The plaintiff, a finance company, is assignee of a conditional sale agreement, by which one Roseman on January 12, 1953, purported to sell an automobile to the defendant for $1,300.86 including a $400.86 finance charge. The relevant testimony is summarized below.
An agreement on a form supplied by the plaintiff was made out by an employee of the plaintiff who gave it to Roseman so that he could get the defendant's signature on it. It was then signed by the defendant. 1 Roseman thereafter induced the defendant to sign another contract form in blank, claiming that an error had been made in the first one. One of these instruments was assigned to the plaintiff on January 12 by Roseman. The defendant testified that the automobile was never delivered to him by Rose-man. It was registered, however, upon written application signed by the defendant also in blank, in the defendant’s name, and when an employee of the plaintiff on February 27, 1953, asked the defendant where the automobile was “the defendant replied that the car was stolen from him.” The defendant by the agreement purported to acknowledge receipt of the automobile. The plaintiff advanced the required funds to Roseman, notified the defendant of the assignment, and sent him instalment payment books.
The defendant also received another set of instalment payment books. It is suggested in one of the briefs that this *152 came from another finance company to which the first contract signed by the defendant had been assigned by Rose-man. If so, this is by no means clear from the record.
The defendant returned these payment books to Rose-man about January 19 requesting him “to straighten out the matter.” The plaintiff received no payments under the agreement and got in touch with the defendant, who had learned that Roseman “had left the State.” The plaintiff’s representative “never located the car that is the subject of this contract, and does not know where it is.” 2
This action of contract is to recover the unpaid balance due on the agreement plus a fifteen per cent attorney’s fee of $195.12. The case was heard by a judge of the Superior Court. He refused rulings (numbered 1) that the “evidence warrants a finding for the plaintiff”; (numbered 5) that the “defendant is estopped to deny the validity of the conditional sale contract as against the plaintiff”; and (numbered 6) that by putting the contract “into the hands of the plaintiff’s assignor, the defendant must bear the loss and is liable thereunder to the plaintiff.” The case is here on the plaintiff’s exceptions to the denial of these and other requested rulings, which need not be set out in full.
1. The trial judge has made only a general finding for the defendant. In view of the plaintiff’s first request, the plaintiff’s exceptions must be sustained if on the evidence the trial judge would have been warranted in finding for the plaintiff.
Bresnick
v.
Heath,
2. The conditional sale agreement upon which the plaintiff seeks to recover is not in form a promissory note and is
*153
nonnegotiable. See
Central National Bank
v.
Hubbel,
3. If the automobile was not delivered to the defendant, there was either no sale (see
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.
v.
Callahan,
4. The plaintiff contends that in any event the defendant is barred from setting up (as against the plaintiff as assignee) that he is not hable upon the agreement.
The agreement contained a provision (hereinafter referred to as the waiver clause) reading in part, “If this contract is purchased from the Seller, the purchaser shall have all the rights of the Seller, and in any suit . . . the Buyer
*154
waives as against any such purchaser ... all rights, remedies and defenses which the Buyer may now and at any time have hereunder against the Seller to set-off ... rescission . . . and otherwise.” There is a conflict of authority whether such a waiver clause is valid. Some courts have held such clauses to be void as against public policy. See, for example,
San Francisco Securities Corp.
v.
Phoenix Motor Co. Inc.
We recognize that G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 5, is primarily a procedural statute and that its provisions, preserving an obligor’s defences against an assignee of an obligee, suing in the assignee’s own name, are in large measure designed to ensure that such a direct suit does not deprive the obligor unwillingly of defences which he may have against the original obligee. However, giving weight to the considerations already mentioned affecting such contract provisions, we think that a blanket provision like the waiver clause (in the present case set out in a long closely printed agreement form) should be disregarded as contrary to the policy of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 5 (see
Lewis
v.
Club Realty Co.
5. The plaintiff contends (apart from any argument based on the waiver clause) that, because the defendant signed the agreement in blank, he is estopped by affirmative conduct to assert the defences of fraud and failure of consideration. Estoppel is a question of fact and in the present circumstances it could not have been ruled as a matter of law that the defendant was estopped. See
Jerome
v.
Eastern
*156
Finance Corp.
6. The plaintiff could recover in the present case if the trier of the fact made either of two findings (a) that the automobile was delivered by Roseman to the defendant, or (b) that the automobile was not delivered to the defendant, but that facts were such as to give rise to an estoppel of the defendant to assert the defence of failure of consideration. It is necessary only to consider the former of these possibilities.
The acknowledgment of the receipt of the automobile contained in the agreement signed in blank by the defendant was not conclusive upon the trier of the fact. See
Dubois
v.
Atlantic Corp.
m ,. , Exceptions sustained.
Notes
Although the agreement purports to be “sealed,” that is of no significance. The contract contemplated that Roseman had delivered or would deliver the automobile. Failure of this consideration can be shown despite the seal. See
Johnson-Foster Co.
v.
D’Amore Construction Co.
Probably because the automobile cannot be found, no effort is now being made to realize on it as security. Even if, as the defendant contends, the contract was in violation of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 255, § 13A, as appearing in St. 1939, c. 509, § 1, the practical situation is much the same as if a sale on credit had taken place, and as if this action had been brought for the price on the principles discussed in
Lehan
v.
North Main Street Garage, Inc.
See also Jones, Chattel Mortgages (6th ed.) § 1257; Corbin, Contracts, § 1515; Notes, 53 Harv. L. Rev. 1200; 44 A. L. R. (2d) 8, 162 (§ 25); 44 A. L. R. (2d) 196; 49 A. L. R. (2d) 15, 29, 45. Compare the Uniform Commercial Code § 9-206 (St. 1957, c. 765, § 1, effective October 1, 1958). Compare also original draft § 9-206 of the code (1952 text and comments ed.) and see Supp. No. 1 (Jan. 1955), note at pages 183-184, especially discussion of the New York cases. See also §§ 1-102, 2-302; Note, 57 Yale L. J. 1414; Shattuck, Secured Transactions under the Uniform Commercial Code, 29 Wash. L. Rev. 1, 36-38; Spivack, In re Article 9, 28 Temple L. Q. 603, 616-617.
For comparable provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code see §§ 3-104 to 3-114 (St. 1957, c. 765, § 1; see footnote 1,
supra).
See also
Central National Bank
v.
Hubbel,
