delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of fraud and deceit. The trial court struck the amended complaint and dismissed the action as to defendant Ford Motor Company, on the ground that the amended complaint, as to Ford, was “substantially insufficient in law.” Plaintiff appeals.
In substance, the fraud alleged is that while plaintiff negotiated and paid for a new car, the automobile which was delivered to her had been previously used, and its speedometer had been set back. Charging fraud and deceit in the sale, plaintiff seeks dаmages totaling $50,018 — being $1,018 compensatory and $49,000 exemplary.
The determinative question is whether the amended complaint alleges sufficient facts in law to support plaintiff’s allegation that, for the purpose of selling a new Ford automobile tо plaintiff, defendant Courtesy Motor Sales was an agent of the defendant Ford Motor Company.
The amended complаint alleges that defendant Courtesy is a “duly authorized franchised dealer for selling and distributing the products of Defendant, Ford Motor Cоmpany” and “acting as a franchised agent of the Ford Motor Company . . . executed a contract of sale and рurchase with the Plaintiff on Courtesy Motor Sales New Car Division order blanks. . . . upon delivery of the automobile, Ford Motor Company, by and through its franchised agent, Courtesy Motor Sales, warranted the 1962 Ford Fairlane ... to be new by giving Plaintiff a New Car Warranty.”
Plaintiff contends that the allegations of a principal-agent relationship between defendants, the admission of an agreement between defendants (“the terms and provisions of which agreement are unknown to the Plaintiff”), and “the delivery to the Plaintiff of new car warranties of the Ford Motor Company by Courtesy Motor Sales, its franchised dealer,” meet the test for a complaint аgainst defendant Ford sufficient in law within the limits outlined in City of Evanston v. Piotrowicz, 20 Ill2d 512, at p 518,
“Agency may be established and its nature and extent shown by рarol evidence, whether direct or circumstantial, and reference may be had to the situations of parties and рroperty, acts of parties, and other circumstances germane to the question, and if the evidence shows one аcting for another under circumstances implying knowledge on the part of the supposed principal of such acts, а prima facie case of agency is established.”
Of the exhibits attached to the amended complaint, plaintiff cоntends that Exhibits “D” and “E” meet the foregoing agency test as to defendant Ford. Exhibit “D” is a printed form, headed in bold type with: “This is your Ford Dealer’s NEW CAB WARRANTY,” and opens with the statement: “Ford Motor Company has warranted to the Dealer who, pursuant to his sales agreement with the Company, hereby, on his own behalf, warrants to the Purchaser each part of this 1962 Ford Fairlane to be free under normal usе and service from defects in material and workmanship . . . .” All other references are to “the Dealer” or “any Authorized Ford Dealer.” Exhibit “E” is a series of blank service coupons, each of which is headed in bold type: “NEW CAR WARRANTY SERVICE ACKNOWLEDGMENT COUPON.” The terms refer to “your Ford Dеaler’s New Car Warranty . . . the selling dealer . . . any Authorized Ford Dealer
Although Ford’s motion to strike was filed pursuant to sections 45 and 48(1) (i) оf the Civil Practice Act, we are concerned only with section 45, which provides that a pleading may be attacked for deficiencies which appear on its face. Motions to dismiss admit facts well pleaded, but not conclusions of law оr conclusions of fact unsupported by allegations of specific facts upon which such conclusions rest. Pleadings are construed most strongly against the pleader. (Garofalo Co., Inc. v. St. Mary’s Packing Co., 339 Ill App 412, 416,
After examining the amended complaint and all of its exhibits, we are not persuaded that it alleges sufficient facts to establish that an “authorized franchised Ford Dealer” is the agent of Ford Motor Company for the purpose of selling new cars. With the exception of “D” and “E,” all of the exhibits clearly identify the seller of the automobile in question, defendant Courtesy Motor Sales, as an independent dealer. As the other exhibits refer only to defendant Courtesy, plaintiff asserts exhibits “D” and “E” are sufficient to establish the agency between defendants and to justify reliance by plaintiff on the acts of the alleged agent.
We believe that Exhibit “D” makes it clear that it is “your Ford Dealer,” defendant Courtesy, which was making, on its own behalf, any warrаnties contained in the form. Exhibit “E” nowhere refers to defendant Ford Motor Company and continuously refers to “Ford Dealer.”
Wе think it is a matter of common knowledge that the term “Authorized Ford Dealer” is in the nature of a trade-mark sign, which is used by independent dealers (Reynolds v. Skelly Oil Co.,
“Nor does the fact that when a sale is made by a dealer to the ultimate purchaser a manufacturer’s warranty goes with the automobile spell out the dealer as the agent of the manufacturer. It is merely incidental to the sale and in no wise by itself gives apparent authority or agency to the dealer. . . . The owner’s service policy simply provided that defective material or workmanship would be replaced free by an authorized Frazer dealer or distributor without charge. This was an undertaking of the distributor, not the KaiserFrazer Corporation, and spеlled out no agency existing between them.”
We conclude that, absent the pleading of other facts which directly or circumstantially establish an agency relationship, plaintiff has failed to allege facts to show in law that an “authorized” or “franchise” dealer, in the sale of a new car, is an agent of the manufacturer rather than an independent merchant. Burkhalter v. Ford Motor Co., 29 Gra App 592,
For the reasons given, the order of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
