delivery of the car; which defendant’s manager refused and said it was too late; that defendant had repossessed itself of the car, because of plaintiff’s default, and intended to keep it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 A. 799, 115 Pa. Super. 74, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valincenti-v-central-motors-inc-pasuperct-1934.