Plaintiff brought an action for conversion and received a judgment following a nonjury trial. Defendants Florida Coast Bank of Oceanside, Jim Schea and Executive Motor Werks, Ltd., appeal by right, and plaintiff cross-appeals the measure of damages awarded to plaintiff. For purposes of this opinion, we substantially adopt the trial court’s findings of fact as follows.
"On or about December 24, 1975, Bloomfield Leasing Associates, a Michigan co-partnership, consisting of Charles J. Van Horn and William K. Van Horn * * *, hereinafter called Bloomfield, purchased a 1972 Rolls Royce automobile, bearing Vehicle Identification No. LRA 12353, hereinafter called 'Rolls’, and obtained financing from Florida Coast Bank of Oceanside, of Pompano Beach, Florida, hereinafter called 'the Bank’. Bloomfield executed a promissory note and security agreement in favor of the Bank on December 24, 1975, in the amount of $11,132.40. The security agreement stated, and the Bank knew, that the Rolls was to be used primarily at 3080 West Huron, Pontiac, Michigan. At the time of the transaction, Bloomfield was engaged in the business of selling and leasing new and used vehicles. The Bank did not perfect its security interest in the Rolls by placing its lien on a certificate of title or filing a financing statement under either Michigan or Florida law. On about February 17, 1976, Bloomfield
"In July, 1976, responding to an advertisement in a Detroit newspaper offering the Rolls for sale, Howard H. Larson of Marquette, got in touch with Bloomfield about the Rolls by telephone. Larson had no prior dealings with Bloomfield but was interested in acquiring the Rolls. * * *
"On or about August 13, 1976, Bloomfield agreed to sell and Larson agreed to buy the Rolls for the sum of $21,500.00, subject to Larson’s right to inspect. Bloomfield sent the Rolls to Marquette with two of its employees. The seller insisted that $5,000.00 of the purchase price be paid by bank money order and $16,500.00 in cash.
"It was Larson’s understanding that Bloomfield Leasing was requiring the payment of $16,500.00 in cash so that Bloomfield could cheat the Internal Revenue Service.
"* * * |-rpjw0 representatives of Bloomfield Leasing * * * drove the Rolls to Larson’s farm in Rock, Michigan. * * * Larson gave these representatives a cashier’s check or money order in the amount of $5,000.00 and $16,500.00 in cash * * *. Larson requested a receipt indicating that he had paid $21,500.00 to Bloomfield Leasing for the Rolls. In addition, the men presented Larson with a receipt that had been previously prepared and signed by William Van Horn indicating that Larson had paid $5,000.00 for a damaged 1972 Rolls Royce long wheel base automobile. * * *
"At the time of the delivery of the automobile to Larson, [Bloomfield’s representatives] presented him with Michigan Certificate of Title No. 417147V, which was properly signed and notarized and which gave no indication of the Bank’s security interest in the Rolls.
"In December, 1977, [sic] the Bank’s assistant loan officer, Ralph Mabry, became aware of the fact that the Bank did not have the title to the Rolls in its file with evidence of a perfected security interest and that Bloomfield was delinquent in its note. Demand was made on Bloomfield for payment in full with no success. On or about March 31, 1977, the Bank, through Mabry, retained the services of Bruce Fletcher, a private investigator, as its agent. Mr. Fletcher had been used by the Bank on past occasions, and the Bank instructed Fletcher to repossess the Rolls on sight. On March 31, 1979, [sic] 1 the Bank gave Fletcher written authority to repossess the Rolls. Within the day, Fletcher made contact with Jim Schea, who was employed by Executive Motor Werks, Ltd., a car dealership in Warren, Michigan, owned by his father, who claimed he knew where the Rolls was located. Schea informed the Bank that Van Horn (Bloomfield) had given him a bad check on another transaction and the Bank told him that if he could find the Rolls and pay off the Bank note of $7,957.75, he could recoup his loss which was approximately $5,100.00.
"Schea indicated that he would not proceed with the repossession unless the Bank would indemnify him from any losses or causes of action that might occur as a result of the repossession of the Rolls. Schea further requested a copy of the security agreement. Finally, Schea requested that the offer to sell him the Rolls and the indemnification be put in writing and forwarded to him by telegram and confirming letter._
" 'This is your authorization to take possession of one 1972 Rolls Royce Silver Shadow VIN Serial Number LRA 12353 with a lien amount of $7,957.75.
" 'You may purchase said vehicle for the sum of $7,957.75 upon repossession.
" 'We agree to indemnify and save you harmless from and against any and all losses, damages, claims and actions resulting from or arising out of your efforts to collect this assignment.’
"The Bank followed up the telegram with a letter to Schea on April 1, 1977, containing similar indemnity language.
"After being retained by the Bank to repossess the Rolls, Schea called Larson from Detroit and stated he was interested in selling Rolls Royces to members of the Rolls Royce Club of which Larson was a member.
"* * * Schea telephoned a Rolls Royce dealership in Chicago and ordered a set of keys for the Rolls, based on the serial number. * * *
"* * * Schea ordered a title history from the Michigan Secretary of State indicating that title to the Rolls was in Bloomfield Leasing, with no lien.
"[Schea enticed Larson to bring the Rolls to Warren, Michigan, by telling him, falsely, that he could arrange a deal on another Rolls in which Larson had expressed interest.]
"On April 18, 1977, following the verbal agreement, Larson drove the Rolls from Marquette to the Executive Motor Werks in Warren. * * * Larson drove the Rolls into the alley in back of Executive Motor Werks and walked into the office where he was greeted by Schea.
"Then an employee of Executive Motor Werks took physical possession of the Rolls * * *.
"Fletcher, who had flown from Florida with a power of attorney from the Bank, was paid $7,984.00 by Schea for the car, and then signed the certificate of title that had been obtained in the name of the Bank from the Michigan Secretary of State over to Schea.
"The only information that Mabry [of the Bank] ever had concerning the car was when Schea told him that the car was somewhere in Ohio. When asked for further information concerning the location of the automobile, Schea refused to respond, so that at no time did Mabry ever know the identity of the person having possession of the vehicle.
"[Also prior to the repossession] Mabry did get in touch with the Michigan Department of Motor Vehicles in Lansing and was told that the certificate of title that had been issued on the Rolls in Michigan contained no lien in favor of the Bank. The Secretary of State’s office was advised by Mabry of the situation the Bank was in, and the Secretary of State’s office suggested that various forms be obtained and that a title could be issued with the lien on it. Mabry did receive the forms from the Michigan authorities, but they were never used.
"Schea convinced Mabry that there were faster ways to accomplish his purpose than to fill out the forms sent to the Bank by the Department of State of Michigan. Schea was very 'helpful’ in advising the Bank how it could obtain title in Michigan and Mabry did authorize Schea to act as the Bank’s agent to. apply for a repossession title to the Rolls which would show Florida Coast Bank of Oceanside as owner of the vehicle.”
"On April 7, 1977, Schea, as agent of the Bank, signed an affidavit of repossession wherein he swore that the Rolls was lawfully repossessed on the seventh day of April, 1977 and that on January 26, 1977, he had served by certified mail a notice of sale on Charles J. Van Horn, 3080 W. Huron, Pontiac, Michigan. The affidavit of repossession and an attached application for certificate of title, signed by Schea, were filed by Schea in the Secretary of State’s office on April 11, 1977 for the purpose of obtaining a certificate of title in the name of the Bank, so that Schea could obtain a title from the Bank as soon as he obtained physical possession of the car. Schea admits that he swore falsely on the affidavit and that he did not obtain possession of the Rolls until April 18, 1977.”
The Rolls was purchased from Schea by a buyer from Ohio in May, 1977, for $20,000, as is. Repairs in the amount of $2,597.12 were made to it. The Ohio buyer sold the Rolls to a Massachusetts doctor in October, 1977, for $16,000 and the trade-in of a 1957 Bentley considered to be worth about $10,000.
After hearing testimony, the trial court concluded that the taking of the Rolls from Larson’s possession and ownership was an act of intentional conversion by Schea and that the Bank did not authorize the tactics used by Schea in gaining possession and disposing of the Rolls. The court found that the retail value of the Rolls at the time of the conversion was $23,500 and that plaintiff Larson was entitled to judgment against each of the defendants, William K. Van Horn and Charles J. Van Horn, individually and doing business as Bloomfield Leasing Associates, Florida Coast Bank of Oceanside, Florida, and Jim Schea and Executive Motor Werks.
Defendants raise several issues on appeal. Defendant Bank argues that it was error for the trial court to find in plaintiff’s favor because plaintiff should have been estopped from asserting any ownership rights that he may have had as a basis for damages arising out of the Bank’s conduct in repossessing the Rolls. The Bank argues plaintiff’s own conduct in violation of the registration and title requirements of Michigan law contributed directly to the Bank’s belief (and indirectly through its agent) that Bloomfield was still the owner of the vehicle as was indicated by the check with the Secretary of State’s office prior to the repossession.
Defendant Bank urges us to find that plaintiff is estopped from raising his superior property rights because of plaintiffs failure to comply with the registration and certificate of title requirements of the Vehicle Code. The general principle of equitable estoppel is stated in
Detroit Savings Bank v Loveland,
"Estoppel is a bar which precludes a person from denying the truth of a fact which has in contemplation of law become settled by the act of the party himself,
The defect in the Bank’s argument stems from the fact that Schea knew that plaintiff had purchased the car from Bloomfield and received an endorsed certificate of title. Thus, Schea was not induced to believe that Bloomfield still owned the Rolls by plaintiff’s failure to apply for a new certificate of title. The trial court also found that under the doctrine of respondeat superior Schea’s knowledge, as agent of the Bank, would be imputed to the Bank. Since Schea and the Bank did not rely upon record title, an essential element of equitable estoppel is missing, and plaintiff is not estopped from relying on his superior property rights.
Likewise, we reject defendant Schea’s argument that plaintiff’s recovery is barred because of plaintiff’s unlawful failure to title and register the Rolls. Defendant Schea had actual knowledge that plaintiff purchased the Rolls from Bloomfield and received an endorsed certificate of title. A certificate of title is "an'indicia of ownership”, 60 CJS, Motor Vehicles, § 42(3), p 294, and "title [to a motor vehicle] passes upon delivery of a properly executed assignment of title, and not before * * *”.
Noorthoek v Preferred Automobile Ins Co,
Next, defendant Schea contends that he and Executive Motor Werks are entitled to indemnity from defendant Bank under a written agreement. Not only did the trial court refuse to allow defendant Schea indemnity from the Bank, it ordered:
"[T]hat Florida Coast Bank of Oceanside, Florida (Bank) recover from William K. Van Horn and Charles J. Van Horn, individually and doing business as Bloomfield Leasing Associates, Jim Schea and Executive Motor Werks, Ltd., any amount paid by Bank to plaintiff pursuant to the terms of this judgment.”
The trial court held the Bank liable for conversion on the theory of respondeat superior, but also found that Schea had acted outside the scope of his agency and had misled the Bank. There is support for allowing a principal to recover from his agent under these circumstances. Restatement Agency, 2d, § 401, comment d, pp 239-240, states in pertinent part:
"Unless he has been authorized to act in the manner in which he acts, the agent who subjects his principal to liability because of a negligent or other wrongful act is subject to liability to the principal for the loss which results therefrom. * * *
"[However] [i]f the principal authorizes a tort, either advertently or inadvertently, he cannot recover for harm resulting to him from it. Hence, if the principal directs the agent to do an act which, to the knowledge of the agent, is either tortious or criminal, the agent is subject to no liability to the principal, unless he should realize that the principal is mistaken and believes the act to be a lawful one, in which case the agent would not be authorized to perform it.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The Bank’s written authorization to Schea was
The trial court found that plaintiff had "suffered actual damages in the amount of attorney fees he must pay”. It also found that plaintiff had incurred legal expenses in excess of $10,000 and awarded plaintiff $10,500 from defendants Jim Schea and Executive Motor Werks exclusively. Thus, the exemplary damages were meant to award attorney fees to plaintiff. Defendant Schea contends that the trial court’s award of exemplary damages approximating the amount of attorney
Michigan recognizes the general rule against allowing recovery of attorney fees as an element of costs or damages, but there are many statutory and judicially created exceptions. The rule and exceptions are fully set forth in
State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins Co v Allen,
"Some jurisdictions allow attorneys’ fees to be taken into consideration in determining the amount of exemplary damages. * * * One Michigan case affirmed an award of exemplary damages in apparent recognition of this principle,
Oppenhuizen v Wennersten, 2
Mich App 288, 299;
This Court is not prepared to say that
Oppen-huizen v Wennersten, supra,
stands for the general proposition that attorney fees may be awarded as a measurable element of exemplary damages. There were two defendants in the
Op-penhuizen
case, and the Court found that because the one defendant, actually guilty of wrongdoing, had committed an intentional fraud, the plaintiff and the other defendant were entitled to exemplary damages because of the embarrassment they had suffered and because "it was necessary * * * to incur liability for the costs of collecting damages”.
As found in Allen, the fact that a number of claims are brought in a single lawsuit does not mean that one or some of the claims cannot be considered prior litigation for the purpose of applying the exception. We are not aware of any Michigan case law which would prevent this Court from ruling that attorney fees may be awarded as exemplary damages in cases such as this where the court finds that a party guilty of wrongdoing acted intentionally, requiring a less culpable defendant to defend itself in a suit arising from the same action and necessitating the plaintiff’s bringing of such a suit. Furthermore, the intentional tort of conversion, found here, is not unlike actions for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution, where the recovery of attorney fees has been allowed. Allen, supra, 78. The trial court’s award of exemplary damages is upheld.
Finally, as to defendant Schea’s contention that he should not bear the burden of exemplary damages alone, we agree with the trial court’s conclusion that the Bank could be found liable for conversion based on a theory of respondeat superior, but, as the trial court found, "[t]he Bank never did authorize Schea to indulge in the tactics used in his gaining possession and ultimate disposition of the Rolls”. Thus, while the Bank may have been liable for conversion, it was not liable for the malicious conduct of Schea upon which exemplary damages were awarded and Schea alone must bear the burden of those damages.
Plaintiff contends on cross-appeal that the trial court erred in awarding plaintiff judgment for $23,500, the amount which the court found to be the value of the Rolls Royce at the time of conver
"There is a doctrine that the measure of damages for conversion of goods that fluctuate in value is the highest value between conversion and judgment, but this has never been applied in Michigan. * * * We do not choose to apply this doctrine in this instance.”
Even in stock conversion cases, the plaintiff is entitled only to the highest market value of the stock "between the time of its conversion and the expiration of a reasonable time to enable [the plaintiff] to purchase other shares in the market”.
Weaver v Commercial Savings Bank,
Judgment for plaintiff is affirmed. Costs to plaintiff.
Notes
The trial court presumably meant to say that Mabry became aware of the Bank’s unperfected security interest in December, 1976, and gave Fletcher written authority to repossess the vehicle on March 31,1977.
