91 Pa. Super. 600 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
Argued October 17, 1927.
This proceeding arises under the Act of March 27, 1923, P.L. 34. A Nash automobile was seized in Cumberland County while in use for the transportation of intoxicating liquor. By appropriate proceedings in the Court of Quarter Sessions, it was condemned and *602
ordered to be sold. Thereupon the Commercial Investment Trust, Inc., of New York City, presented a petition setting forth that about July 15, 1926, the Kruse Motors Company of Brooklyn, N.Y., entered into a conditional sale contract with one Louis Buttel of Brooklyn, under which the automobile referred to was delivered to the purchaser; at the same time, the latter executed a promissory note in the sum of $1,308 for a balance of purchase money, to secure the payment of which said conditional sale contract was executed; that about July 20th, the petitioner in the course of its business as an automobile finance company purchased the said promissory note and conditional sale contract from the Kruse Motor Co.; that no part of the above mentioned note has been paid and that the said sum remains due and payable to the petitioner, and that the latter claims a lien on the automobile for that amount, by reason whereof the petitioner prayed the court to direct that the said sum of $1,308 be paid to it out of the proceeds of the sale of the automobile. The trial judge construing the contract to be a conditional sale and not a bailment, refused the petition and from that action we have this appeal. It is plain that any relief to which the petitioner may resort must be found under Section 11 B, clause 3, where provision is made for payment to the bailee of money on a bailment lease or contract, under the conditions therein prescribed. If the document pleaded by the appellant is a bailment lease or contract, and the petitioner is a "bailor" as described in the paragraph referred to, it brings itself within the terms of the act. That the title relied on is not a lease and that the assignor to the petitioner was not a bailor, we consider evident from the terms of the contract. It was the purpose of the Kruse Company to sell the automobile to Buttel, and it was the intention of Buttel to buy. It was not the intention of either party that the vehicle was to be *603
returned to the Kruse Company at the end of any term of bailment. There was no provision for the payment of anything in the nature of rent. The contract did provide that on certain defaults, the vendor might seize the property, but it reserved the right to recover all the purchase money from the vendee. The right to reclaim the property did not define the nature of the contract nor distinguish it from that class of contracts known as conditional sale. It was said in Farquhar v. McAlevy,
The order is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.