In hеr petition filed herein on September 17, 1953, plaintiff alleged that, on or about February 25, 1951, she had purchased from defendant, a used car dealer at Joplin, Missouri, a 1948 Ford tudor automobile, motor number A2298212, for $1,180; that she had delivered to defendant “as a down payment” a used automobile of the value of $400 and had executed a promissory note for $780, on which $604.08 had been paid; that, although demanded by plaintiff “on numerous occasions,” defendant had failed and refused to deliver to plaintiff a certificate of title to the 1948 Ford automobile purchasеd by her; and that, on or about September 14, 1953, plaintiff had tendered said Ford automobile back to defendant and had “demanded that defendant return to her the amount paid on said purchase price,” which defendant refused to do. The prayer of plaintiff’s petition was for а money judgment of $1,004.08 and for costs. Defendant’s answer was a general denial. The evidence adduced upon trial by the court, a jury having been waived, fully justified and amply supports the findings of the able trial judge that:
“ * * * at the time of purchase plaintiff was delivered a certificate of title to the Ford, bearing (motor) No. 2249724. She made application for a new title, was given a receipt by the licensing clerk (at the State License Bureau), and received a car license. The new title was not returned to her, but evidently was sent to' defendant who held the mortgage. In the early part of September, 1953, plaintiff endeavored to trade the Ford to Stanley Motors for a new car. An attempt was made to procure the title from defendant. It was not forthcoming. It later developed that the title delivered to plaintiff bore the wrong (mоtor) number. It should have been No. 2298212, which was the number on the motor. * * * There is no evidence that defendant acted in bad faith in delivering the wrong titie, but on the contrary he delivered the same title he had received. The mistake was made by some prior owner or dealer. Plaintiff had the use óf the Ford from date of purchase, February 25, 1951, until September 15, 1953, when her husband returned the car to the defendant, shortly after she discovered her title was not good, or for a period of two years, six months and twenty-five days. After that .date (about October 7, 1953) defendant procured a corrected title which plaintiff then refused to accept.”
After noting that “plaintiff demands the full amount paid by her, to-wit, $604.08 cash and $400 value placed on the 1941 Chevrolet which she traded in,” the trial judge expressed the opinion that “under the peculiar circumstances of this casе plaintiff should be charged with the use of the Ford car unmolested for a period of over two and one-half years”; and, observing that “certainly the value of the use of the car should at least equal the depreciation,” the court entered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $574.08, arriving аt that figure by deducting the unpaid balance of $175.92 on plaintiff’s purchase money note, secured by chattel mortgage on the Ford, from the valuation of $750 which plaintiff placed on the Ford as of September 14, 1953, when it was returned to defendant.
On this appeal by defendant, it would seem to be “of primary importance to determine what sort of action is sought to be maintained.” United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Mississippi Valley Trust Co., Mo.App.,
Unless a certificate of title, correctly describing the motor vehicle sold,
8
is assigned and delivеred to the buyer, the attempted sale of any motor vehicle registered under the laws of this state is fraudulent and void and no title passes.
9
This is true, not because of any judicial reasoning, but because the absolute and mandatory
*609
provisions of Section 301.210(4) plainly so state. Robinson v. Poole, Mo.App.,
Of course, the requirement (as stated in many of the cases) that a buyer act within a reasonable time, as a condition precedent to recovery of money paid under a void contract of sale for a motor vehicle, means within a reasonable time after he discovers,
or in the exercise of ordinary care should discover,
the ground for repudiation of the contract;
12
and whether, in any given case, the buyer’s action has been timely remains a question of fact so long as fair-minded men reasonably might differ about it.
13
In the instant case, the 1948 Ford tudor purchased by plaintiff from defendant on February 25, 1951, was described
correctly
in the certificate of title excepting
only
as to
motor number,
and plaintiff apparently did not learn of that misdescription until she undertook to trade the Ford about two weeks before she tendered it to defendant. Where, as here, there is no circumstаnce fairly calculated to arouse suspicion or to excite the zetetic impulse in an ordinarily prudent person, we are unwilling to impose upon the buyer of a motor vehicle the inflexible duty, as a matter of law, of searching out the motor number on the vehicle (in itsеlf,
*610
an aggravating and perplexing task to one not schooled in such matters) and comparing, it 'with the motor number bn the certificate of title to make sure that there is no discrepancy between the two. On the record presented to us, we think that whether plaintiff’s discovery of the misdescription as to motor number on the certificate of title and her attempted repudiation of the contract of sale were timely were questions for determination by the trier of the fact, in this instance the court sitting as a jury, and we are not inclined to disagree with the findings inhеrent in the judgment that' plaintiff’s action was seasonable. Section 510.310(2); Beckemeier v. Baessler, Mo.,
However, as we have noted, the right of the buyer to repudiate a void contract of sale for a motor vehicle and to recover what he has paid therefor is сonditioned not only upon action within a reasonable time but also upon return or tender of the vehicle in substantially as good condition as it was when he received it. This latter condition simply carries over into the field of repudiation of void' contracts of sale for motor vehicles “the first and prime essential of rescission” which is said to be “restitutio in integrum” [Black on Rescission and Cancellation, Vol. 2, Section 616, p. 1414] or restoration of the status quo ante,
14
a requirement predicated on the equitable maxim that “he who seeks equity must do equity” [Ebel v. Rollеr, Mo.App.,
If we did not know judicially in the instant case that, ex necessitate, when the Ford automobile purchased by plaintiff on February 25, 1951, was tendered to defendant on or about September 14, 1953, it was not in substantially as good condition as it was when received by plaintiff more than two and one-half years previously, that fact is established by the testimony of plaintiff, herself, that the Ford, worth $1,180 when purchased, had a reasonable market value of $750 when it was tendered back. It is to us clear and indisputable that, when she undertook in September, 1953, to repudiate the contract of sale for the Ford, plaintiff did not satisfy one of the conditions precedent to such repudiation, i. e., that the Ford be returned or tendered to defendant in substantially as good condition as when plaintiff received it. 18
If
this requirement, as it thus has been stated uniformly in all of the cited Missouri cases dealing with motor vehicles, could have been satisfied other than by literal compliance therewith (a question not raised or briefed by the partiеs and, on the record presented, reserved by us as unnecessary to determination of this appeal), plaintiff should, on tendering the Ford to defendant in September, 1953, have offered to account for the benefit realized in use of the automobile for more than two and оne-half years.
19
However, the transcript before us reflects a firm, arbitrary, unyielding and unremitting demand by plaintiff for $1,004.08 (representing every cent paid by her, in cash or in property, on the sale price of the Ford), boldly presented when the automobile was tendered to defendant оn or about September 14, 1953, clearly renewed in plaintiff’s petition filed on September 17, 1953, and persistently maintained to April 19, 1955, when the court announced his findings and judgment, in which he noted that “plaintiff demands the full amount paid by her.” We have not overlooked the fact that the learned trial judge, recognizing the obvious injustice of plaintiff’s demand and with an eye single for the doing of substantial justice, found that “plaintiff should be charged with the use of the Ford car unmolested for a period of over two and one-half years” and opined, albeit in the absence of any evidеnce on the subject [cf. Kurth v. Morgan, Mo.App.,
Sinсe this essential prerequisite to maintenance of the instant suit has not been shown and obviously could not be established by a retrial, the judgment for plaintiff is set aside and the cause is remanded with directions to enter judgment for defendant.
Notes
. Conrad v. Diehl,
. Gerber v. Schutte Inv. Co.,
. Webster v. Sterling Finance Co.,
. All statutory references herein are to RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.
. Jones v. Norman, Mo.App.,
. Witte v. Cooke Tractor Co., Mo.App.,
. Dahler v. Meistrell, supra, 24 S.W.2d loc. cit. 242; Green v. Security Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
. Craig v. Rueseler Motor Co., Mo.App.,
. Section 301.210(4); State ex rel. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford, Conn. v. Cox,
. Boyer v. Garner, Mo.App.,
. Cantrell v. Sheppard, supra, and Fowler v. Gоlden, supra, refer to
both repudiation and rescission,
while Pearl v. Interstate Securities Co.,
. Horigan Supply Co. v. Rau, Mo.App.,
. Aeolian Co. of Missouri v. Boyd, Mo.App.,
. Schurtz v. Cushing,
. Now the statutory law in thirty-five states (although not in Missouri), the District of Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii and the Canal Zone.
.Fairbanks, Morse & Co. v. Walker,
. See also Donovan v. Aeolian Co.,
. See cases cited in footnote 10, supra.
. Hess v. Ehrlich,
. See the cases cited in footnotes 5 and 6, supra.
