Page v. Camper City and Mobile Home Sales
Decision Date | 11 July 1974 |
Citation | 297 So.2d 810,292 Ala. 562 |
Parties | , 15 UCC Rep.Serv. 112 Virginia PAGE v. CAMPER CITY & MOBILE HOME SALES, a corp. SC 722. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
John P. Carlton, Birmingham, for appellant.
London, Yancey, Clark & Allen and John M. Laney, Jr., Birmingham, for appellee.
Virginia Page purchased a 'camper' from Camper City. While riding down Interstate 59 between Birmingham and Gadsden, the seat in which Ms. Page was sitting gave way, due to faulty construction. As a result, she was thrown backward into the interior of the camper, where she suffered alleged serious injuries. Immediately following the incident, Ms. Page drove to Camper City's place of business and indicated what had occurred. Camper City thereupon modified and strengthened the seat and tended to Ms. Page's physical injuries on the spot.
Almost four years later 1 in July, 1972, a suit was filed by Ms. Page against Camper City for breach of warranty both express and implied. Camper City filed a general demurrer 2 and later amended it by adding the fact that the plaintiff had failed to allege in her complaint that Written notice of the breach had been given. In July, 1973, the new Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure became effective. On August 7, 1973, the trial judge elected to treat the demurrer as a motion to dismiss and dismissed the case. A motion by Ms. Page to have the judgment of dismissal vacated and for leave to amend the complaint was overruled. This appeal followed.
One of the principal issues for decision in this appeal is whether or not written notice of a breach is required in this situation. If the notice given by Ms. Page, when she went to see Camper City after the accident, is consistent with the letter and spirit of the Uniform Commercial Code and § 2--607(3)(a) in particular, then the trial court improperly granted the motion to dismiss, based on the grounds stated in the amended demurrer. 3 Title 7A, Code of Alabama, § 2--607(3)(a) states as follows:
'(3) Where a tender has been accepted
'(a) the buyer must within a reasonable time after he discovers or should have discovered any breach notify the seller of breach or be barred from any remedy; and . . .'
This subsection uses the word 'notify', saying nothing about the method by which it is to be done. While in a subsection below, § 2--607(5)(a), the term 'written notice' is specifically used. If the drafters had intended a requirement of written notice for § 2--607(3)(a) they could have easily included that requirement, but here they did not. We therefore find that the word 'notify' as used in § 2--607(3)(a) encompasses a proper oral notification of any breach. Our conclusion is strengthened by the observation of a recent text on the Uniform Commercial Code, where the authors indicate that the word 'notifies' is defined in such a way in Title 7A, § 1--201(26) as to reasonably include oral communication. Additionally, written requirements throughout the U.C.C. are usually imposed by the word 'sent' or one of its derivatives. J. White & R. Summers, Uniform Commercial Code 348 (1972).
The Official Comment to § 2--607 sets out what type of notice was envisioned by the drafters of the Code. Comment 4 says in part:
In Smith v. Pizitz, 271 Ala. 101, 122 So.2d 591 (1960), this court held that the allegation of notice is a condition precedent to recovery in consumer as well as commercial cases. As to what would constitute sufficient notice, it was indicated the degree of notice which at least comports with the notice an ordinary tort-feasor would have of his breach of duty is sufficient. Generally however, as in the...
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