587 N.E.2d 972 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1990
Dan Prickett brought suit for damages and/or the rescission of an automobile sales contract, alleging that the seller, Foreign Exchange, Inc. had violated the Odometer Rollback and Disclosure Act, R.C.
On June 24, 1985, Foreign Exchange, a car dealership in Dayton, purchased a 1982 Jaguar XJ6 from RAM Financial Corporation ("RAM") at an automobile auction in Louisville, Kentucky. Pursuant to Ky.Rev.Stat. 190.300, RAM executed an odometer disclosure statement which it gave to Foreign Exchange along with the title to the Jaguar. On this statement RAM indicated that the odometer read 28,633 miles and certified "to the best of my knowledge that the odometer reading is and reflects the actual mileage of the vehicle." This reading, however, did not reflect the actual mileage of the car. *238
On the left inside door frame was a sticker which read: "ODOMETER NOTICE: ODOMETER HAS BEEN REPAIRED OR REPLACED AND SET TO ZERO ON 3-9-83. PRIOR TO REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT MILEAGE WAS 14,800. OWNER OR AGENT UNLAWFUL TO REMOVE OR ALTER." There is no indication that either RAM or Foreign Exchange noticed this sticker, despite the fact that the laws of both Kentucky (Ky.Rev.Stat 190.290) and Ohio (R.C.
Foreign Exchange returned to Ohio with the Jaguar. The car was inspected by the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles, which certified its mileage to be 28,692, thus also disregarding the additional 14,800 miles that the Jaguar had actually been driven.
On June 27, 1985, Foreign Exchange sold the Jaguar to Prickett for $19,700 plus $1,182 in taxes. Prickett traded in a 1981 Mazda 626, which reduced the purchase price by $3,000. Pursuant to R.C.
A few months after Prickett took delivery of the car, it developed mechanical problems. While the car was being repaired, a mechanic pointed out the odometer repair notice to Prickett, who then contacted Foreign Exchange about the mileage discrepancy.
Eventually, Prickett filed suit under the Odometer Rollback and Disclosure Act, R.C.
As his sole assignment of error, Prickett asserts that:
"The trial court erred in rendering summary judgment in favor of defendant on plaintiff's complaint on the basis that Section
The relevant sections of the Odometer Rollback and Disclosure Act were amended after this action was filed. Therefore, we must apply the statutes as they existed in their pre-amendment versions. State, ex rel. Slaughter, v. Indus. Comm. (1937),
Both parties draw the court's attention to R.C.
"No person shall fail to provide the true odometer disclosure required by
The required disclosure referred to is the statement by Foreign Exchange, quoted supra, that the odometer reading reflects the actual mileage of the vehicle. The sole issue of this appeal is whether the Odometer Rollback and Disclosure Act requires that the transferor have actual knowledge that the odometer reading is incorrect before the liability provisions of R.C.
This court has recognized that the first sentence of R.C.
The leading case in this area is universally acknowledged to be Flint v. Ohio Bell Tel. Co. (1982),
The plain meaning of the word "knows" in this context is that the transferor must have actual knowledge of odometer discrepancies caused by previous owners before he can be held liable for them. This construction is supported by the fact that the General Assembly saw fit to amend *240
R.C.
Nothing in the record indicates that Foreign Exchange actually knew that the Jaguar's odometer was incorrect by 14,800 miles. Prickett's own testimony is most enlightening in this matter:
"Q. You're not alleging here that the Foreign Exchange had any knowledge of the mileage difference from that registering on the odometer, are you?
"A. I'm not alleging that.
"Q. Okay. In fact, you are aware through your diligent search and informational gathering that the transaction and the odometer changing or set-back or whatever modification we want to call it, was done by the owner prior to the Foreign Exchange or at least that's where the problem gap was?
"A. The record indicates that.
"* * *
"Q. Sure. You're not claiming John Higgins or the Foreign Exchange set it back? His signing and saying while in my possession it was not set back, is an accurate statement?
"A. No, I'm not alleging that he's misrepresenting his possession of it.
"Q. Right. Okay. And the other statement, `to the best of our knowledge, the odometer reflects the actual reading,' you're not saying that he had any other knowledge, so that statement's also true, to your knowledge?
"A. Uh-huh."
Thus, Prickett has conceded that Foreign Exchange had no actual knowledge of the odometer discrepancy. There being no dispute as to the relevant facts, summary judgment in favor of Foreign Exchange was appropriate.
Prickett's sole assignment of error having been found to be not well taken, the judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
WOLFF, P.J., and GRADY, J., concur. *241