Two Fire Departments One Truck and Federal Court To Decide Who Gets What

Two fire departments, one in New Jersey and the other in North Carolina, have found themselves in the middle of a complicated commercial lawsuit in Federal court over title to a brand new American LaFrance brush truck.

Last September, the Audubon Park Volunteer Fire Department in Audubon Park, New Jersey, agreed to purchase a $180,000 brush truck from American LaFrance LLC. The transaction was structured as a lease purchase whereby the fire company paid $29,763 down, with the balance to be financed through a lease with TD Equipment Finance, an affiliate of TD Bank.

The truck is a 2012 American LaFrance Brush Truck (identified in the complaint as a Pastak model with a  VIN # 1FDOW5HT4CEA71862). Before the unit could be delivered, it apparently required some work to be performed by Anchor-Richey Emergency Vehicle Services, Inc., of Taylorsville, North Carolina. Anchor-Richey also happens to be an American LaFrance dealer.

In February, TD Equipment Finance wired the $150,000 balance to American LaFrance as final payment for the vehicle. The manufacturer’s Statement of Origin for the truck (the document that goes to the registry of motor vehicles for purposes of registering a new vehicle) was updated to list Audubon Park VFD as the owner with TD Equipment Finance as a lienholder.

When the vehicle was completed, Anchor-Richey refused to turn it over to Audubon Park VFD, claiming that the $150,000 payment should have been made payable to it, not American LaFrance. Despite months of wrangling the matter could not be straightened out.

On July 16, 2012, Anchor-Richey informed Audubon Park and TD Equipment Finance that it sold the brush truck to a fire company in North Carolina. That prompted TD Equipment to file suit in Federal District Court in New Jersey against:

  • American LaFrance
  • Anchor-Richey
  • The unidentified fire company (listed in the suit as XYZ Fire Company of North Carolina).

The suit seeks monetary damages for breach of contract, fraud, misappropriation, and  intentional interference with a business relationship, as well as an injunction to recover possession of the vehicle.

Cases like this make me wish I paid a little more attention in my commercial law class, but fundamentally at issue is going to be the rights of the lienholder (TD Equipment Finance) versus the mechanic’s lien rights of Anchor-Richey for the work they put into the vehicle.

Unclear at this point is why American LaFrance has not stepped to the plate to resolve this dispute without the parties having to make a Federal lawsuit out of it.

While many municipalities require successful bidders to post a performance bond to cover themselves in the event of such unforeseeable disputes, many volunteer fire departments that operate outside of municipal purchasing systems do not. Certainly the value of a performance bond may be one point to take away from this case.

Here is a copy of the complaint. Complaint

More on the story.

About Curt Varone

Curt Varone has over 45 years of fire service experience and 35 as a practicing attorney licensed in both Rhode Island and Maine. His background includes 29 years as a career firefighter in Providence (retiring as a Deputy Assistant Chief), as well as volunteer and paid on call experience. He is the author of two books: Legal Considerations for Fire and Emergency Services, (2006, 2nd ed. 2011, 3rd ed. 2014, 4th ed. 2022) and Fire Officer's Legal Handbook (2007), and is a contributing editor for Firehouse Magazine writing the Fire Law column.
x

Check Also

KCMO Challenges Arbitration Award in Triple Fatal Crash

The City of Kansas City is appealing an arbitration decision that reduced the disciplinary penalty for the firefighter responsible for the 2021 triple-fatal apparatus crash to a three-day suspension without pay. Dominic Biscari was driving Kansas City’s Pumper 19, when it ran a red light, collided with an SUV, struck several parked cars, came to rest in a building, and in the process killed three people.

New Hampshire Firefighter Claims He Was Sexually Harassed

A New Hampshire firefighter who resigned last December after enduring what he claims was years of sexually harassing comments and retaliation is now suing his former employer. Christopher R. Golomb filed suit against the City of Concord last month in Merrimack County Superior Court.