Susan Oik, as president of Empire Distributors, appeals from the trial court’s grant of Hub Motors’ motion for summary judgment on Oik’s complaint for fraudulent inducement and breach of a duty of good faith and fair dealings in negotiating several leases for Ford vans and trucks. Because the trial court correctly found that Oik failed to show she reasonably relied on the salesman’s representations, we affirm.
This suit involves five leases: two Ford vans that Oik leased in November 1991, and three trucks that she leased in October, November and December 1992. Oik’s complaint alleges that one of Hub’s salesmen fraudulently induced her to lease trucks for her business instead of purchasing the trucks. Oik became unhappy with the leases when Empire’s vice-president started questioning the wisdom of leasing the vehicles because she “wasn’t happy with the residual” value at the end of the lease period. Several weeks after she entered into the last lease, Oik consulted her accountant who informed her it was costing her $15,093 more to lease the trucks than to purchase them. Oik claims that the reason she decided to lease the trucks and vans instead of purchasing them was the salesman’s assurance that the interest rate available on a lease vehicle was just as good if not better than the interest rate Oik could get from her own bank if she bought the trucks and vans.
Hub Motors filed a motion for summary judgment on Oik’s complaint, which the trial court granted. The trial court found that Oik could not show she reasonably relied on the salesman’s representations and also had not shown any damage resulting from leasing the vehicles instead of purchasing them. We agree.
1. The essential elements of fraud are: (1) a representation made by the defendant, (2) with the knowledge that it was false, (3) and with the intention of deceiving the plaintiff; (4) a reasonable reliance upon the representation by the plaintiff; and (5) loss by the plaintiff as a proximate result of the misrepresentation.
Evans Toyota v. Cronic,
There was deposition testimony that there are many reasons why a company may prefer to lease rather than buy vehicles, even if it were paying a higher interest rate for the lease than it would for the purchase, and it is difficult if not impossible to compare payments made under a lease with payments made on a purchase. Nevertheless, even assuming that the total cost under the lease compared with the total cost under a purchase was the only important factor for Oik, she had all the figures she needed to determine whether the lease was more expensive than the purchase. She testified at her deposition that she had already negotiated a sales price with the fleet manager at Hub Motors before she went to the salesman’s office to discuss a lease. The lease papers she signed gave all charges and fees, the amount due at inception, the amount of the payments, the length of time of the lease and the residual value of the truck or van at the end of the lease. Therefore, Oik could easily compare how much she would pay under the lease with how much she would pay on a purchase.
Oik also claims that the salesman refused to give her the cap cost or what she contends is the actual price of the vehicle under the lease and, therefore, she was unable to determine what rate of interest they were charging her. But, Oik’s claim is not that she was damaged because she is paying more interest than she was led to believe; rather, Oik’s claim is that it cost her some $15,000 more to lease than to purchase. Because this information was readily available to her at the time she signed the lease, she cannot show that she reasonably relied on the salesman’s statements about the equivalent interest rate. See
Garcia v. Charles Evans BMW,
In addition, we note that the cases cited by Empire concern a failure to disclose a fact which the other party could not discover by the exercise of ordinary prudence and caution, and therefore, they are not on point. Likewise, contrary to Oik’s argument, Evans Toyota, supra, does not apply in this case. In Evans Toyota, the salesman convinced Cronic to buy a used truck by assuring him the truck was fully covered under the manufacturer’s warranty. At the time, the salesman knew the truck had been in an accident and was repaired with nonToyota authorized parts and labor and, therefore, could not be covered under the warranty. Id. at 320. Unlike this case, the customer could not have discovered that the truck was repaired with nonauthorized parts.
Thus, because Oik could not have reasonably relied on any representations by Hub Motors’ salesman in determining whether it would cost more to lease or purchase the vehicles and because any loss suffered by Oik was not the result of the salesman’s alleged misrepresentations, the trial court correctly granted Hub Motors’ motion for summary judgment on Oik’s fraud claim.
2. Oik also claims the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on her claim for breach of good faith and fair dealings. The trial court correctly found that the count alleging this claim referred only to the performance of duties under the contract and because Oik alleged bad faith and fraud only in the inducement of the contract itself and not in the performance of the contract, Hub Motors was entitled to summary judgment on this claim. See
Southern Business Machines v. Norwest Financial Leasing,
3. Hub Motors’ motion for penalty for frivolous appeal is denied.
Judgment affirmed.
