Vanessa Mathews v. REV Recreation Group, Inc. ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 18‐1982
    VANESSA MATHEWS and RANDY MATHEWS
    Plaintiffs‐Appellants,
    v.
    REV RECREATION GROUP, INC.,
    Defendant‐Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division.
    No. 1:15‐cv‐247 — William C. Lee, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED APRIL 2, 2019 — DECIDED JULY 26, 2019
    ____________________
    Before HAMILTON, BARRETT, and SCUDDER, Circuit Judges.
    BARRETT, Circuit Judge. Vanessa and Randy Mathews pur‐
    chased an RV, which came with a one‐year warranty from the
    manufacturer, REV Recreation Group, Inc. The RV was rid‐
    dled with problems from the time that they bought it, and
    these problems ultimately led the Mathews to sue REV. We
    sympathize with the Mathews’ plight; they bought a lemon.
    But because they have not shown that REV failed to honor its
    2                                                  No. 18‐1982
    warranties or that the warranty provisions were unconscion‐
    able, we must affirm the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment to REV.
    I.
    Vanessa and Randy Mathews purchased a Holiday Ram‐
    bler Presidential RV on May 7, 2014 from Mellott Brothers
    Trailer Sales, Inc. The RV came with a warranty from the man‐
    ufacturer, REV Recreation Group, Inc., which limited both ex‐
    press and implied warranties to one year from the purchase
    date. To take advantage of the warranty, the Mathews had to
    notify REV or an authorized dealer within five days of discov‐
    ering a defect. Moreover, the warranty stated that “[i]f the re‐
    pair or replacement remedy fails to successfully cure a defect
    after [REV] received a reasonable opportunity to cure the de‐
    fect[], your sole and exclusive remedy shall be limited to War‐
    rantor paying you the costs of having an independent third
    party perform repair(s) to the defect(s).” The Mathews were
    told about the warranty when they bought the RV, but they
    were not initially given a hard copy.
    The Mathews say that they encountered problems with
    the RV almost as soon as they drove it off the lot. They called
    the dealership to report that there were issues with the inte‐
    rior lights, the refrigerator, and the leveling system. The Mel‐
    lott Brothers service manager recommended that they go to
    an auto parts store and replace the fuses in order to fix the
    issues, which they did. The Mathews say that they also no‐
    ticed other problems on this first trip: water leaked from the
    shower, and the TV and DVD player didn’t work. But they
    didn’t contact anyone about these issues.
    No. 18‐1982                                                 3
    A month later, the Mathews went on another trip and
    claim to have had even more difficulty: the converter was
    blowing fuses, the leveling jacks worked only intermittently,
    the curbside slide cable broke, and there were still problems
    with the TV and DVD player. After calling the Mellott Broth‐
    ers again, the Mathews were given the number for REV so
    that they could locate an authorized repair center. REV told
    them that they could go to a local dealer near them, Johnson’s
    RV, but would need to obtain approval from REV before the
    dealer performed repairs that would be covered under the
    warranty. Johnson’s RV completed the repairs and told the
    Mathews that the repair work was covered, but neither the
    Mathews nor anyone from Johnson’s RV ever contacted REV
    about this work (though notably, the Mathews were never
    forced to pay for the repairs). This happened again a few
    months later when Johnson’s RV fixed the curbside slide ca‐
    ble—no one notified REV that repair work had been done.
    Around a month later, the Mathews contacted REV to in‐
    form them that they were having issues with the RV. REV ar‐
    ranged to repair the RV at its factory store. After completing
    the repairs, it issued an extended goodwill warranty for “de‐
    fective workmanship or materials in manufacturing”—alt‐
    hough the warranty specifically excluded an extension of the
    limited warranty “or any other warranties.”
    In March 2015, the Mathews again contacted REV, this
    time about problems with the cable for the air conditioning
    unit, the main slide, and the sealing tape on the slides. The
    Mathews asked REV to buy back the RV, but REV declined to
    do so and instead promised to repair the issues pursuant to
    the warranty. REV arranged to pick up the RV to repair it and
    4                                                        No. 18‐1982
    once again extended the goodwill warranty. In May 2015,
    REV also provided the Mathews a copy of the warranty.
    REV returned the RV to the Mathews in June 2015, and the
    Mathews never again took the RV to REV or any other author‐
    ized or independent dealer for repair. Instead, their attorney
    sent a letter to REV in July 2015 alleging that it had breached
    its warranties. Fed up, the Mathews filed suit soon after. In
    their amended complaint, they alleged breaches of express
    and implied warranties, as well as violations of both the Indi‐
    ana Deceptive Consumer Sales Act (IDCSA) and the Mag‐
    nuson–Moss Warranty Act.1 They claimed that REV had
    failed to fix the TV, DVD player, and air conditioning/slide
    out seals. They also asserted that in 2016, after they had filed
    suit, they noticed problems with the kitchen cabinets, a latent
    issue with the water tank, and that the rear of the coach was
    falling out. The Mathews conceded, however, that they did
    not raise this second group of issues with REV within the one‐
    year warranty period.
    REV moved for summary judgment on all counts, and the
    district court granted the motion. It explained that “while the
    facts and evidence support the Mathews’ contention that the
    RV had numerous problems, they do not support the allega‐
    tions that REV failed to honor its warranties.” Because REV
    was not given a reasonable opportunity to cure any defects,
    the court said, REV did not breach its express or implied war‐
    ranties. It also concluded that the warranty’s limitations were
    not unconscionable. And because the alleged warranty violat‐
    ins had been the basis for the Matthews’ claims under both
    1 The Magnuson–Moss Warranty Act is a federal statute that, among other
    things, permits consumers to sue to enforce state law warranty obliga‐
    tions. See 15 U.S.C. § 2310(d)(1).
    No. 18‐1982                                                    5
    the IDCSA and the Magnuson–Moss Warranty Act, the court
    held that those claims failed too.
    The Mathews appealed. Although, as the district court
    rightly noted, “[t]his case is a cluttered mess of immaterial
    factual disputes, unsupportable claims and maze‐like presen‐
    tation of arguments,” we gather that the Mathews raise the
    same arguments before us that they did below: that REV
    breached express and implied warranties and that REV vio‐
    lated both the IDCSA and the Magnuson–Moss Warranty Act.
    II.
    The Mathews first argue that REV breached its express
    warranty. To prevail on a breach of warranty claim in Indiana,
    a plaintiff must prove (1) the existence of a warranty, (2) a
    breach, (3) causation, and (4) damages. See Peltz Const. Co. v.
    Dunham, 
    436 N.E.2d 892
    , 894 (Ind. Ct. App. 1982). REV argues
    that the Mathews cannot establish a breach because it re‐
    paired all of the issues that the Mathews presented to it dur‐
    ing the warranty period. Indeed, the Mathews admit that they
    failed to give REV a chance to complete any new repairs after
    REV returned the RV to them in June 2015.
    But the Mathews argue that REV still breached the war‐
    ranty because, under Indiana law, a warranty can be breached
    “[w]here circumstances cause an exclusive or limited remedy
    to fail of its essential purpose.” Ind. Code § 26‐1‐2‐719(2); see
    also Perry v. Gulf Stream Coach, Inc., 
    814 N.E.2d 634
    , 643 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2004). The district court concluded that because the
    Mathews had not given REV a reasonable opportunity to cure
    the defects, which the warranty required, the warranty could
    not have failed in its essential purpose. See Anderson v. Gulf
    6                                                     No. 18‐1982
    Stream Coach, Inc., 
    662 F.3d 775
    , 783–84 (7th Cir. 2011) (ex‐
    plaining that, under Indiana law, the buyer has to give the
    seller a reasonable opportunity to cure “if the terms of the
    warranty impose that requirement”); Aamco Transmissions v.
    Air Sys., Inc., 
    459 N.E.2d 1215
    , 1217 (Ind. Ct. App. 1984). We
    agree.
    The Mathews rightly note that REV was in fact given a
    chance to fix at least some of the issues: the TV, the DVD
    player, and the air conditioning/slide out seals. But even as‐
    suming that we can count the repair attempts at Johnson’s
    RV—and it’s doubtful that we should because REV was not
    notified about them—REV had only two chances to fix each
    of these problems. Under Indiana law, two chances is not a
    reasonable opportunity to cure the defects such that the war‐
    ranty failed of its essential purpose. Cf. General Motors Corp. v.
    Sheets, 
    818 N.E.2d 49
    , 53 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004) (explaining that
    under Indiana’s Lemon Law, “[a] reasonable number of at‐
    tempts is considered to have been undertaken if the noncon‐
    formity has been subject to repair at least four times but contin‐
    ues to exist or if the vehicle has been out of service for at least
    thirty business days and the nonconformity continues to ex‐
    ist” (emphasis added)); Mayew v. Chrysler, LLC, 
    2008 WL 4447707
    , at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. 2008) (explaining that under the
    Delaware Warranty Act, “a plaintiff must permit the dealer at
    least four opportunities to attempt to repair the alleged de‐
    fect”).
    And even if the Mathews could show that REV had a rea‐
    sonable opportunity to repair the RV’s defects, the limited
    warranty did not fail in its essential purpose because the
    Mathews did not avail themselves of the contract’s back‐up
    remedy—which required that if REV failed to cure a defect,
    No. 18‐1982                                                                7
    the Mathews’ “sole and exclusive remedy shall be limited to
    Warrantor paying you the costs of having an independent
    third party perform repair(s) to the defect(s).”
    The Mathews next argue that REV breached the implied
    warranty of merchantability by selling them an RV that was
    not in merchantable condition at the time that they bought it.
    But here too the Mathews’ failure to give REV a reasonable
    opportunity to cure the alleged defects is fatal to their claim.2
    Recognizing this, the Mathews instead contend that the war‐
    ranty’s limitations—for both the express and implied warran‐
    ties—were unconscionable for two main reasons. First, they
    didn’t receive a copy of the warranty at the time of purchase.
    Second, the one‐year limited warranty period was an insuffi‐
    cient amount of time for them to recognize a latent defect like
    the water tank.
    Indiana courts have held that an unconscionable contract
    is one that “no sensible man not under delusion, duress or in
    distress would make, and … no honest and fair man would
    accept.” Weaver v. Am. Oil Co., 
    276 N.E.2d 144
    , 146 (Ind. 1971)
    (citation omitted). The district court correctly held that the
    Mathews’ arguments did not satisfy that standard. As for
    2 In one conclusory sentence and citation, the Mathews suggest that they
    did not have to give REV an opportunity to cure its failure to comply with
    the implied warranty. But without anything more by way of argument or
    citation to Indiana case law, we do not consider the argument. See United
    States v. Dunkel, 
    927 F.2d 955
    , 956 (7th Cir. 1991) (“A skeletal ‘argument,’
    really nothing more than an assertion, does not preserve a claim.”); United
    States v. Giovannetti, 
    919 F.2d 1223
    , 1230 (7th Cir. 1990) (“A litigant who
    fails to press a point by supporting it with pertinent authority, or by show‐
    ing why it is a good point despite a lack of supporting authority or in the
    face of contrary authority, forfeits the point.” (emphasis omitted)).
    8                                                  No. 18‐1982
    their claim that the warranty was unconscionable because
    they didn’t receive a hard copy, the district court observed:
    [T]he Mathews were aware of the Limited War‐
    ranty and its terms, and even took advantage of
    it by having repair work done at REV’s factory
    on two (and only two) occasions, so they cannot
    claim now that any of its terms or limitations are
    unconscionable based on the fact that they did
    not receive [a] physical copy of it at the time of
    sale.
    In other words, the Mathews cannot have it both ways: rely‐
    ing on the contract when it works to their advantage to get
    repairs done and then alleging that it is unconscionable when
    it doesn’t. See Dixon v. Monaco Coach Corp., 
    2009 WL 187837
    ,
    at *3 (N.D. Ind. 2009) (“[T]he evidence is undisputed that the
    Dixons took advantage of the warranty prior to the filing of
    their claim, requesting and receiving numerous repairs from
    Monaco during the applicable warranty period. As such, the
    Dixons can not [sic] now argue that they are suddenly sur‐
    prised by the application of the limited warranty and its terms
    relating to the filing of breach of warranty claims.”). And as
    for the Mathews’ contention that the warranty’s one‐year time
    limitation was unconscionable, the district court rightly noted
    that “[t]he possibility that a latent defect may exist is one of
    the risks present at the time the contract is formed, and does
    not, in and of itself, render a contract unconscionable.” (quot‐
    ing Popham v. Keystone RV Co., 
    2016 WL 4993393
    , at *6 (N.D.
    Ind. 2016)). We thus agree with the district court that the con‐
    tract’s limited warranty was not unconscionable—it was not
    one that “no honest and fair man” would accept. See 
    Weaver, 276 N.E.2d at 146
    .
    No. 18‐1982                                                9
    Finally, because the Mathews have not established that a
    warranty was breached or that the limitations in the warranty
    were unconscionable, their remaining claims under the
    IDCSA and Magnuson–Moss Warranty Act, which were
    based on the same arguments, fail as well.
    ***
    We are sympathetic to the Mathews; they were sold an RV
    that had problems from the day that they bought it. But be‐
    cause they have not established that REV breached its express
    or implied warranties—or any other law—we agree with the
    district court that their claims fail.
    AFFIRMED.