623 N.E.2d 177 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1993
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *140 This case involves several appeals taken from judgments entered by the Municipal Court of Chillicothe, Ohio, in the action commenced by Linda S. Vannoy, plaintiff below and appellee herein, against Capital Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Inc. ("Capital") and BancOhio National Bank ("BancOhio"), defendants below and appellants herein. Capital assigns the following errors for our review:
"I. The lower court erred in finding that Capital Lincoln-Mercury committed a deceptive act or practice by failing to provide replaced parts to appellee.
"II. The lower court erred in holding Capital Lincoln-Mercury liable for attorney fees.
"III. The lower court erred in finding that the subject `attorney's fee' clause violates the Retail Installment Sales Act and thus renders the note unenforceable.
"IV. The lower court did not err in finding that Capital Lincoln-Mercury is not liable to BancOhio on BancOhio's cross-claim."
The following assignments of error are presented by BancOhio:
"I. The trial court erred in finding that the note is illegal and unenforceable by virtue of the inclusion therein of an `attorney's fee' clause.
"II. The trial court erred in rendering a money judgment against BancOhio.
"III. The trial court erred in holding BancOhio liable for costs and attorney's fees. *141
"IV. The trial court erred in finding that Vannoy is not liable to BancOhio on BancOhio's counterclaim.
"V. The trial court erred in finding that Capital Lincoln-Mercury is not liable to BancOhio on BancOhio's cross[-]claim.
"VI. The trial court erred in ordering rescission of the transaction."
The record reveals the following facts pertinent to this appeal. On April 6, 1987, appellee entered into a sales contract whereby she agreed to purchase a 1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass from Capital for the price of $5,995. Appellee financed the acquisition through BancOhio and executed a note to BancOhio in the principal amount of $6,267.72 together with interest at the rate of 10 3/4 percent to be payable in monthly installments of $161.23 beginning the following month. The automobile had mechanical problems from the outset and a number of repairs were required. Appellee put approximately twenty thousand additional miles on the vehicle but ceased making loan payments after two installments.
On August 31, 1987, appellee commenced the action below against Capital and BancOhio, alleging violations of the retail installment sales provisions of R.C. Chapter 1317, the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, codified at Section 2301 et seq., Title 15, U.S. Code, and consumer protection regulations for automobile repairs. There were also averments of deceptive sales practices and breach of warranty. Appellee sought judgment for,inter alia, compensatory, incidental and consequential damages as well as restitution of all previous loan payments, treble damages and attorney fees.
Appellants both filed answers denying liability and asserted a number of defenses against those claims. On November 18, 1987, BancOhio filed a counterclaim against appellee, alleging a default on the note and seeking judgment thereon. Appellee filed a reply which stated, among other things, that the note was not enforceable against her and therefore she was not liable on its default. BancOhio also filed a cross-claim against Capital, seeking indemnification from the dealership for any damages adjudicated against it on the original complaint or for any damages which it failed to recover from appellee on the counterclaim. Capital replied and denied any such derivative liability to BancOhio.
As a result of numerous continuances, the matter did not come on for trial until August 18, 1989, and January 5, 1990. An agreement was reached by the parties after trial that appellee would release the 1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass to BancOhio, which would then dispose of the property and credit her account with the net proceeds therefrom. There is no further mention in the record of such a disposition or the remaining balance, if any, due BancOhio on the loan.
A final resolution of this case would take two more years. On January 10, 1992, the lower court entered judgment finding (1) that an attorney fee provision *142 in the note to BancOhio was illegal and, therefore, it was unenforceable and appellee was entitled to a refund of payments previously made thereon, and (2) that Capital had failed to return old parts to appellee following repair of the automobile and thereby violated certain consumer protection regulations. In addition to damages, the court ruled that it would award attorney fees and ordered the parties to submit affidavits addressing that issue. The court also ruled against BancOhio on its cross-claim, holding that the bank's liability, and the unenforceability of the note, arose from the use of its own forms.1
Appellee filed affidavits to the effect that her counsel had expended 22.50 hours in the preparation and trial of this matter and that a reasonable fee for such cases would be $90 per hour. Thus, appellee concluded, her counsel should be awarded $2,025 in fees, together with sundry litigation costs. On March 16, 1992, the lower court entered final judgment awarding those costs and $2,000 in attorney fees. This appeal followed.2
We begin our review of this case by considering the first and fourth assignments of error advanced by BancOhio, and the third error assigned by Capital, wherein it is argued that the trial court erred in finding appellee's note to be unenforceable. The court's decision was based on a portion of that note which warns that "[i]f we [BancOhio] sue to collect any amount you owe us, we may charge you for court costs and attorney fees wherepermitted by law." (Emphasis added.) The lower court reasoned that the attorney fee provision was illegal under Ohio law and, therefore, that the note was unenforceable.
It is a well established principle of law that a provision in a note for payment of attorney fees upon default thereof is contrary to public policy and void. Miller v. Kyle (1911),
The execution of the note to BancOhio was, at most, a "consumer transaction."3 Consumer transactions are sales, leases, assignments or other transfers of goods except in those transactions between persons defined, inter alia, by R.C.
Our conclusion on this issue is further buttressed by considering that the contract provides for payment of attorney fees upon default only "where permitted by law." Thus the issue presented herein is the significance to be given this language. We note that there has been little in the way of reported decisions directly on point. The available options in resolving this issue are either to construe the language of the note in light of the statute and the protection which it is meant to afford, or, as appellee suggests, to simply ignore the precatory language, interpret the contract as absolutely requiring payment of attorney fees and, thereafter, ruling it to be unenforceable. Obviously, the former is more in line with the maxims of contract interpretation.
It is well settled that the law in existence when a contract is formed enters into the contract and becomes a part of the agreement, thereby requiring the contract to be construed in light of the law. Holbrook v. Ives (1886),
Thus, the covenant that a retail buyer would pay a seller's attorney fees upon default where permitted by law refers to the law of each particular jurisdiction. In jurisdictions such as Ohio where these provisions are void, they are merely excluded from the contract. This interpretation follows the rule that courts must, when possible, construe a contract to be consistent with the law in existence at the time of its execution. To construe it otherwise, to mean that the contract required payment of the seller's attorney fees by the retail buyer in default, would not only ignore the language used therein, but also would be an unduly technical construction of the contract, the result of which would be to render it void under R.C.
In sum, the attorney fee clause in the note between appellee and BancOhio does not render that instrument unenforceable. The lower court erred in so ruling and, accordingly, the first and fourth assignments of error by BancOhio are sustained, as is the third assignment of error by Capital. BancOhio may proceed with enforcing the note. At the August 1989 hearing, appellee stipulated a principle loan balance remaining of $8,242.58 and evidence was introduced to show a per diem interest charge of $1.79. The record indicates that, since the hearing, the Oldsmobile Cutlass was to have been sold and the proceeds therefrom credited to appellee's account. There is no further mention of a sale, or any reduction in the principal loan balance, shown in the record. Accordingly, this matter will be remanded to the trial court for a determination of damages to enter on the counterclaim.
We now turn to the bank's second and third assignments of error, which state that the lower court erred in entering judgment against it for money damages, attorney fees and costs. These items must be examined individually. First, we direct our attention to the money damages awarded. After determining that the attorney fee clause rendered the note unenforceable, the trial court ordered that appellee recover the $305.83 in loan payments she had previously made to BancOhio. An additional $200 in damages was then awarded to appellee after it was determined that Capital had violated regulations promulgated under the state's Consumer Sales Practices Act ("CSPA"). Appellants were then made jointly and severally liable for the sum total of these amounts, or $
It has already been determined that the attorney fee clause in the note from appellee to BancOhio did not violate RISA and did not render the instrument unenforceable. Thus, appellee is not entitled to the return of the $305.83 in previous payments on the loan. There is also no legal basis for holding the bank liable for a violation of the CSPA. Regulations make it "a deceptive act or practice" in a consumer transaction for a supplier to "[f]ail to tender to the consumer any replaced parts." Ohio Adm. Code
Likewise, the bank bears no liability for attorney fees and costs. Attorney fees are, generally, not recoverable in absence of statutes authorizing *146
them. See, generally, Nottingdale Homeowner's Assn., Inc. v.Darby (1987),
It has previously been determined that there has been no violation of RISA or CSPA by BancOhio in this case. Neither appellee nor the court below cite any further statutory authority to sanction an award of attorney fees and we are not aware of any. It also bears mentioning that BancOhio has prevailed, on appeal, in prosecuting its counterclaim and defending against those claims brought by appellee. Thus, the bank should not be held liable for court costs. The second and third assignments of error are, for these reasons, sustained.
We next consider BancOhio's sixth assignment of error, wherein it is argued that the lower court erred in awarding both a rescission of the transaction and money damages to appellee without requiring her to make an election between the two remedies. In that we have already ruled in favor of BancOhio on appellee's claims, the issue of an election between available remedies is moot. The assignment of error will, therefore, be disregarded pursuant to App.R. 12(A)(1)(c).
In BancOhio's fifth assignment of error, and in Capital's fourth, appellants argue over whether the lower court correctly ruled in favor of Capital on the cross-claim brought by BancOhio. As mentioned before, this cross-claim sought indemnification from Capital for any damages adjudicated against the bank on the complaint and for any damages BancOhio failed to recover on the counterclaim. In light of our determination that BancOhio may recover on its counterclaim and is not liable on appellee's claims, the issue is now moot and these assignments of error will also be disregarded.
We now turn to Capital's first assignment of error, wherein the dealership argues that the lower court erred in ruling that it had violated the CSPA by failing to tender replaced parts to appellee. The lower court never specified the exact regulation which it determined to have been violated and gave only a general reference to Ohio Adm. Code Chapter
"(C) In any consumer transaction involving the performance of any repair or service upon a motor vehicle it shall be a deceptive act or practice for a supplier to:
"* * *
"(13) Fail to tender to the consumer any replaced parts, unless the parts are to be rebuilt or sold by the supplier, or returned to the manufacturer in connection with warranted repairs or services, and such intended reuse or return is made known to the consumer prior to commencing any repair or service[.]"
The uncontroverted evidence adduced at the trial below was that appellee paid $25 for repair of a broken flywheel. Kenneth Alderson, owner of the dealership, testified that all other repairs were covered under the service contract or "picked up" by Capital. William Steinbrook, Service Manager at Capital, conceded that appellee was never given back the parts replaced in her car. Steinbrook explained that parts were not returned to customers unless they were requested. A sign was posted at the dealership to alert customers that replaced parts were "available upon request." Appellee never asked for the parts and they were never returned.
Capital argues that its policy of returning parts upon request satisfies the requirement of tender of the administrative regulations. We disagree. "Tender" generally means to offer or hold something out, especially in fulfillment of the requirements of law. Oxford Universal Dictionary (3 Ed.Rev.1955) 2148. Capital did not offer or hold out the replaced parts to appellee. At the very least, this would require that a mechanic proffer those parts in person to a customer. Capital merely placed a sign alerting customers that parts would be returned on request. This impermissibly placed the onus on the customer to take affirmative action to retrieve the parts and failed to satisfy the requirement of tender.
Capital also argues that the pertinent regulation excuses tender of the replaced part if, among other things, the part is to be returned to the manufacturer in connection with warranted repairs and the customer is made aware of that fact. Capital then directs our attention to Steinbrook's testimony that "any time we make a repair and it is covered by a contract, we have to save the parts for the warranty company, in case they call for them." Capital concludes that this need to retain the parts excuses it from the requirement of tender. Again, we disagree. Steinbrook's testimony was that the parts were being saved in case the warranty company needed them. There is no indication that the parts were definitely going to be shipped to the manufacturer as allowed by regulation. Moreover, Capital cites nothing in the transcript that suggests that appellee even had knowledge of that fact. *148
Finally, Capital asserts that the failure to return the replaced parts is classified as a deceptive sales practice only if the anticipated cost of repair exceeds $25. Capital then cites evidence that appellee never spent more than $25 on repairs and concludes that there has been no breach of regulations. We are not persuaded. The plain and unambiguous language in Ohio Adm. Code
Capital cites Funk v. Montgomery AMC/Jeep/Renault (1990),
The second assignment of error of the dealership is that the lower court erroneously held it liable for appellee's attorney fees. Ohio law permits a court to award a consumer her legal fees if a supplier has knowingly committed an act or practice which violates the CSPA. R.C.
The Ohio Supreme Court has ruled that attorney fees may be awarded pursuant to R.C.
In summary, the judgment is affirmed as to Capital, except that the damages specified therein are modified and reduced from $
Judgment affirmed in part as modified,reversed in partand cause remanded.
GREY and PETER B. ABELE, JJ., concur.