75 Colo. 231 | Colo. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is by the assignee of the vendor of five automobile carriages or busses which were sold to the Inter-City Automobile Lines of Denver, a corporation, and the object is a foreclosure, as chattel mortgages, of the five written instruments evidencing the transaction. Whether under the decision in Bailey, Trustee, etc. v. Baker I. M. Co., 239 U. S. 268, 36 Sup. Ct. 50, 60 L. Ed. 275, under a similar contract, that there is a real distinction between a conditional sale and an absolute sale with a mortgage back, and that the transaction there was strictly a conditional sale, is not important here, even if the conclusion is inconsistent with Andrews & Co. v. Colorado Sav. Bank,
Some of the Illinois decisions are: Chipron v. Feikert, 68 Ill. 284; First Natl. Bank v. Barse Com. Co., 198 Ill. 232, 64 N. E. 1097; Springer v. Lipsis, 209 Ill. 261, 70 N. E. 641; Zola v. Zacher, 220 Ill. App. 123.
In the Telluride Iron Works Company Case, supra, our Chattel Mortgage Act was construed in accordance with previous rulings of our own court, which give to the mortgagee of a defective chattel mortgage rights superior to those of “creditors and third persons” when the mortgagee has taken possession before their rights have become fixed by judicial process, or as against the rights of purchasers' without notice. The court said: “But the third person of the Colorado statute is not one who stands in the shoes of the mortgagor, but a purchaser or lienor for value without notice, or one in some such situation.”
As to the third point relied upon that the delivery of the automobile busses to the mortgagee’s agent by the mortgagor vendee was for the benefit of creditors, we observe that the court’s findings were against this contention and the testimony is clear that there was no such restriction, but that it was an absolute delivery for the failure of the purchaser to comply with the contract and possession was given to the mortgagee before any rights of this bankrupt attached, and before he ever had or claimed any lien or had made a seizure thereof by any judicial process, and possession was given for the express purpose of enabling the mortgagee to foreclose the mortgage liens.
The plaintiff in error cites Turnbull v. Cole, 70 Colo. 364, 201 Pac. 887, 25 A. L. R. 1149, to the proposition that a sale contract like the one before us, where possession has been given to the purchaser who reserves a secret lien, can not
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Teller and Mr. Justice Sheafor concur.