63 A.2d 767 | D.C. | 1949
Plaintiffs Price sued in replevin to recover an electric delicatessen case and computing scale having a total value of $1,085 from defendant’s store. They based their claim upon a conditional sales contract signed by defendant. He defended upon the ground that he had previously purchased the chattels from plaintiffs and had never transferred title back to them and therefore there was no basis for the re-plevin suit. Judgment was given against defendant by the trial court and he prosecutes this appeal. ' *
It is not disputed that the articles were sold by plaintiffs by an oral agreement under which defendant gave three checks. The first, for $600, was dated on the date of the sale and was cashed by plaintiffs. The others, for $400 and $85, respectively, were postdated. Delivery of the chattels
The conditional sales contract, in the usual form of such documents, was phrased as though it represented the first contract between the parties. It was dated about seven weeks after the original transaction. It treated the $600 already paid as “cash with order” and provided for the payment of the balance, together with a finance charge, in 12 monthly Installments. Under it title to the chattels would “remain” in the seller (Price) until payment in full was made. The certificate of installation recited that the chattels had been delivered and installed in defendant’s store in accordance with the conditional sales contract.
Although one of plaintiffs testified regarding the transaction, he gave no details of the conversation leading up to the signing of the conditional sales contract. Defendant said he had signed without having read the document or having it read to him and after plaintiff Price had told him he wanted the paper so that he could obtain money on it from his bank, tie said plaintiff had added that the document would make it possible for defendant to pay in small monthly installments. Defendant made none of the monthly payments called for by the promissory note and the conditional sales contra.ct and about four months later plaintiffs began this action and had the chattels seized.
Defendant urges that the conditional sales contract was invalid and ineffective because plaintiffs did not have title or any property in the chattels at the time it was executed and that they could not “retain” a title they did not have. He also charges that the conditional sales contract was secured fraudulently and without consideration. While the trial judge made only a general finding in favor of plaintiffs, it must be presumed that he considered the question of fraud and found against defendant on that score. There is nothing in the record which would support a contrary finding,
Examining the conditions existing when the chattels were delivered, we conclude that property in the chattels passed at that time to defendant. Nothing remained to be done but the completion of payment. The Uniform Sales Act, in force in the District of Columbia, provides that in a sale of specific goods property is transferred to the buyer at such times as the parties to the contract intend.
It also follows that the plaintiffs retained no lien on the chattels when they were sold to defendant. A seller’s lien is predicated upon possession and is lost when the buyer lawfully obtains possession of the goods.
The effectiveness of the conditional sales contract must be considered in light of the status of the chattels at the time the contract was made. Defendant’s contention that it was ineffective because it lacked consideration is not well founded. The antecedent debt could furnish valid consideration for a security transaction of this nature.
The record is entirely barren of any evidence which would indicate that the parties intended to accomplish more than was contained in the terms of hhe written conditional sales contract. We have no doubt that the parties could have retransferred title to plaintiffs and thus have accomplished an effective security transaction. However, the conditional sales contract did not do so. There are no words of grant or conveyance from defendant to plaintiffs. Instead it purported to represent only a sale from plaintiffs to defendant, with retention of title in plaintiffs. By it plaintiffs purported to sell something which they did not own. The plaintiff who testified did not say that the question of transferring the property from defendant was discussed, and defendant’s testimony negatived any such idea. We find no authority and plaintiffs have given us none for holding that personal property may be sold under a conditional sales contract when the purported seller has no title to the property and when it is totally owned by the buyer and when the only interest of the seller in the property is that he has • not been fully paid the consideration for a previous sale. The sellers had and probably still have remedies available for qollecting the balance due on the sale of the chattels. It is possible that the transaction could be construed as a chattel mortgage since a chattel mortgage and a conditional sale are the same in many respects although different in form.
Reversed.
Zier v. Eastern Acceptance Corporation, D.C.Mun.App., 61 A.2d 106.
Code 1940, 28 — 1202; Secor v. Charles H. Tompkins Co., D.C.Mun.App., 45 A.2d 117; Barde Steel Products Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2 Cir., 40 F.2d 412, certiorari denied Barde Steel Products Corp. v. Burnet, 282 U.S. 853, 51 S.Ct. 30, 75 L.Ed. 756.
Code 1940, 28 — 1203. See Uniform Laws Annotated, Sales §§ 18 and 19 and cases there cited; 2 Williston, Sales § 260 et seq.
Standard Inv. Co. v. Town of Snow Hill, N. C., 4 Cir., 78 F.2d 33; see also Publicker Commercial Alcohol Co. v. Harger, 129 Conn. 655, 31 A.2d 27.
State v. Langer, 46 N.D. 462, 177 N. W. 408.
Lovell v. Eaton, 99 Vt. 255, 133 A. 742.
Code 1940, 28 — 1405; Poor v. American Locomotive Co., 7 Cir., 67 P.2d 626.
36 Am.Jur., Mortgages § 106; 10 Am. Jur., Chattel Mortgages § 49.
Code 1940, 28 — 1104.
2 Williston, Sales § 337.
54 C.J., Replevin § 4; Code 1940, 16 — 1801.