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(JOHN
OLIVERA |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN
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(AND
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(SONIA
FABER |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 9 of 1983
5th December, 1983
Rajasingham, J., Q.C.
Mr. Denys
Barrow for the Plaintiff.
Mr. B.Q.A. Pitts for the Defendant.
Sale
of goods - Oral agreement - Balance due on sale price.
J U D G M E N T
The Plaintiff's
action is for the sale price of a deep freezer sold by him
to the Defendant at a price of $800. The Defendant, while
acknowledging the sale, states that the price she agreed to
pay was only $500. The parties agree that the Defendant had
paid a sum of $250 towards the price of the deep freezer.
Counsel for the Defendant stated in Court that the Defendant
had deposited the sum of $250, which she says is the balance
due, in the Registry to the credit of this case.
The Plaintiff
gave evidence and said that he had discussed the sale of the
deep freezer with his daughter-in-law, the daughter of the
Defendant, in the presence of his son. His daughter-in-law
told him her mother, the Defendant, was interested and went
downstairs with him to see it. The Plaintiff says he asked
his son what he could sell it for and his son told the daughter-in-law,
whose name was Betty, he could sell it for $800. The Plaintiff
says he told Betty that "if they came up with cash off
the barrel" he would give it to her for $600. He told
her that if he had to "work on it" he wanted $800.
He said there was no further discussion. One day when he returned
from the farm the freezer had been removed. That was on the
13th of May, 1983. He and his wife went to Belize City on
the 14th of May, 1983, to the Defendant's house. He added
that between the date of his discussion with Betty and the
date of removal of the freezer, he had worked on the freezer.
On the 14th May, 1983 which was a Saturday, the Defendant
paid him $250 and, he says, promised to send the balance through
her daughter on Monday. She did not do so.
In cross-examination
the Plaintiff agreed that he had made no agreement with the
Defendant personally. He said that prior to going to her house
he did not know her. This makes the message conveyed to the
Defendant by her daughter important. He says he knows of no
agreement made between the Defendant and his wife, but agreed
she had authority to do so. He denied that the Defendant,
when she paid the $250 on that Saturday, said she was paying
half the agreed price.
The Plaintiff's
wife gave evidence and she said she heard Betty tell her husband
her mother was interested in the freezer, but that when they
went downstairs later she did not go with them. She said the
freezer was removed on a Friday which she thought was the
14th of May. She said they went to Belize City on the Saturday.
She denies discussing price with the Defendant. She denied
the freezer was delivered on the 8th of May, 1983, a Sunday.
She said it was delivered on the 14th, a Friday. She said
the Defendant never came there before that date. She is corroborated
on this by the Defendant's daughter, Elizabeth Gentle. She
said she discussed nothing with the Defendant when she came
for the freezer. She denied any discussion about the Defendant
paying half the money. Mrs. Olivera said that the Defendant
told her that that was the only time she had free and the
owner of the vehicle had picked her up and brought her so
she could take the freezer, and that she did not get the time
to go for the money before she came. Mrs. Olivera let the
Defendant remove it without payment. Mrs. Olivera remembered
that when they went to Belize City she did not have to introduce
her husband because they met the Defendant's son at the door
and the son knew her husband. She corroborates her husband
by saying there was nothing said of paying half the price
when the $250 was paid, and states that the defendant said
that was all the money she had till Monday. She agreed Defendant
held it out to her and she said it should be given to her
husband.
There
was a lot of reference to matters that happened thereafter
but as they do not have any reference to the price I do not
intend to deal with that evidence in any detail, except to
note that all attempts to recover the freezer were made by
Mrs. Olivera and that those attempts failed. That evidence
was presumably led to show that it was Mrs. Olivera who took
an active part in matters concerning this freezer. The Defendant
also said that on the last occasion Mrs. Olivera sought to
remove the freezer the Defendant had the money to pay the
balance but Mrs. Olivera would not listen and wanted to remove
the freezer. I do not believe this evidence as from her manner
it appeared to me to be an invention made on the spur of the
moment.
The Defendant
gave evidence and stated that her daughter Elizabeth ascertained
the price from Mrs. Olivera, her mother-in-law, and told her
it was $500. She said she went to Hattieville herself and
verified the price as being $500. This was sometime in April,
1983. She said she went again on the 8th of May with a vehicle
and told Mrs. Olivera she had not brought the money and asked
if it was alright for her to take it. She said her pay day
was the 13th and she would make the first payment then. She
says she told Mrs. Olivera she was going to make a first payment
of $250 and pay the rest later, and Mrs. Olivera agreed to
that. She said she does not know the Olivera's son Raymond,
although she herself earlier referred to Mrs. Olivera as her
daughter's mother -in-law; perhaps Betty's husband was another
son. She said she next saw Mrs. Olivera when she came on the
13th to collect the money. She gave them the $250; she says
she offered it to Mrs. Olivera because it was Mrs. Olivera
she had made her arrangement with. Since she had never before
met Mr. Olivera, I am inclined to believe she may have done
so as Mrs. Olivera was the person she knew. It is of no great
significance to my mind. She said she then stated "This
leaves a balance of $250". She said she said this to
both. Then she made a curious slip. She had earlier said that
when she offered Mrs. Olivera the money, Mrs. Olivera asked
her to give it to her husband; now she said that Mrs. Olivera
smiled when she said "that leaves a balance of $250"
and "took the money". In cross-examination of the
Plaintiff when it was suggested that the money had been given
to Mrs. Olivera and the Plaintiff denied it, Counsel asked
Plaintiff whether it had not been offered to Mrs. Olivera
and Mrs. Olivera had not asked that it be given to Plaintiff.
The same suggestion was made in cross-examination of Mrs.
Olivera. Both Mrs. Olivera and Mr. Olivera agreed that that
was how it happened, and Plaintiff says he received the payment.
The defendant went on to speak of Mrs. Olivera's attempts
to collect the balance money or repossess the freezer and
her refusal to give it up and of a frustrated attempt to pay
the balance due.
In cross-examination
she said she first learnt of the price from her daughter.
She says she did not take her daughter's word on the price
so she went to discuss it personally with the seller and to
ascertain who would transport the freezer. In cross-examination
she says it was agreed on the first visit that she would pay
in installments and would pay the first installment on the
13th when she was paid. This varies from her position in examination-in-chief
where she said that when she went there on the 8th of May,
the second visit and the day she collected the freezer, she
told Mrs. Olivera she had not brought the money and would
make the first payment on the 13th, her pay day. She now said
in cross-examination that she had been merely reminding Mrs.
Olivera of what she had said on the first visit. This raises
a strong probability that Mrs. Olivera is right and there
was only one visit. She went on to say that she only paid
half at first because she had other uses for the money she
had with her. At this stage of the cross-examination I had
the distinctive impression that she was ad-libbing freely.
The Defendant
called her daughter, Elizabeth Gentle. She says she told her
mother of the deep freezer and of the price being $500. She
too says Mrs. Olivera told her the price was $500. She says
she told her mother "of it in April" and it was
brought to her mother's house on the 8th of May, 1983. In
cross-examination she agreed at first that Mr. Olivera had
said he wanted $800 if he fixed it up, and then later prevaricated
about when and in whose presence it happened. She added that
she knew of only one occasion when her mother went to Hattieville
(where the plaintiff had the freezer) and that was on the
day she brought it back. This supports Mrs. Olivera's evidence.
In re-examination she did not really change this piece of
evidence. If that is true and it means that in fact the Defendant
did not go earlier in April, it means she did not discuss
price with Mrs. Olivera; because even she does not say she
discussed the price on the day she went to collect the freezer.
I was
struck by the contrast between the manner in which Mr. &
Mrs. Olivera gave their evidence and the manner in which the
Defendant gave evidence. I am afraid I found the defendant
most evasive and unconvincing. Her daughter was very uncomfortable
and unconvincing in the witness box.
On the
evidence I am satisfied that the only time any price was mentioned
was when the Plaintiff told Elizabeth Gentle that he would
accept $600 as is or $800 after he had worked on it - repaired
it. His assertion that he worked on it is uncontested. I am
satisfied that this price was conveyed by the daughter to
the Defendant.
I, therefore,
hold that the freezer was sold at $800 by the Plaintiff to
the Defendant and that the Defendant knew that to be the price
when she collected it on the 13th of May, 1983. I give judgment
for Plaintiff in a sum of $550. If the Defendant has deposited
a sum of $250 to the credit of this case, from the Defendant
to the Plaintiff, the balance sum due will be $300. I award
costs to the Plaintiff.
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