231 S.W. 1011 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1921
This was an action, originating in the justice court, to replevin an automobile. Upon a judgment being rendered for plaintiff assessing the value of the automobile at $300, the defendant appealed to the circuit court where a jury was waived and the case was tried by the court. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff that he was entitled to the possession of the automobile, assessing the value thereof at $250, and that defendant return the automobile to plaintiff or pay him the assessed value thereof, at the latter's election. No declarations of law or findings of fact were asked or given.
It appears that plaintiff sold the automobile to one LeslieB. Walters on the 22nd day of May, 1919, and he gave a chattel mortgage thereon to plaintiff for the purchase price.
The defendant is a dealer in junk, and on May 26, 1919, four days after plaintiff's chattel mortgage was given, defendant got possession of the car. The evidence is not as full and clear as it might be as to the circumstances under which defendant got it. All that it shows is that the car was "out on the Paseo" but "not *191 in a running condition. It had to be towed in" to defendant's yard or place of business; and that late in the afternoon of May 26, 1919, one Roy Walters, in the office of defendant made a bill of sale for the car to defendant and received a check for $42.50.
The next morning defendant, having heard of the transaction, went to defendant's office, notified them that he held a chattel mortgage on the car and demanded it but was refused possession. Defendant bought the car for junk which means that they would wreck it or take it apart and sell the material for junk. Defendant's evidence was not very definite as to the condition the car was in save that it was not in a running condition, that, for junk purposes it was worth around $50, and that after wrecking it and converting it into junk it would be worth around $70. Plaintiff's evidence is that when it was seized under the replevin writ the car looked all right and would run well except that the pin in the cranking shaft where the crank would be put on would slip out and then the motor could not be made to turn over; that as an automobile it was worth in the neighborhood of $300 and at least $250.
Immediately upon being notified by plaintiff of his chattel mortgage, defendant notified the bank to stop payment on the check and when it reached the bank in regular course of business, the bank refused payment, writing across the face of the check "payment refused." Defendant also endeavored to find the man, Roy Walters, to whom they had given the check, but was unable to find him as he had left town. Defendant did not know him, had never seen him before and, made no investigation as to his title to the car when they took the bill of sale and gave him the check, though they said their custom was to do so where the car was in too good a condition to be junked.
On May 29, 1919, plaintiff brought this replevin action and seized the car but defendant gave a redelivery bond and kept it. *192
After the service of the writ upon the defendant, it notified the bank that it could pay the check, the defendant's reason for doing so being that the correspondent bank to whom Roy Walters had presented the check had paid the cash on it at the time or before the drawee bank was notified.
The plaintiff had not yet recorded his chattel mortgage when the defendant obtained possession of the automobile. And defendant's contention is that, under section 2256, Revised Statutes 1919, which provides that an unrecorded chattel mortgage shall not "be valid against any other person than the parties thereto" unless possession be delivered to the mortgagee, the plaintiff has no interest in or title to the property sufficient to give him a right to possession.
The trouble with this contention is that, under the record in this case, and the inferences to be drawn from the evidence, the defendant did not purchase the car from anyone having any interest in or title to the car. As said in Elliott v. Washington,
In Landis v. McDonald,
It is true, in a replevin action, the burden is on plaintiff to show that at the time the action was instituted, he was entitled to the possession of the property, and the burden is not on the defendant to show title. Plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title. [Leete v. State Bank of St. Louis,
It is also true that the possession of personal property is prima-facie proof of ownership and presumptive evidence that possession is rightful; but there is no evidence that Roy Walters ever had possession of said car; and as heretofore stated the inference arising from the evidence disclosed in the record support the conclusion, evidently reached by the trial court, that, if he ever had possession of the car, it was wrongful and without basis of ownership or title, and that defendant had nothing but the bare possession of a car which was worth from $250 to $300 for which they gave a total stranger $42.50 to give a bill of sale.
The judgment is affirmed. All concur. *194