324 A.2d 921 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1974
Although the named plaintiff is Mark D. Black, the parties at the outset of the hearing *523 before the trial court stipulated that the only plaintiffs remaining are the plaintiffs Welch and the plaintiffs Clothier, the complaints of the other plaintiffs having been abandoned.
The defendant Schenectady Discount Corporation, hereinafter referred to as Schenectady, is a New York corporation now authorized to do business in Connecticut. In the action before us, Schenectady financed the inventory of mobile homes sold by NuTrend, Inc., a Connecticut corporation controlled by Mr. and Mrs. Billy Joe Sere. Schenectady had a security interest in the inventory, i.e. "all mobile homes and campers" of the dealer, NuTrend. Copies of the financing statement, as required by the Uniform Commercial Code, were on file in the secretary of state's office as of December 6, 1971. See General Statutes §§
Regarding the Clothier transaction, the facts may be summarized as follows: Schenectady was the holder of a trust receipt in the amount of $6358, covering a Schult mobile home, serial No. 11283, and executed by NuTrend on June 8, 1972. On that date, the Clothiers signed an agreement with NuTrend to purchase a Beaumont mobile home, for which they paid $9276 in cash. But Sere then indicated to the Clothiers that the Beaumont had been damaged by rain and that he was unable to make delivery of that home to them. He effectuated a substitution of the Schult mobile home referred to above. Schenectady, however, has never been paid the sum lent to NuTrend for which the Schult was security. *524 Schenectady now seeks to repossess that mobile home from the Clothiers, claiming that its security interest continues despite the "sale" to the Clothiers.
Under the terms of the financing statement filed by Schenectady covering all of NuTrend's inventory of mobile homes and campers, including the Schult No. 11283, the mobile homes could be sold by NuTrend without permission of Schenectady. But Schenectady argues that the across-the-board exchange of the Schult for the damaged Beaumont did not amount to a "sale" within the contemplation of the parties to the trust receipt. The transaction, Schenectady argues, was not authorized, and consequently, under §
Under §
Section
But the definition of "buyer in ordinary course of business" expressly provides that "`[b]uying' may be for cash or by exchange of other property." §
Under §
Turning to the Welch transaction, the mobile home, American No. 0419, which the Welchs purchased from NuTrend on September 5, 1972, had been previously owned by Ethel M. Heser. Welch knew of this prior ownership. The mobile home was identified as one for which there is a certificate of title on file with the motor vehicle department showing Ethel M. Heser as owner, Schenectady as first lienholder, and NuTrend as seller. The Welchs paid Sere $7495, and the only document of sale the Welchs possess is a receipt for money as "payment for mobile home in full," signed by Sere. Welch testified that he signed an application for a title certificate but had never received one from either NuTrend or Sere. Mrs. Heser had in fact defaulted on the payments on her retail instalment contract. She apparently returned possession of the mobile home to NuTrend but has never conveyed title to the home to either NuTrend or the plaintiffs Welch. Schenectady has never released nor assigned its interest in the mobile home. NuTrend then sold the home to the Welchs, as set forth above. When Schenectady sought information relative to the Heser default, it found the Welchs in possession of the mobile home. They refused to relinquish it to Schenectady on demand.
In the case of this mobile home, Schenectady claims that as the holder of a perfected security interest created by means of a retail instalment contract between it and Ethel M. Heser, it is entitled to priority over any subsequent purchaser from Mrs. Heser upon her default.
In National Shawmut Bank v. Jones,
In National Shawnut Bank v. Jones, supra, the court also held that the buyer did not take free of the security interest by reason of the provisions of §
Inasmuch as Schenectady has demonstrated to us the possible validity of its right to possession of *528 the mobile home now in the possession of the plaintiffs Welch, we conclude that the injunction barring its right to institute a replevin action cannot stand.
There is error in part, the injunction as it applies to the plaintiffs Welch is dissolved and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion;