Massey-Ferguson Credit Corp. v. Orr, MASSEY-FERGUSON
Decision Date | 25 February 1988 |
Docket Number | No. 870190,MASSEY-FERGUSON,870190 |
Citation | 420 N.W.2d 1 |
Parties | CREDIT CORPORATION, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. Clifford ORR, Defendant and Appellee, and James River Valley Mutual Insurance Company, Defendant. Civ. |
Court | North Dakota Supreme Court |
Weiss, Wright & Paulson, Jamestown, for plaintiff and appellant; argued by Terence J. Paulson, Jamestown.
Gilje, Greenwood & Dalsted, Jamestown, for defendant and appellee; argued by Charles J. Gilje, Jamestown.
Massey-Ferguson Credit Corporation appealed from a special jury verdict denying a deficiency on a secured indebtedness after repossession and sale of two combines. Because the jury's answers to the special verdict are inconsistent and cannot be reconciled, we reverse and remand for a new trial on both liability and the deficiency.
Clifford Orr purchased two Massey-Ferguson combines and attachments in June 1980. He signed a retail installment contract and security agreement, which was assigned to Massey-Ferguson Credit Corporation (hereinafter "M-F"). Orr failed to make timely payments. In 1982 he left the combines at an implement business, in an unsuccessful attempt to sell them. In early 1983, Orr became doubtful about the model year of the combines, a circumstance that could reduce their resale value, and contacted an attorney to make inquiries.
Orr's attorney wrote M-F, proposing that Orr would not resist repossession of the combines if M-F would consider that repossession as a full satisfaction of the balance due. In return, Orr would not seek damages for the decreased value of the allegedly misrepresented combines. Soon thereafter, M-F took possession of the combines and attachments, with the exception of a 20-foot table which Orr later sold. Orr claimed that he thought that M-F had accepted his offer. M-F gave notice, sold the collateral and applied the proceeds to the outstanding balance. A deficiency of nearly $20,000 remained, which Orr refused to pay. M-F sued for the amount of the deficiency, as well as for application of the proceeds of the 20-foot table on the deficiency.
Orr denied that he had defaulted, arguing accord and satisfaction, failure of consideration, release, and payment. He claimed that the combines he had purchased as 1980 models were actually 1979 models. He also argued that he had an agreement with M-F to voluntarily allow the repossession in return for M-F's not seeking a deficiency judgment.
At trial, using a special verdict, the jury found that the tractors were 1980 models and that there was no agreement between M-F and Orr waiving a deficiency judgment. The jury awarded M-F no damages. Without explanation, the trial court denied M-F's post-trial motions.
The form of special verdict submitted to the jury was not a model; it could have been better crafted. Both sides expressed reservations to the trial court, in chambers, about its design. In fact, counsel for Orr said, "I see them [the jury] getting all tangled up in the verdict form." The verdict form did not clearly address the matter of deficiency on the indebtedness after sale of the secured goods:
However, the form of the special verdict has not been made the issue here. M-F does not complain about the wording or content of the special verdict. Rather, M-F argues that the failure to award "damages" was contrary to the evidence and the law, and that, for that reason, the trial court erred in denying M-F's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial.
The jury did not find an agreement between Orr and M-F that waived the latter's right to seek a deficiency judgment. NDCC 41-09-50(2) provides that a debtor is liable for a deficiency under most circumstances. 1 The terms of the security agreement provided for M-F's recovery of a deficiency. The jury was instructed: "If the sale proceeds are insufficient to satisfy the indebtedness, the debtor is liable for any deficiency, unless the parties have agreed otherwise." The record shows that a deficiency of...
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