Roadmaster Auto Sales, Inc. v. McSweeney ( 2011 )


Menu:
  • Roadmaster Auto Sales, Inc. v. McSweeney, No. S1344-10 CnC (Tomasi, J., Mar. 30, 2011)
    [The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the
    accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
    STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                                                             CIVIL DIVISION
    Chittenden Unit                                                                            Docket No. S1344-10 CnC
    )
    James and Paula McSweeney,                                               )
    )
    Plaintiffs/Appellees,                         )
    v.                                                                     )
    )
    Roadmaster Auto Sales, Inc.,                                             )
    )
    Defendant/Appellant.                         )
    Defendant/Appellant Roadmaster Auto Sales, Inc. appeals from a
    judgment entered against it in the Small Claims Court in the amount of
    $4,859.16 in damages, $103.44 in service fees, and $75.00 in filing fees. The
    lower court concluded that Roadmaster had violated Vermont’s Consumer
    Fraud Act (the “CFA”) in connection with its failure to return a $100.00
    deposit that the McSweeneys had placed on a vehicle. See 9 V.S.A. § 2453.
    Based upon that violation, it awarded the McSweeneys their damages,
    including attorney’s fees, and their costs of suit. 
    Id. § 2461(b).
    On appeal, Roadmaster challenges the conclusions of the Small Claims
    Court contending that the parties entered into a written contract that
    entitled Roadmaster to retain the deposit as liquidated damages. It also
    asserts that the attorney’s fees are not reasonable, inter alia, because the
    billing entries are not set out in sufficient particularity and detail as to time
    increments and because the hourly rate charged by the McSweeneys’ counsel
    is not appropriate for small claims practice. The McSweeneys counter that
    the provisions of the written contract cannot overcome the oral
    representations made by Roadmaster that the deposit would be returned to
    them, that the provision of the contract purportedly entitling Roadmaster to
    retain the deposit as “liquidated damages” is not enforceable under Vermont
    law, that Roadmaster waived any arguments regarding attorney’s fees by not
    raising them below or in its statement of issues on appeal, and that, in any
    event, the billing entries and hourly rate are reasonable.
    On March 16, 2011, the matter came before the Court for a hearing.
    The Court entertained the arguments of counsel and afforded the parties the
    opportunity to submit post-argument memoranda on the issue of waiver.
    Roadmaster submitted a brief memorandum on that point. For the reasons
    that follow, the Court affirms the decision below.
    Standard of Review
    An appeal from a small claims judgment is heard and decided “based
    on the record made in the small claims procedure.” 12 V.S.A. § 5538. The
    “appeal is limited to questions of law.” V.R.S.C.P. 10(d). If the Small Claims
    Court has applied the correct law, this Court will affirm its “conclusions if
    they are reasonably supported by the findings.” Maciejko v. Lunenburg Fire
    Dist. No. 2, 
    171 Vt. 542
    , 543 (2000) (mem.).
    2
    Analysis
    In this case, the lower court correctly applied the provisions of the
    CFA. To establish liability under the CFA, a plaintiff must establish: (1) a
    misrepresentation or omission that was likely to mislead consumers; (2) that
    the consumers at issue reasonably interpreted the statements/omissions
    under the circumstances; and (3) that the statements/omissions were
    “material,” i.e., they influenced the consumer’s conduct or decision making.
    See Jordan v. Nissan N. Am., Inc., 
    2004 VT 27
    ¶5, 
    176 Vt. 465
    , 468.
    Here, based upon this Court’s review of the statements and findings of
    the lower court, each of the above elements has been established. The Small
    Claims Court found that the McSweeneys gave Roadmaster a $100.00 deposit
    on a vehicle in order to “hold” the car from a Wednesday to a Friday. During
    that period, the McSweeneys were to determine whether they could obtain
    the funds necessary to purchase the car. They called Roadmaster on
    Thursday to say that they could not obtain the necessary funds, but
    Roadmaster refused to return the full amount of the deposit.
    As to the deposit, the Small Claims Court found that the oral
    agreement entered into between the McSweeneys and Roadmaster “clearly”
    contemplated that if the McSweeneys did not obtain financing and informed
    Roadmaster in advance of the Friday deadline, they would “get it back.” That
    conclusion is well supported by the consistent hearing testimony of the both
    of the McSweeneys.
    3
    After making such an oral agreement, Roadmaster then required the
    McSweeneys to sign a “contract” that contains a directly contrary provision.
    The contract states, in reduced print, that the deposit will be retained by
    Roadmaster as “liquidated damages” should the customer fail to consummate
    the transaction.
    A business that provides customers with two such divergent
    statements regarding whether a refund is or is not refundable is certainly
    likely to mislead consumers. At a bare minimum, as the lower court found, it
    would been incumbent on the business to make clear to the customers that
    the deposit was not refundable and any failure to do so would be a misleading
    omission on the part of the business.
    Similarly, there is no error in the Small Claims Court’s conclusions:
    (1) that the McSweeneys reasonably interpreted Roadmaster’s statements to
    indicate that the deposit was refundable, and (2) that the McSweeneys
    decision to provide the deposit turned on whether it was, in fact, refundable.
    Each of those points was supported by the testimony of the McSweeneys and
    the lower court’s assessment of what an objectively reasonable customer
    would have thought under the circumstances of this very short deposit
    period. As a result, the Small Claims Court’s ultimate determination that
    4
    Roadmaster violated the CFA is more than adequately supported by the
    record.1
    As to Roadmaster’s challenge to the reasonableness of the award of
    attorney’s fees, the Court concludes that any such contention has been
    waived. The McSweeneys offered a billing sheet from their attorney as an
    exhibit below in support of their claim for attorney’s fees. The claim was also
    set out in the Complaint. Counsel for the McSweeneys explained in detail to
    the lower court why the fees were higher than one might usually see in Small
    Claims Court. Much of that explanation focused on the litigation activities of
    Roadmaster, which had required the parties to brief and address a number of
    procedural issues to a number of different courts. Roadmaster was given an
    opportunity to examine the exhibit, object to its admissibility, ask questions
    about it or challenge the requested fee in any way. Roadmaster did not object
    to the fees or challenge them as excessive, either as to hours spent or rate
    charged. Just prior to entering judgment, the lower court, again, offered
    Roadmaster the opportunity to submit any additional evidence or say
    anything else. Roadmaster remained silent. In addition, Roadmaster’s
    Notice of Appeal, see V.R.S.C.P. 10(a), lists a number of issues it wished to
    contest on appeal, but attorney’s fees was not listed among them.
    1
    As the Court finds a violation of the CFA based on the findings described, it
    does not reach the issue of whether the liquidated damages provision of the
    contract at issue may provide an independent basis to claim a violation of the
    CFA.
    5
    As the Vermont Supreme Court has consistently held in an analogous
    context: “Failure to raise an issue before the trial court precludes raising it
    on appeal.” Adams v. Adams, 
    2005 VT 4
    ¶15, 
    177 Vt. 448
    , 454; see Fyles v.
    Schmidt, 
    141 Vt. 419
    422-23 (1994). In Burton v. Jeremiah Beach Parker
    Restoration & Construction Management Corporation, the Court applied that
    rule to reject both a challenge to an award of litigation costs where the costs
    had not been challenged below, and a request for a hearing as to attorney’s
    fees where the challenging party had not requested such a hearing in the
    trial court. 
    2010 VT 55
    , ¶¶12-13 (mem.); see Boston Old Colony Ins. Co. v.
    Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co., 
    889 F.2d 1245
    , 1248 (2d Cir. 1989) (failure timely
    to challenge attorney’s fee request precludes appellate review).
    Roadmaster’s contention that the above rule should not be applied in
    this case, because it was unrepresented below and because the rule is not
    consistent with the informal small-claims process, is not persuasive. The
    Court is not suggesting that an unrepresented party must speak with the
    precision or knowledge of an attorney. It does not violate the spirit of the
    small claims process, however, simply to require that a party alert the Court
    and the opposing party when it disagrees with or wishes to challenge a
    particular position or point. To hold otherwise would permit a litigant to
    obtain multiple small claims hearings as a result of matters that should have
    been, but were not, raised at prior hearings. Such a result invites
    gamesmanship and multiple bites at that apple, both of which are in
    6
    contravention of V.R.S.C.P. 1’s admonition that the Rules should be
    interpreted to “secure the simple, informal, and inexpensive disposition of
    every action.”2
    Conclusion
    In light of the foregoing, the ruling of the Small Claims Court is
    AFIRMED.
    Dated at Burlington, Vermont this 30th day of March, 2011.
    -------------------------------
    Timothy B. Tomasi
    Superior Court Judge
    2
    While it does not affect the Court’s determination, the Court is also mindful
    that a remand solely on the issue of attorney’s fees would likely generate a
    claim for additional fees covering both the appeal and the remanded
    proceeding. See, e.g., Gagne v. Maher, 
    594 F.2d 336
    , 344 (2d Cir. 1979)
    (awarding fees for time spent defending attorney’s fee application), aff'd on
    other grds, 
    448 U.S. 122
    (1980). The Court is confident that any possible
    downward adjustments to the claimed fees that might result from a remand
    likely would be more than eclipsed by such a claim for additional fees.
    7