119 Wash. 169 | Wash. | 1922
Lead Opinion
— Respondent, claiming to be the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of one certain Jordan touring car, No. 11,457, brought an action in the nature of a replevin to recover the possession thereof from appellant. Appellant answered, denying the material allegations of the complaint, and pleading affirmatively that it had a- chattel mortgage on the car, duly executed and filed for record, and that it had taken, and then held, possession of the car by virtue of such mortgage. Thereafter appellant brought an action to foreclose its mortgage, alleging the necessary facts as to the loaning of the amount thus secured, the giving of the note and mortgage, the filing of the mortgage for record, and the nonpayment of the debt. Respondent, by answer, denied the material allegations of the complaint, and affirmatively pleaded that the mortgagor, the Mitchell Motor and Service Company, Incorporated, was engaged in the business of selling motor cars, and with knowledge and consent of appellant, displayed this particular car in its show rooms for sale, and, with authority from appellant so to do, sold it to respondent for its full value of $3,150; further alleging that it was the usual and customary course of dealing between the appellant and the Mitchell Motor & Service Company followed for more than two years; that appellant would furnish the money necessary to take up the bill of lading, when a shipment of cars arrived from the manufacturer consigned to the Mitchell Motor & Service Company, take and file for record a chattel mortgage on the cars so received, and then permit the Mitchell Motor & Service Company to display for sale and sell the mortgaged cars, and thereafter account to it for the proceeds of such sales. The affirmative matters were denied; the two cases were, upon stipulation, consolidated for trial, and
The trial court, among other things, found:
“That the said above named Mitchell Motor and Service Company used the proceeds with the knowlledge and consent of the said State Bank of Seattle from the sale of cars mortgaged to the said State Bank of Seattle, to repay to the said State Bank of Seattle the amounts due upon the mortgages, and that had been the custom for more than three years last past. The said above named State Bank of Seattle, by its acts in permitting the said automobile sued for herein and the other automobiles upon which they had mortgages to be placed in the show rooms of the said company for sale, and by its course of dealing with the said Mitchell Motor and Service Company to sell the cars upon which they had mortgages, are now in equity and good conscience estopped from claiming any interest in and to the car No. 11457 sued for herein, the said S. G. Hardin being the purchaser for value in good faith without notice of the claims or mortgage of the above named State Bank of Seattle.”
Appellant’s chief attack is directed at this finding, making it incumhent upon us to examine with care all of the evidence in the record hearing upon the course of dealing between the mortgagor and the mortgagee. This we have done, and while there is plenty of evidence showing that the mortgagor was remiss in this respect, and wrongfully disposed of mortgaged cars, there is no evidence whatever to show that appellant ever had any knowledge of, or consented to the sale of a mortgaged car in any instance. True, there are some loose expressions by appellant’s officers to the effect that the mortgagor might sell, hut could not make de
The learned trial court felt, as all must feel, that the purchaser, in dealing with an apparently reputable concern, housed in an extensive building, and carrying a large stock, acted but naturally in neglecting to search the chattel mortgage records, and therefore placed the loss upon the bank; but while we sympathize with the purchaser, we feel that our recording statute, Rem. Code, § 3662 (P. C. § 9761), which makes every chattel mortgage duly filed and indexed “full and sufficient notice to all the world,” etc., must be considered and
Some contention is made that, under the facts of this case, the automobile in question should be held to have been a part of a shifting stock of merchandise, and the mortgage therefore void under the rule laid down in Keyes v. Sabin, 101 Wash. 618, 172 Pac. 835, and Miller v. Scarbrough, 108 Wash. 646, 185 Pac. 625, but it must be borne in mind that those cases treat of mortgages upon a stock in trade, the description of which must be general only, and in which it is expressly provided that the mortgagor may sell in the ordinary course of trade. It has never yet been questioned, so far as we are aware, that the purchaser who, in the regular course of business, buys an article from such a stock takes good title free from the lien of the mortgage! Consequently those cases have no application here.
Our statute, !Rem. Code, § 3659
The facts in this case as we find them render it unnecessary to discuss the authorities cited upon the question of equitable estoppel.
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter a decree foreclosing the chattel mortgage.
Parker, C. J., Mitohell, Bridges, Fullerton, Main, . and Hovey, JJ., concur.
Note: See Rem. Comp. Stat., § 3779.
Dissenting Opinion
— I am unable to give my assent to the decision of the majority.
I concede that the chattel mortgage in question was not a mortgage upon a shifting stock of merchandise, but was a mortgage upon specific chattels described therein.
The cars were, however, known by the bank, as mortgagee, to be intended for sale to the general public as a part of the stock of the mortgagor. The bank’s officers did not require anything more than that the mortgagee procure a release of the mortgage on any specific car when sold. The mortgage did not provide against sale or removal, and the bank’s officers knew that they were being sold. Mr. Grondahl, an officer of the bank, testified that he so knew. He testified that the bank loaned the Mitchell Motor & Service Company a great deal of money and that the company was selling the particular cars that the bank had mortgages on. The officers of the mortgagee trusted Osmond, the manager
It seems to me that the plainest principle of equitable estoppel estops the mortgagee from recovering against this respondent who is an innocent purchaser for value.
It will not do to say that, because the mortgage was recorded, the automobile company could give respondent no better title than it had, and that it was respondent’s duty to see what title the seller had. By its course of dealing the appellant, as mortgagee, put it in the power of the automobile company to defraud every purchaser of a car it procured. “Where one of two equally innocent persons must suffer, he should bear the burden whose conduct has induced the loss,” is a principle of equity and common justice which we have asserted and applied in a great many cases.
If the decision stands, as respondent asserts, it will make it unsafe for any person to buy any article in any store in any town or city. If we hold that the bank is not estopped by its conduct, or did not waive the protection of the recording statute, and that Hardin should have investigated the records of King county before paying his money for the car, then no person can safely buy a sewing machine, a piano, or any other such valuable chattel without employing an attorney to search, the records for him, or running the risk of having the article subsequently taken from him. It, as sssertedl by respondent in this case, changes the recording statute into a sword instead of a shield. Many cases could be cited to sustain my position, but being so hopelessly in the minority, it would be profitless to do so and I forbear to cite them.
Mackintosh, J., concurs with Holcomb, J.