127 S.E. 325 | W. Va. | 1925
This writ of error involves a controversy between landlord and a vendor who has reserved title to personal property, as to which has precedence in the assertion of his claim, the personal property having been placed on the landlord's premises with his tenant. The landlord asserts that his lien for rent is superior to the claim of the vendor who has title under a conditional sale contract. The property involved is an automatic player-piano. Originally it was sold by the Manley Piano Company to Jones, a tenant of J. E. Brown, the landlord, and was placed by the tenant in a restaurant in a building owned by Brown, in Keystone, West Virginia. Jones failed in the business, and the piano was redelivered to the vendor, the piano company. Subsequent to its removal, I. S. Woody, who had been employed as a cook by Jones in the restaurant, conceived the idea that he could make a success of the restaurant and rented the same room for that purpose from Brown. He desired to purchase the piano from the piano company and approached its manager for that purpose. The piano was sold to him under a conditional sale contract for the sum of $970.00 to be paid in monthly payments of $54.00, the title being retained by the vendor until the purchase price was paid, with power to repossess the piano upon failure of any of the monthly payments, and in case the piano was so repossessed by the vendor the payments made should be considered as payments for its use. The conditional sale contract was dated the 5th day of February, 1923, but was not recorded. The piano was placed in the restaurant. There is a controversy as to the date on which it was delivered to Woody and placed by him in the landlord's building. The monthly payments were not made, only the sum of $187.00 having been paid to the piano company by Woody. Some time in the latter part of the year 1923, the piano company notified Woody that it would repossess the piano under its contract, for failure to pay the monthly payments. When it went to repossess the piano the restaurant was closed, with a notice on the door that the contents had been levied upon by the landlord under a distress warrant. The piano *514 company filed a petition in the proceeding before the justice of the peace on the distress warrant, asking for a trial of the right of the property. The case was appealed to the circuit court. In the meantime, the piano company gave bond and secured the possession of the piano. Upon the trial in the circuit court, after the evidence was in, the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the landlord. This writ of error followed
The only question we have is whether or not the court erred in giving the peremptory instruction to find for the landlord.
Under Section 11, Chap. 93, Barnes' Code, 1923, a distress warrant may be levied on any of the tenant's goods found on the landlord's premises. But if the goods, when carried on his premises are subject to a lien which is valid against the tenant's creditors, the interest only of the tenant in the goods is liable to the distraint. Woody had only an equity in the piano at the time it was placed in the restaurant. Under the contract the title did not pass to him until the full purchase price was paid. Under the conditional sales statute, Sec. 5, Chap. 99-A, Code 1923, every provision in a conditional sale agreement reserving property in the seller is void as to creditors of the buyer, who acquire a lien by attachment or levy upon the property, without notice of such provision, before the contract is recorded, unless the contract be recorded within ten days after the conditional sale is made. Under this statute a seller who retains title to property sold is protected against innocent purchasers, and creditors who obtain a lien by attachment or levy thereon, by recording the conditional sale contract within ten days after the sale is made. His contract is void as to them, if they do not have notice, if he does not record before the lien attaches 'or the purchase is made. The only purpose of recording the agreement is to give notice to purchasers and creditors that the possessor of the property does not have title thereto. After recordation within ten days after such sale, the statute says that every creditor who has obtained a lien by attachment or levy, and every purchaser, has had constructive notice that the seller has superior title with right to repossess the *515
property upon breach of the sales conditions. Actual notice is as potent as constructive notice; and if a creditor or purchaser with actual notice of the seller's rights seeks to take the property, he is on no higher ground than if he had purchased, or obtained a lien after due recordation of the conditional sale contract. It cannot be questioned that if the conditional sale contract for the piano had been recorded before the piano was placed by Woody in the landlord's building, the seller's right under the contract would be superior to the landlord's lien for rent. Thomas v. Hubbard Co.,
We conclude, therefore, that if a landlord has actual notice before property is moved upon his premises that the title to the property which his tenant moves into the leased premises is reserved by his tenant's vendor until the purchase money is paid, the interest only of the tenant in the property is subject to distraint for rent, even though the conditional sale contract has not been recorded. We do not intimate an opinion that Brown had actual notice. Iller asserts that he did have such notice, and Brown asserts that he did not. The fact is one peculiarly for jury determination, and it was error to instruct the jury to find for Brown under this conflicting evidence.White v. Hoster Brewing Company,
The judgment will be reversed, the verdict set aside and a new trial awarded.
Judgment reversed; verdict set aside; new trial awarded.