Appellee brought this action to recover compensatory and punitive damages for the alleged fraud and misrepresentation of appellant, an automobile dealer, in the sale of a used pickup truck. Appellant seeks reversal of a judgment for $350 compensatory damages and $5,000 punitive damages, asserting error in (1) the denial of its motion for a directed verdict, (2) instructing the jury that appellee had the burden of proving fraud by a mere preponderance of the evidence rather than by clear and convincing evidence, and (3) submitting the question of punitive damages to the jury and instructing the jury that a corporation could be held liable for exemplary or punitive damages based upon unauthorized and unratified acts of its agents. Appellant also argues that the jury verdict for punitive damages is excessive in that it bears no reasonable relationship to the actual damages and that it was based upon passion and prejudice. We find no error and affirm the judgment.
Insofar as the contention of appellant as to the denial of a directed verdict is concerned, we have carefully considered the evidence as abstracted and, giving it its strongest probative force and drawing all reasonable inferences in his favor, it is sufficient to present a jury question. See Greiner Motor Co. v. Sumpter,
Conflicting conclusions might be drawn from the evidence on this point. The vehicle was purchased by appellee Moore on November 8, 1969. He testified that he discovered the actual mileage sometime in the summer of 1970, in a conversation with William Lee Adams, who traded the truck to appellant. He said that Jim Ray, a salesman and one of the owners of Ray Dodge, Inc., had stated when the purchase was made that if anything was wrong with the truck he could bring it back for repairs, and that Ray also assured him that the odometer reading was correct. He did take the vehicle back for a tune-up and oil change, for rebuilding of the motor and carburetor and for problems with the heating and air conditioning systems. He was satisfied with the service on most items, but said that he was displeased with results on the heating and air conditioning control system and on the failure to replace shock absorbers as promised, and disgusted with the necessity for repeated returns of the truck for such services. Appellee said that he first learned of the mileage discrepancy not more than six weeks prior to the date of filing of the suit, which was August 3, 1970. He said that he and his wife were debating the steps to be taken during this interval. He admitted that payments on the contract were not discontinued and that he did not make any objection to appellant about the misrepresentation before filing suit.
Waiver is the voluntary abandonment or surrender by a capable person of a right known by him to exist, with the intent that he shall forever be deprived of its benefits. It may occur when one, with full knowledge of the material facts, does something which is inconsistent with the right or his intention to rely upon it. Sirmon v. Roberts,
Appellant relies upon such cases as Advance Aluminum Casting Corp. v. Davenport,
Appellant’s argument that the proof of fraud must be clear and convincing is based upon the premise that the fraud charged is contradictory of the written vehicle buyer’s order signed by appellee, citing Belew v. Griffis,
The questions pertaining to the award of punitive damages are not presented as clearly as they might be as an instruction complained of by appellant is not abstracted. The major issue, however, pertains to the propriety of permitting the jury to consider the question of exemplary or punitive damages. Appellant argues that its conduct was not characterized by either wilfulness and malicious conduct or gross fraud required as a basis of such damages. Particular emphasis is given to the facts that appellant’s salesmen readily gave appellee the name of the owner of the vehicle from whom they acquired it and from whom appellee eventually learned that the mileage was considerably greater than that registered on the vehicle odometer and that appellee himself had once dealt in used cars.
We have said that before punitive damages may be awarded, it must be shown that there was a wanton disregard for the rights and safety of others on the part of the tortfeasor. Nance v. Cook,
Here the motive of the injuring party becomes material. Mere negligence, indifference, or careless disregard of the rights of others is not sufficient upon which to base a recovery for exemplary damages. The acts must be such as to evince malice. It is true that in law malice is not necessarily personal hate. It is rather an intent and disposition to do a wrongful act greatly injurious to another.
This posture with reference to the type of conduct upon which an award of punitive or exemplary damages may be founded is quite similar to that of the courts of other jurisdictions which have sustained verdicts for such damages founded upon representations based on false mileage readings resulting from a seller’s action in turning an odometer back. In Williams v. Miller Pontiac Co.,
If, then, there was evidence tending to show that appellant intentionally performed a deliberate act with the intention of misleading a prospective purchaser about a material matter to his injury, it was proper to permit the jury to consider the award of exemplary or punitive damages. There is really no serious contention here that appellant or its employees did not turn the odometer back to reflect a reading several thousand miles less than the correct mileage. By so doing, appellee was led to believe, and says that he was actually told by appellant’s salesman, that this reading represented the actual mileage the truck had been driven. Furthermore, the evidence appears undisputed that the dealer’s salesman assured Moore that he would have the benefit of the balance of the manufacturer’s warranty which covers a period of either five years or 50,000 miles of travel, depending upon which causes the earlier termination. The transfer of warranty was approved. The former owner testified that appellant gave him a bad trade allowance for the truck because of the actual mileage. The only motive an automobile dealer could possibly have in turning back an odometer on a vehicle is to make it appear that the vehicle had only been driven the distance shown by the changed reading. It does not seem that any plausible argument could be advanced that such an act was not done in a deliberate attempt to deceive any prospective purchaser about a material matter to his injury and to the advantage of the seller. When such action is accompanied with an actual representation that the reading was correct, there can be no doubt that the trial court should properly permit the jury to consider the allowance of exemplary damages.
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We do not agree with appellant that tíre giving of the former owner’s name to appellee afforded him such an opportunity to obtain accurate information contrary to that given by appellant as would bar allowance of punitive damages, as a matter of law, even when the buyer had dealt in used cars some years ago, when appellant might have been expected to have possessed peculiar knowledge on the subject. Hutchinson v. Gorman,
The argument that appellant should not be liable for punitive damages for acts of its agents and servants, unless ratified or authorized cannot be sustained. It was rejected in Miller v. Blanton,
We do not feel that the award in the amount of $5,000 was so great as to shock the conscience of the court or to indicate passion and prejudice upon the part of the jury, since there was sufficient evidence to support a finding of legal malice. While there is no doubt that the amount is liberal insofar as the individual buyer is concerned, compensation of a plaintiff is not the purpose of exemplary or punitive damages and an award may be somewhat of a windfall to him. Dunaway v. Troutt,
In considering the amount awarded here, we recognize that there is no fixed standard for measurement of such damages and that their amount lies largely within the discretion of the jury on due consideration of the attendant circumstances. Vogler v. O’Neal, supra. The jury in this case apparently found that the circumstances were such as to indicate a deliberate wrong by a practice which, if followed by dealers generally, would lead to widespread commercial fraud through which literally thousands of purchasers of used cars, including many who could least afford a loss, could be victimized by extraction of excessive prices, without having adequate means of ascertaining correct information or of pursuing a remedy for actual damages, which might not even be large enough to justify the expenditure of the money and time involved in seeking their recovery. It seems to us that the jury verdict may be said to evidence a legitimate concern for the possible consequences of such a practice to the consuming public generally, rather than passion and prejudice.
In considering the amount of the award in the light of its function as a deterrent, we find appropriate the following language of Judge Fuld speaking for the New York Court of Appeals in Walker v. Sheldon, 10 N. Y. 2d 401, 223 N. Y. S. 2d 488,
Exemplary damages are more likely to serve their desired purpose of deterring similar conduct in a fraud case, such as that before us, than in any other area of tort. One who acts out of anger or hate, for instance, in committing assault or libel, is not likely to be deterred by the fear of punitive damages. On the other hand, those who deliberately and coolly engage in a far-flung fraudulent scheme, systematically conducted for profit, are very much more likely to pause and consider the consequences if they have to pay more than the actual loss suffered by an individual plaintiff. An occasional award of compensatory damages against such parties would have little deterrent effect. A judgment simply for compensatory damages would require the offender to do no more than return the money which he had taken from the plaintiff. In the calculation of his expected profits, the wrongdoer is likely to allow for a certain amount of money which will have to be returned to those victims who object too vigorously, and he will be perfectly content to bear the additional cost of litigation as the price for continuing his illicit business. It stands to reason that the chances of deterring him are materially increased by subjecting him to the payment of punitive damages.
In considering the very argument advanced by appellant as to the apparently disproportionate award of actual and punitive damages, in a case involving a recovery based upon a false odometer reading, the Idaho Supreme Court had this to say in Boise Dodge, Inc. v. Clark,
The amount of actual damages sustained by a plaintiff is one indication of the culpability of the defendant’s acts, but it cannot be the sole criterion for the assessment of punitive damages. Also relevant is the prospective deterrent effect of such an award upon persons situated similarly to the defendant, the motives actuating the defendant’s conduct, the degree of calculation involved in the defendant’s conduct, and the extent of the defendant’s disregard of the rights of others. These are legitimate concerns of the law, and the application of any fixed arithmetic ratio to all cases in which punitive damages are assessed would be arbitrary.
Even if we should declare that our law required a reasonable relationship between compensatory and exemplary damages, we agree that other considerations are of equal importance, and, in this case, must have been considered by the jury. Not only can we not say that the jury was motivated by passion and prejudice, we cannot say that this award is excessive when we consider the dual purpose of exemplary or punitive damages.
Appellee’s motion for taxing costs of abstracting is denied.
The judgment is affirmed.
Chief Justice Harris and Justices Brown and Jones would reduce the award of punitive damages to $2,500.
Notes
See cases from other jurisdictions cited above.
