Court Opinion

ID: 3762468
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:18:18.244815+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:04:32.091226
License: Public Domain

I respectfully dissent from the decision of the majority.
The trial court granted a judgment on the pleadings on motions filed pursuant to Civ.R. 12 (C), which presents an issue of law only. Peterson v. Teodosio (1973), 34 Ohio St. 2d 161,63 O.O.2d 262, 297 N.E.2d 113. In this instance, that issue was whether the vehicle that Beau Townsend Ford delivered to the Days was a "new motor vehicle" for purposes of the Ohio Lemon Law, R.C. 1345.71
et seq. In holding that the vehicle was not covered by the Lemon Law, the trial court applied the distinction between "new" and "used" vehicles we adopted in Steger v. Superior Dodge, Inc.
(Oct. 11, 1985), Montgomery App. No. 9165, unreported,1985 WL 6944. I believe that the trial court erred in so doing.
Steger reversed as against the manifest weight of the evidence a judgment rendered in favor of a plaintiff consumer on a claim that a defendant dealer's failure to disclose that a vehicle was a "used" demonstrator violated the Consumer Sales Act, permitting the consumer to rescind the sale. We found that the dealer's failure to disclose was overcome by the fact that when the vehicle was delivered to the consumer its odometer displayed 1,146 miles. We specifically declined to adopt the definition of a "new motor vehicle" in R.C. 4517.01 (C), which looks to whether its title has previously been transferred to an ultimate purchaser. We stated, "A new car buyer, we believe, is more concerned — and rightfully so — with whether the car *Page 269 
has more than the minimal mileage incidental to its delivery to the dealer rather than whether it has ever been transferred in the past by the dealer." Id. at 3.
The trial court relied on Steger to support its holding that the vehicle here, which had twenty-six thousand miles on its odometer when it was delivered to the Days, was not a "new motor vehicle" as a matter of law. However, in Steger the vehicle's mileage at delivery was relevant to a question of fact, or a mixed question of law and fact, which was whether the  consumer was deceived or misled. That same matter and holding cannot be applied to resolve a different issue of law, whether a vehicle is a "new motor vehicle" for purposes of the Lemon Law, which is what the trial court did when it granted the Civ.R. 12 (C) judgment on the pleadings for Beau Townsend Ford.
The Lemon Law makes no mention of mileage at all, so engrafting a mileage standard to determine whether the vehicle is a "new motor vehicle" is necessarily arbitrary, both in its application and its result. The better and more principled alternative is to read the Lemon Law in pari materia with the definition of "new motor vehicle" in R.C. 4517.01 (C). The rule of in pari materia
permits the meaning of an undefined statutory term to be determined with reference to the statutory law of the state on the same subject or subjects related to it.
R.C. Chapter 4517 is concerned with regulation of automobile dealers and sales. The General Assembly may be presumed to have had the definition in R.C. 4517.01 (C) in mind when it used the "new motor vehicle" term in the Lemon Law, but didn't define it there. Therefore, I would apply the R.C. 4517.01 (C) definition to the term "new motor vehicle" as it appears in R.C. 1345.71 etseq. That application would leave undisturbed the distinction we drew in Steger between "new" and "used" vehicles because that, case presented an entirely different issue.
The terms "new" and "used" have customary and complimentary meanings in the market for automobiles. One of the alternative remedies in the Lemon Law, replacement of the consumer's vehicle; appears to be addressed to new vehicle sales. However, it doesn't require replacement with the same vehicle or type of vehicle, but only one "acceptable to the consumer." R.C. 1345.72 (B). If one cannot be found, the dealer may refund the purchase price and associated costs, which it can do whether the vehicle is new or used.
The concern of the Lemon Law is not the vehicle but an express warranty, which can be attached to any vehicle whether it is "used" rather than "new" in the market sense. If the point of distinction is whether the vehicle has previously been "titled" to an ultimate purchaser, as R.C. 4517.01 (C) provides, then the Lemon Law cannot apply to a vehicle that was previously acquired by an ultimate purchaser. For purposes of the Lemon Law, a "purchaser" includes a lessee. *Page 270 Pertuset v. Ford Motor Co. (1994), 96 Ohio App. 3d 777,645 N.E.2d 1329. Therefore, a prior lease would remove any warranty attached to the vehicle from the coverage of the Lemon Law, just as would a prior sale.
We do not know from this record whether title to the vehicle that Beau Townsend Ford delivered to the Days had previously been transferred to another "ultimate purchaser," through a sale or lease, because that is not reflected in the pleadings and this case was decided only on the pleadings. The Days contend that the title was previously in the name of Beau Townsend Ford, which is not an "ultimate purchaser" per R.C. 4517.01 (C).
On the basis of the pleadings, the Days are "consumers" and the vehicle delivered to them by Beau Townsend Ford was subject to an express' warranty that required the dealer to bring the vehicle into conformity with the warranty when its engine malfunctioned, which the dealer failed to do. Therefore, the Days have a right of relief pursuant to R.C. 1345.75 for the dealer's failure to comply with the requirements of the Lemon Law, if their vehicle is a "new motor vehicle." This record does not demonstrate that title to the vehicle had previously been transferred to another "ultimate purchaser." Therefore, the trial court erred when it granted the motions for judgment on the pleadings on the record before the court.
Finally, and as an alternative ground to grant the motions, the trial court held that the Lemon Law cannot apply here because R.C. 1345.72 (A) requires consumers to report a nonconformity to the dealer "during the period of one year following the date of original delivery or during the first eighteen thousand miles of operation, whichever is earlier," and the vehicle had twenty-six thousand miles on its odometer when it was delivered to the Days. In my view, this latter alternative reasonably means during the first year or the first eighteen thousand miles of the vehicle's operation after its delivery to the consumer. This makes delivery of the vehicle, which coincides with creation of the consumer's right to enforce the express warranty, the critical point in time, and avoids the arbitrariness of accounting for mileage put on an otherwise "new" vehicle during and after the manufacturing process, during delivery, and on the dealer's lot.
For the foregoing reasons, I would reverse the judgment on the pleadings that the trial court granted and remand the case for further proceedings on the Days' claim for relief. *Page 271