206 S.W.2d 591 | Tex. | 1947
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The respondent purchased a 1941 Buick on the used-car lot of petitioner at the ceiling price of $1,527, as fixed by the office of Price Administrator, plus a properly chargeable item of $86.00 for sales taxes, license and notary fees, making a grand total of $1,563.00. Respondent traded in a 1937 Studebaker automobile as part of the consideration for the Buick. She paid petitioner $790.00 in cash. A note she executed netted petitioner $750.00 from a finance company. The balance of the purchase price in the sum of $23.00 was credited on the written purchase contract as an allowance for the Studebaker automobile.
The respondent contends that, notwithstanding the written recitals in the purchase contract, the parties orally agreed that the exchange value of the -Studebaker was $225.00, which fact, she asserts, fixed its market value 'at that sum regardless of its actual market value. On the contrary, petitioner contends that the price of $23.00 was agreed upon as its exchange value, which, petitioner insists, was the actual market value of the automobile.
. The only evidence offered or introduced as to the value of the Studebaker in the condition in which it was traded was that of the petitioner, which showed that it was only $23.00, the amount allowed for it in the written purchase contract. The respondent took the position that its actual market value- was immaterial, and that the alleged parol agreement that its value was $225.00 was controlling.
At the conclusion of the evidence petitioner filed a motion for an instructed verdict which was based in part on respondent’s failure to show that the market value of the Studebaker was in excess of the $23.00 actually allowed for it. The mof/ion was overruled. The cause was thereupon submitted to a,- jury which found, in response to special issues, (1) that petitioner orally agreed to allow respondent $225.00 for the Staáebaker; (2) that petitioner charged respondent a price for the Buick greater than the ceiling price allowed by OPA regulations; (3) that the overcharge was $173.00; (4) that tJhree times that
The petitioner filed a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, in which it was urged, first, that there was no evidence as to any value of the Studebaker other than the $23.00 allowed in the written contract, and, secondly, that the testimony of the alleged oral agreement violated the parol evidence rule because it varied the terms of the written purchase contract. The trial court granted the motion, and entered judgment for petitioner notwithstanding the verdict.
The Court of Civil Appeals held that the question of the value of the Studebaker was immaterial, and that, since the jury determined there was an oral agreement to allow $225.00 for it, that finding established an overcharge regardless of its actual market value, and rendered judgment upon the verdict of the jury. 203 S. W. (2d) 325.
The term “price” as used in the Emergency Price Control Act is defined as the “consideration demanded or received in connection with the sale of a commodity.” 50 U. S. C. A. Appendix, Section 942(b). The Studebaker was part of the consideration demanded and received in the sale of the Buick. To determine whether there has been an overcharge we must first find what was intended by the Administrator in issuing the price regulation which controls the transaction.
It was stipulated by the parties in the trial court that the sale of the Buick was controlled by the terms of Maximum Price Regulation Number 540. The material portions of that regulation are as follows:
“It shall be a violation of this regulation to charge a price above the applicable maximum price in connection with any sale of a used car, either alone or in conjunction with any other consideration even though the price increase appears only indirectly. Specifically, the seller is not permitted to require the purchaser, as a condition of the sale or transfer of the car, * * * to make payment in whole or in part by exchanging or transferring or trading in any other vehicle or other product or commodity, or where there is an exchange, transfer, or trade-in, toN require him to accept an allowance for the vehicle, product or commodity exchanged, transferred or traded in which is below"-, its reasonable value. * * *”
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed and that of the trial court is affirmed.
Opinion delivered December 10, 1947.
Rehearing overruled December 31, 1947.