delivered the opinion of the court:
Autоmobile purchase — retail installment contract — assigned to bank — suit for balance due.
Which statute of limitations applies? Four years or ten?
Four. The Uniform Commercial Code controls.
Citizen’s National Bank of Decatur brought this small-claims action to recover the balance due on two retail installment sales contracts. Judgment was entered for defendant on one of the contracts and for plaintiff on the other. Only defendant appeals. The sole issue raised is whether the 4-year statute of limitations governing actions for breach оf a contract for the sale of goods is a defense to the bank-assignee’s action.
We reverse.
On July 7, 1972, the defendant purchased an automobile from Weidenbacher Toyota, Inc. At the time of purchase she made a cash down payment and signed a retail installment contract which obligated her to pay the remaining purchase price in 18 monthly installments. This contract was subsequently assigned to Citizen’s, the bank with which the defendant told the dealer she did business. She had never contacted anyone at the bank in regard to a loan but she did make pаyments to Citizen’s on this contract. The testimony at trial was contradictory concerning the date of defendant’s default on the contract. Accоrding to a bank employee, the account became delinquent in January 1973, but defendant testified that she made no payments after March 1974.
In either сase, it is undisputed that plaintiff did not bring this action until more than 4 years after defendant’s breach. The defendant unsuccessfully raised the statute of limitations issue thrеe times: by motion to dismiss prior to trial, by motion for judgment, and by motion to vacate judgment. This appeal followed.
It is the bank’s position that its action as assignee of a retail installment sales contract is governed by the 10-year statute of limitations for actions on a written contract. The section relied on by plaintiff provides:
“Except as provided in Section 2 — 725 of the ‘Uniform Commercial Code,’ enacted by the Seventy-second General Assembly, actions on bonds, promissory notes, bills of exchange, written leases, written contracts, or other evidences of indebtedness in writing, shall be commenced within 10 years next after the cause of action accrued; ” * (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 83, par. 17.)
The explicit exception to this 10-year limitations period — section 2 — 725 of the Uniform Commercial Code — requires an action for breach of any contract for sale to be commenced within four years after the cause of action has accrued. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 26, par. 2 — 725.
The bank’s argument for application of the 10-year statute, although novel, is unacceptable. It argues that defendant’s breach was of her obligations to make payment, not of a contract for the sale of goods. In the contract, defendant agreed to make 18 monthly payments commencing on August 25, 1972, and plaintiff argues that the contract is really a hybrid instrument containing provisions for the sale of goods and provisions for the obligation to pay. The bank would have us hold that the sale of goods occurred on the date the contract was signed. It argues that this action is one for breach of defendant’s promise to pay which is an
We find no basis for making such a distinction.
The principal case relied on by plaintiff-bank is readily distinguishable from the case at bench. In Harris Trust & Savings Bank v. McCray (1974),
In the present case, however, the bаnk did not loan money to the defendant as it contends. It purchased a retail installment contract from Weidenbacher Toyota. There was no рre-existing relationship between plaintiff and defendant which was similar to the one between the issuer and cardholder in Harris Trust.
A contract for sale inсludes both a present sale and a contract to sell in the future. The sale consists of the passing of title to the buyer for a price. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 26, рar. 2 — 106.) The obligation to pay is a fundamental part of the contract for sale. It is not, as plaintiff suggests, separate and distinct from the transfer of the physical possession of the automobile. Nor is this a case where a buyer borrows money from a third person and uses that money to purchase goods from a merchant.
Moreover, the comments to section 2 — 725 of the Uniform Commercial Code state that it is designed to introduce a uniform statutе of limitations for sales contracts and to eliminate jurisdictional variations. (Ill. Ann. Stat., ch. 26, par. 2 — 725, Comments, at 614 (Smith-Hurd 1977).) An examination of cases from other jurisdictiоns wherein this issue has been considered shows that it has consistently been held that actions such as the one at bench are governed by section 2 — 725, the 4-yеar limitation statute.
In Associates Discount Corp. v. Palmer (1966),
We believe the reasoning employed by the Court of Appeals of Maryland in Burton v. Artery Co. (1977),
If Weidenbacher Toyota, Inc., had not assigned this contract to the bank, it is obvious to us that its сause of action on the contract would be governed by section 2 — 725. The fact that plaintiff-bank brought this action as an assignee of the contract does not change that result. This is an action for breach of a contract for sale and should have been brought within 4 years of defendant’s breach,
Reversed.
REARDON, P. J., and CRAVEN, J., concur.
