Stephen
G. Poulin v. Ford Motor Company and Hayes Ford, Inc.
Supreme Court of Vermont
147 Vt. 120; 513 A.2d 1168; 1986 Vt.
LEXIS 381
May 16, 1986, Opinion filed
OPINION: The plaintiff brought an action against defendants
Hayes Ford and Ford Motor Company, alleging that they illegally induced
him to buy a 1979 Ford Mustang "Pace Car" by indicating that the car
was a limited-production model which would increase in value. The
complaint alleged violations of express and implied warranties,
intentional misrepresentation and violation of the Consumer Fraud Act,
9 V.S.A. § 2453. After trial, the jury awarded the plaintiff $
40,000. Defendants appeal the judgment on the verdict, the denial of a
motion for a new trial, and the denial of a motion to set aside the
verdict. We affirm.
In May, 1979, plaintiff, an owner of a lumber business, approached John
Hayes, owner of defendant Hayes Ford, Inc., and expressed some interest
in purchasing a 1979 Ford Mustang "Pace Car." The car was an exact
replica of the one used to pace the field at the 1979 Indianapolis 500
motor car race. The plaintiff's interest stemmed from his knowledge
that the 1978 Corvette Pace Car had increased in value, according to
the evidence, from $ 14,000 to approximately $ 28,000.
After a test drive, the plaintiff met with Hayes and a representative
of defendant Ford Motor Company. He expressed a continuing interest in
the vehicle but also indicated that personal financial difficulties
might preclude the purchase. According to the plaintiff, the
representative of defendant Ford Motor Company told plaintiff that the
pace car is "going to be a very lucrative type of car . . . as a
collector's item . . . [We] are stopping production as of the
Indianapolis 500." Further, testimony indicated that the defendants
told plaintiff the 1979 pace car was a limited edition with only about
2,800 issued, or less than one car per dealer. Defendants told
plaintiff the car would increase in value similarly to the Corvette
version of the pace car. Based on these representations, plaintiff
purchased the car.
About one month later, plaintiff contacted Hayes and expressed his
concerns about seeing "quite a few" pace cars on the road. Defendant
Hayes Ford indicated to plaintiff that Ford had "flooded the market"
with the cars, that Ford was still producing them and that Hayes Ford
had, in fact, acquired another pace car. Plaintiff also learned that a
Ford dealer in Swanton, Vermont, was offering rebates on two of the
cars, asking only $ 7,400 for each.
After failing in his attempts to get Hayes Ford to buy back the pace
car, plaintiff brought an action against the named defendants. The
counts specified that: (1) defendants breached an express warranty that
the vehicle was a "limited production car"; (2) defendants breached an
implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose in that defendants
knew plaintiff, in purchasing the car, relied upon statements regarding
its expected increase in value and that the warranted increase never
occurred; (3) defendants defrauded plaintiff; and (4) defendants'
actions constituted unfair and deceptive acts and practices in
violation of 9 V.S.A. § 2453.
After both sides presented their cases, the trial judge, over
defendants' objection, charged the jury on plaintiff's consumer fraud
claim as well as the other claims. The jury found defendants liable,
and awarded him $ 40,000. The amount of this award indicates the jury's
verdict was rendered pursuant to the exemplary damage provision in the
Consumer Fraud Act. 9 V.S.A. § 2461(b). Defendants moved the court
to grant a new trial and to set aside the verdict. The court denied
defendants' motions and issued judgment for plaintiff. Defendants
appealed the order denying their motions and appealed the judgment.
The defendants first argue that the trial court committed reversible
error in submitting the consumer fraud count to the jury. They contend
(1) that the plaintiff was not a consumer, and (2) that there was
insufficient evidence of consumer fraud presented at trial.
The Consumer Fraud Act prohibits "unfair or deceptive acts or practices
in commerce." 9 V.S.A. § 2453(a). For the Act to apply, the
plaintiff must be a consumer as defined by the Act: "any person who
purchases . . . merchandise or services not for resale in the ordinary
course of his trade or business but for his use or benefit . . . ." n2
9 V.S.A. § 2451a. Defendants argue that plaintiff was not a
consumer because he purchased the pace car as an investment, and
because he stated he bought and sold cars. Plaintiff's expectation that
the car would appreciate in value does not prohibit him from being a
consumer. The issue is whether the plaintiff bought the car to resell
in the ordinary course of his business. The plaintiff testified
that he bought the car for his personal benefit and that although he
had sold cars bought as investments, he was not a used car dealer.
Based on this testimony, the jury could conclude that the plaintiff was
a consumer under the Act.
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n2 9 V.S.A. § 2451a was amended in 1985.
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The defendants' next argument is that there was insufficient evidence
presented at trial to allow the claim of unfair or deceptive acts or
practices to go to the jury. Although this Court has considered what
constitutes unfair acts and practices, Christie v. Dalmig, Inc., 136
Vt. 597, 600-01 (1979), we have not addressed
what constitutes deceptive acts or practices under 9 V.S.A. §
2453(a).
In this case, the trial court charged the jury on common law fraud, n3
apparently concluding that it was synonymous with consumer fraud.
However, state statutes similar to our Consumer
Fraud Act are recognized as providing a much broader right than common
law fraud.
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n3 The charge read as follows:
The following essential elements of fraudulent misrepresentation are
that prior to the sale of the pace car Defendants misrepresented to
Plaintiff the number of cars that would be manufactured; that this
misrepresentation was either intentional -- that is, Defendants made it
knowing that it was untrue or that Defendants acted as if they knew
what they said was a fact when they really did not know them to be
true; misrepresentation was a material factor in inducing the Plaintiff
to purchase the pace car; the Plaintiff reasonably relied on the
misrepresentation and was deceived by it; and finally the
misrepresentation was the proximate cause of the damages to Plaintiff.
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Our Consumer Fraud Act requires courts construing Vermont's consumer
fraud law to "be guided by the construction of similar terms contained
in section 5(a)(1) of the Federal Trade Commission Act as from time to
time amended by the Federal Trade Commission and the courts of the
United States." 9 V.S.A. § 2453(b).
Many federal courts have held that a misrepresentation which has the
tendency and capacity to mislead consumers is a deceptive act or
practice under federal law. See, e.g., .... FTC v. Sterling Drug, Inc.,
see also the discussion in FTC v.
Colgate-Palmolive Co. Similarly, a number
of courts in states with statutes similar to Vermont's Consumer Fraud
Act have also adopted this definition of deception.
Recently, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) stated that "a deception
case requires a showing of three elements: (1) there must be a
representation, practice, or omission likely to mislead consumers; (2)
the consumers must be interpreting the message
reasonably under the circumstances; and (3) the misleading effects must
be 'material,' that is, likely to affect consumers' conduct or decision
with regard to a product." International Harvester Co., 3Trade Reg.
Rep. (CCH) para. 22,217 p. 23,174, 23,178 (Dec. 21, 1984).
It is unnecessary to determine which standard should be adopted for
purposes of this case under our Act, because in light of the facts
presented here, both standards are satisfied. The evidence indicated
that the defendants told the plaintiff the pace car was a limited
edition; that production was stopping immediately; that only 2,800 cars
would be produced; and that the car would increase in value by $ 4,000
or $ 5,000 in several months. Furthermore, there was evidence that one
defendant later told the plaintiff that Ford had flooded the market
with the cars and that Ford was still producing them. Other evidence
revealed that at least one dealer was offering $ 1,600 rebates on the
cars and that the price of the car had dropped from $ 9,000 to between
$ 5,000 and $ 7,500. Given this evidence, we conclude that there was
sufficient evidence of deceptive acts or practices to go to the jury.
The defendants further attack the trial court's charge on consumer
fraud as erroneous because (1) it failed to describe what constitutes
unfair or deceptive acts or practices, and (2) it directed the jury to
apply the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard of proof rather than
that of clear and convincing evidence. The record reveals no objection
by the
defendants as to the burden of proof or the text of the instructions
themselves. Issues not objected to below will not be considered upon
appellate review. Furthermore, as noted above, the jury charge required
a
higher standard than that of consumer fraud, thereby giving defendants
a definite advantage of which they now complain. Their arguments have
no merit. However, to clarify the issue of burden of proof we make the
following comments. Defendants are correct that common law fraud
requires clear and convincing proof. As defendants admit, however, the
jury based its decision
on consumer fraud. Consumer fraud does not require the higher standard
of proof. "The mere fact that the word 'fraud' appears in the title of
our consumer protection statute does not give rise to an inference that
the legislature intended to require a higher degree of proof than that
ordinarily required in civil cases." The purpose of our Consumer Fraud
Act is to protect
consumers by adding "a claim for relief that is easier to establish
than is common law fraud. To require the higher degree of proof would
frustrate the legislative intent." Until the legislature states
otherwise, we will not presume that it intended to impose the greater
burden of proof in consumer fraud cases.
Next, the defendants attack the verdict as unsupported by the evidence.
They contend that deception requires an intentional misrepresentation,
and that plaintiff failed to introduce any evidence that the defendants
intentionally misrepresented material facts. n4 Neither the prevailing
judicial definition nor the recent FTC definition (both mentioned
above) require intent. See, e.g., FTC v. Sterling Drug, Inc., supra,
317 F.2d at 674. Thus, plaintiff was held to a higher standard than
that required under the Act. Defendants' argument must fail.
Defendants also argue that plaintiff failed to show that there was a
misrepresentation. They contend that the defendants' assertion that the
pace car was a limited edition was never proven to be false because the
plaintiff did not produce evidence on the number of pace cars actually
produced by Ford. Viewing the evidence most favorably to the plaintiff
and excluding any modifying evidence, we find that there was sufficient
evidence to support a showing of misrepresentation: specifically, that
Ford had flooded the market with the cars and that production had
continued past the date they said it would stop.
.......
The plaintiff claims this appeal should be dismissed for lack of
jurisdiction because the lower court's decision was not final due to
its failure to rule on attorney's fees. Although the plaintiff
requested attorney's fees in his complaint and in his proposed jury
instructions, he did not introduce any evidence on reasonable
attorney's fees at trial. After plaintiff rested, he moved to reopen to
introduce evidence on this issue but the court denied his motion. He
did not object to the court's jury instructions which did not mention
attorney's fees. After trial, he did not cross-appeal or move to amend
the judgment. Under these circumstances, we think the judgment was
final and the issue of attorney's fees has been waived.
Affirmed.