130 Wash. 641 | Wash. | 1924
This action is to recover alleged usury paid by the bankrupt to respondents McAvoy, and in the second cause of action to recover cars, or the value thereof, re-possessed by McAvoy upon the failure of vendees on conditional sale contracts to complete their payments as agreed. At the time of the bankruptcy of the company, there were outstanding contracts assigned to McAvoy of approximately $138,000.
In 1919, McAvoy and the Mitchell Company, which later became bankrupt, entered into an arrangement whereby, when the Mitchell Company sold automobiles on time, McAvoy would buy the conditional sale contracts under which the cars were sold. A certain cash payment was in each instance required of the purchaser, thé balance being payable in monthly installments. McAvoy, in buying these contracts, paid the Mitchell Company the face of the contract less a certain flat discount, usually six per cent, but in some instances running as high as ten per cent. The conditional sale contracts were on a printed form employed by the company, which included as a part of the same instrument a promissory note. When the contract was transferred by the company to McAvoy, it signed the form of transfer printed on the back of the conditional sale contract, which was uniformly as follows:
“For value received we hereby assign all our right, title and interest in and to the within memorandum of*643 conditional sale and note, and in and to the property therein described, and all moneys payable thereunder, to W. Gr. McAvoy, and hereby guarantees the payment of all moneys due, or to become due, under said memorandum of conditional sale, and also the full performance by the vendee therein named of all vendee’s promises and covenants; and we hereby consent that the time of payment of any of the said installments therein provided may be extended at the request of the vendee.” [Signature.]
These contracts, which were taken by the company and assigned to McAvoy, exactly corresponded to the increased price which the Mitchell Company exacted from the purchasers. As is common with such dealers, the company made a different price to a cash purchaser and to a time purchaser. For instance, if the cash price of a car was $1,000, the time price would be six per cent higher, usually, or $1,060. The company then transferred such contract, together with its title as vendor of the automobile, to McAvoy, who paid the Mitchell Company its cash price, as, in the instance named, $1,000 in full. The discount was paid by the purchaser of the car.
On these conditions we are unable to see any usury as between the company and McAvoy, whatever there may have been as to the purchasers of cars.
The first claim of appellant is that, under Rem. Comp. Stat. §7299 [P. C. §3155], these transactions were the discounting of commercial paper where the borrower had made himself liable as maker, guarantor or endorser, and therefore constitute usurious transactions. It is also contended that the transactions were usurious loans fraudulently disguised as sales, and in fraud of the creditors of the bankrupt.
(1) As to the first contention, these contracts are not commercial paper nor negotiable instruments.
(2) Where contracts such as. those involved and the notes are each embodied in one instrument, the vendor in the conditional sale contract reserving title until the contract price is fully paid, may sell and transfer its title, and the intention to do so is manifested by the written endorsement on the instrument transferring all the vendor’s right, title and interest in and to the same. And where a conditional sale contract retaining title in the vendor embodies a promissory note for the balance due, all as a part of one instrument, an assignment of the conditional bill of sale and the guaranteeing of its payment and fulfillment merely renders the assignor liable as a guarantor, should the assignee elect to seek recovery of the balance of the debt. State Bank of Black Diamond v. Johnson, 104 Wash. 550, 177 Pac. 340, 3 A. L. R. 235.
Affirmed.