DocketNumber: File No. CV 5-6103-287M
Judges: George, Matzkin, Toscano
Filed Date: 5/3/1962
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
This is an action brought by the as-signee of a conditional sale agreement to recover the amount of a deficiency resulting from the repossession and resale of a motor vehicle.
The defendant and Milford Auto Sales, Inc., entered into a retail instalment contract on September
On July 13, 1960, one Frank Robbins, on behalf of the plaintiff, sent a letter to the defendant advising him that the automobile would be sold at a private sale on July 28, 1960, at 10 o’clock a.m. The letter further set forth the amount needed by the defendant to redeem the chattel and also stated that the plaintiff would seek to recover from the defendant any deficiency resulting from the sale. Prior to July 28, 1960, the defendant’s wife, Noreen Beck-with, called the plaintiff’s offices and spoke with Frank Robbins. She was informed that a private sale was to be held and that no one could attend. At no time did Mrs. Beckwith inform the plaintiff or its agent that either she or her husband knew of anyone interested in bidding on the automobile. No one but the defendant was notified of the private sale. On July 28, 1960, a piece of paper purporting to be a bid was placed in the plaintiff’s file showing a bid of $1000 by the plaintiff. This bid was the only offer submitted relative to the purchase of the automobile, and there was no other overt act by the plaintiff as to a sale of the automobile.
This action is now brought to collect a purported deficiency plus attorneys’ fees, as provided in the contract. The plaintiff claims that the court erred in failing to correct its finding that no one but the
The plaintiff next attacks the conclusions of the court as being contrary to the provisions of § 42-98 of the General Statutes. While there must be evidence to support a finding of fact, conclusions are to be tested by the finding and not by the evidence. The subordinate facts in the instant matter clearly support the conclusions of the trial court, and those conclusions were not drawn in violation of any rule or principle of law, nor were they in conflict with the rules of logic and reason. Therefore they must stand. Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. §§ 165, 166.
The plaintiff further contends that the subordinate facts support a conclusion that a sale was made in accordance with the statute then in effect, and therefore the trial court erred in concluding in its finding that there was no resale under § 42-98. To support this assignment of error, the plaintiff interprets §42-98, subsection (d), as allowing the holder of a retail instalment sale contract, after default and repossession, to bid for the chattel at either a public or a private sale. Under this subsection, the holder of a retail instalment sale contract may retain the chattel under subsection (h) or “sell such
There is no error.