David D. CLAYTON, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. CROSSROADS EQUIPMENT COMPANY, Ivin Barlow, Les Barlow, Ralph H. Barlow and John Deere Company, Defendants and Appellants. (Two Cases).
Nos. 17013, 17014
Supreme Court of Utah
Sept. 17, 1982
655 P.2d 1125
Donald Kearney, a Vice President of Hawaiian Boat, Inc., testified at the preliminary hearing that he had searched the Hawaiian Boat Company records and he found no record of a boat numbered 108960578 having ever been manufactured or sold, but that a boat numbered 108960676 had been manufactured and sold in June of 1976 to an individual in Spokane, Washington. In light of the in-person testimony of Brent Thompson at trial we conclude that the testimony of Kearney is merely cumulative as to whether the Image Boat Company ever owned or sold a boat with the numbers on Chapman‘s invoice, and is clearly harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Oniskor, supra.
We affirm.
HALL, C.J., and OAKS and HOWE, JJ., concur.
STEWART, J., concurs in the result.
Willard R. Bishop, Cedar City, J. Rand Hirschi, Dennis McCarthy, Salt Lake City, for defendants and appellants.
Michael W. Park, Cedar City, for plaintiff and respondent.
HOWE, Justice:
The plaintiff, David D. Clayton, brought this action against the defendants Crossroads Equipment Company (Crossroads) and John Deere Company (Deere)1 seeking
On October 7, 1977 the plaintiff purchased a John Deere combine from Crossroads for $47,250. Plaintiff signed a contract marked “Retail Installment Contract, Security Agreement” which provided for a down payment of $18,900, an initial installment payment of $4,352 due on July 1, 1978, and equal payments of $3,793 every six months thereafter commencing January 1, 1979, until the balance was paid. Crossroads assigned this contract to Deere‘s branch office in Portland, Oregon for financing and it was accepted.
Plaintiff used both combines to harvest crops for farmers. He traveled from state to state to work and had 14 years of experience as a contract harvester. In early August of 1978 he brought both combines back to Utah in search of harvesting work. He had hoped to harvest barley for Ivin Barlow, president of Crossroads. When plaintiff arrived in Utah, however, he discovered that Barlow‘s barley crop was overrun with weeds and was not yet ready for harvest.
Plaintiff then had the combines serviced by Crossroads together with some warranty work. On September 21, 1978 he commenced leaving with them intending to travel to Illinois where he had arranged to harvest corn. Crossroads had earlier informed the plaintiff that he could not take the second combine from the Crossroads lot since Deere had refused to accept the contract for financing which left the combine without insurance coverage. When Ivin Barlow discovered that the plaintiff had taken both combines and was leaving town he attempted to overtake him. On his way, he stopped to enlist the help of Deputy Sheriff Wayne Holt. When Deputy Holt and Barlow caught up with plaintiff, he had already been stopped by Barlow‘s son, Les. Les Barlow had observed the plaintiff leaving and had pulled his pickup across the path of the 1978 combine which was being driven by Bill Miles, an assistant of the plaintiff. After a roadside discussion between the men, the officer took temporary possession of the keys to the two trucks on which the combines were loaded. Later that day Deere requested Crossroads’ assistance in further detaining the 1977 combine.
The two combines were moved to Crossroads’ lot. Plaintiff did not pursue obtaining their possession at that time but later brought this action.
Plaintiff was awarded damages of $27,400 against both defendants plus punitive damages of $20,000 against Deere because of its improper repossession. He also recovered nominal damages of $100 for slander, false arrest, or “unlawful detention.” Possession of the combines was given to the defendants. Crossroads was awarded a set-off of $1,413 which plaintiff owed to it on his open account, together with reasonable attorney‘s fees of $750.00 for collection services.
The broad issues which we consider material to the resolution of this appeal are:
- Whether the “Retail Installment Contract, Security Agreement” executed pursuant to the purchase of the 1978 combine was in full force and effect on September 21, 1978, the date of repossession.
- Whether the combines were wrongfully repossessed.
- Whether the trial court‘s award of damages was proper.
- Whether the trial court erred in awarding plaintiff punitive damages against Deere.
I. THE 1978 CONTRACT
One of the defenses raised by the Answer of Crossroads was that at the time the contract for the purchase of the second combine was entered into in May 1978, it was orally agreed between the parties that the contract would not be carried by Crossroads but that the purchase would have to be financed by John Deere as was the first contract, or by someone else. Thus the contract was subject to either a condition precedent to its taking effect, or was subject to a condition subsequent which would terminate it if the parties were unable to find financing. The trial court made no finding on this issue although by implication it found that the contract was in effect when the repossessions took place in September 1978.
The parties had made efforts from May until September 21, 1978 to obtain financing. Since they had been entirely unsuccessful in obtaining it, Barlow had the legal right to take possession of the combine because the condition of financing had not been met. In view of the uncontroverted status of the evidence in this regard, the judgment against Crossroads must be reversed and the case remanded to the trial court for the purpose of amending the Findings of Fact accordingly, and for the purpose of the court making a determination of how much, if any, of the $8,500 which the plaintiff had paid on the machine should be returned to him.
II. THE REPOSSESSION OF THE 1977 COMBINE
The next question presented is whether the 1977 combine was wrongfully repossessed. In the sales contract, there is a provision that:
In the event of the default (as defined on the reverse side hereof), holder may take possession of the GOODS and exercise any other remedies provided by law.
The event of default with which we are here concerned is recited on the back of the agreement as follows:
This note shall be in default ... if for any reason the holder of this note deems the debt or security unsafe, and in any such event the holder may immediately and without notice declare the entire balance of this note due and payable together with all expenses of collection by suit or otherwise, including reasonable attorney‘s fees.
The validity of such a contractual provision is not in dispute. Section
“Good faith” is defined by
This is not a case where the plaintiff‘s credit had deteriorated after the contract had been accepted by Deere. On the contrary, the plaintiff had made all required payments to date on the 1977 combine. Furthermore, a representative of Deere had met in June 1978 with the plaintiff to collect an overdue payment which plaintiff made to him. He indicated to the plaintiff that he would use his effort to induce Deere to accept the second contract. We therefore affirm the trial court‘s finding that Deere failed to act in good faith, based upon its finding that there was no substantial change in his credit standing between the time of the execution of the 1977 sales agreement and the time the defendants repossessed the combine.
Deere further contends that it was justified in deeming the debt and security unsafe because the plaintiff had declared his intent to take the combine to Illinois. The contract provided that it would be kept in Riverside County, California. The U.C.C. financing statement had been filed only in that state. This contention is also unavailing. Deere‘s own witnesses contradicted each other as to whether plaintiff‘s announced intention to take the combine to Illinois was a factor in its determination to repossess the combine. John Hubbard, manager of financial services in the Portland office, testified that while he did not object to the machine being brought to Utah for warranty work, he did object to it being taken to Illinois and this was one factor in his decision to repossess it. D.D. Sommerfield, assistant to Hubbard, testified that Deere would have repossessed the combine irrespective of the events of September 21, 1978. A note which Sommerfield made following a telephone conversation with the plaintiff in June 1978 bears out that repossession was considered by him at that early date. Deere was obviously shaken by the adverse credit information it had received from its Dallas office and as Sommerfield admitted, it was foregone that Deere would have to repossess the 1977 combine, but he did not know just when it would take place. In view of this conflict in the testimony of Deere‘s own representatives and in view of all of the evidence, the trial court was not compelled to believe and to find that Deere exercised its repossession rights because the plaintiff announced his intention to take the combine to Illinois.
III. THE DAMAGES
Deere next complains that the trial court erred in awarding the plaintiff as damages the amounts he had paid on the combine. We find no error in this regard. In Even Odds, Inc. v. Nielsen, 22 Utah 2d 49, 448 P.2d 709 (1968) we stated that the desired objective in computing damages and fashioning a remedy is to evaluate a loss suffered by the most direct and practical method which could be employed. It appears that allowing Deere to retain the combine which it had earlier repossessed in addition to compensating the plaintiff for his investment in the combine, was the most direct method of providing relief to the plaintiff. In Keller v. Deseret Mortuary Co., 23 Utah 2d 1, 455 P.2d 197 (1979) we held that a non-breaching party to a contract should receive an award which will put him in as good a position as he would have been in had there been no breach. That appears to be exactly what the trial court attempted to do. The combine had been repossessed by Deere and had been in its possession for several months at the time of trial. Allowing Deere to retain possession of the combine and compensating plaintiff for his investment therein was not an unreasonable method of fixing damages.
In fixing damages the trial court is vested with broad discretion and the award will not be set aside unless it is manifestly unjust or indicates that the trial court neglected pertinent elements, or was unduly influenced by prejudice or other extraneous circumstances. Aerospace Realty v. Tooth, Ltd., Colo.App., 539 P.2d 1314 (1975).
It is true, as pointed out by Deere, that the plaintiff did not seek rescission of the contract in his complaint but sought damages for loss of use both in his complaint and at trial. However, Deere has not shown how it was prejudiced by the trial court‘s action in adopting a different measure of damages. Plaintiff testified that based on past experience, he could have earned approximately $43,000 after expenses with the two combines for the harvesting which he had already contracted for in the fall of 1978. He was, of course, unable to perform the harvesting after the repossession. Had the trial court compensated him for the loss of use, of one combine, the amount of the award could have been, based upon plaintiff‘s testimony, in excess of the $18,900 which the trial court awarded him on the rescission and restitution theory.
(Two justices have dissented to this part of the opinion, but a 2 to 2 vote works an affirmance of the trial court.)
IV. THE PUNITIVE DAMAGES
Deere contends there is no basis in the evidence for the award by the trial court of $20,000 punitive damages against it. Deere assails that court‘s findings that it (1) conceived a scheme to extract from the plaintiff as much money as possible and to then repossess the combine, and (2) that Ivin Barlow enticed the plaintiff to come to Utah and bring his machines upon a false promise that he had crops to harvest. Without discussing these points in detail, if we assume the validity of Deere‘s argument, there is other competent evidence which amply supports the award of punitive damages.
The judgment below is affirmed except as modified herein and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Each party shall bear his or its own costs.
STEWART, J., concurs.
DURHAM, J., does not participate herein.
OAKS, Justice (concurring and dissenting):
I concur in Justice Howe‘s opinion, except for Part III, damages.
When Deere wrongfully repossessed the 1977 combine, the buyer was not in default. Consequently, the Uniform Commercial Code provisions regulating the rights of the parties upon the debtor‘s default are inapplicable.1 The sole statutory provision applicable to the rights of a debtor who is not in default is
In this case, the buyer (debtor) elected an action for wrongful repossession of goods sold under contract, an intentional tort which, if proven, would entitle the buyer to a tort measure of damages, including punitive damages. First Security Bank of Utah v. JBJ Feedyards, Inc., Utah, 653 P.2d 591 (1982); 1 C.J.S. Actions § 47 (1936); 25 C.J.S. Damages § 120 (1966); 22 Am.Jur.2d Damages § 245 (1964). However, the compensatory relief awarded by the trial court
The trial court‘s broad discretion in fixing damages cannot justify the compensatory damages awarded in this case for three reasons: (1) A plaintiff cannot elect one theory or remedy in his complaint and proof at trial and then obtain relief only appropriate to another and inconsistent theory or remedy. 28 C.J.S. Election of Remedies § 3 (1941). Cf. Cook v. Covey-Ballard Motor Co., 69 Utah 161, 169-70, 253 P. 196, 199 (1927). (2) Even the remedy of recision requires that the plaintiff‘s recovery be reduced for benefits received, in this case the reasonable value of the use of the combine during the time he possessed it. Erisman v. Overman, 11 Utah 2d 258, 262, 358 P.2d 85, 87 (1961). (3) Punitive damages are only recoverable for a “tortious invasion of the chattel holder‘s interest,” Annot., 35 A.L.R.3d 1016, 1025 (1971); authorities cited supra, and therefore cannot be an element of damages accompanying the contract remedy of recision for a mere breach of contract. Reese v. Cradit, 12 Ariz.App. 233, 236, 469 P.2d 467, 470 (1970).
I would therefore vacate the award of compensatory damages and remand with directions to redetermine plaintiff‘s damages on the existing record on the basis of the loss the plaintiff suffered from the wrongful action of Deere, with appropriate adjustment for the disposition of the collateral since it was repossessed. In the alternative, the award of punitive damages should be vacated and plaintiff‘s recovery as compensatory damages of the amounts he had paid should be reduced by the value of his possession of the combine.
HALL, C.J., concurs in the concurring and dissenting opinion of OAKS, J.
