Adler v. Ammerman Furniture Co.

123 A. 268, 100 Conn. 223, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 123 A. 268 (Adler v. Ammerman Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adler v. Ammerman Furniture Co., 123 A. 268, 100 Conn. 223, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 2 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

We correct the finding in accordance with paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of the motion to correct. *228 We strike out paragraphs 10, 12, 18, 19 and 20 of the finding as allegations of legal claims and not findings of fact, and add paragraph 6 of the draft-finding. These additions to and subtractions from the finding are included in the statement of the case as made above.

The defendant’s title to this truck depends upon whether the New Haven Bank had a right to sell to it the truck, and that depends upon whether Exhibit A is a chattel mortgage or a conditional contract of sale. “A chattel mortgage is a conditional sale of personal property to secure a debt or obligation of the mortgagor. . . . Whether or not the parties intended a particular transfer of property to be a mortgage, is to be determined by the character and language of the instruments intentionally executed by them, and by the surrounding facts, rather than by the belief of the parties as to the effect of their acts.” Williams v. Chadwick, 74 Conn. 252, 255, 50 Atl. 720. The retention of possession by a mortgagor of personal property makes the mortgage invalid as against attaching creditors and bona fide purchasers, unless the property mortgaged be included in the list of personal property which General Statutes, § 5206, authorizes the mortgagor to retain possession of upon certain conditions, viz.: that the mortgage deed shall contain a condition of defeasance, and a particular description of the property, and be executed, acknowledged and recorded as mortgages of land. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Puritan Laundry, Inc., 95 Conn. 172, 180, 111 Atl. 149. Since the truck in question is not within the classes of personal property excepted by the statute, there was no obligation upon the parties to it to have recorded Exhibit A, assuming it to have been a chattel mortgage, and the recording of it was not notice to the New Haven Bank, since it was under no duty to look to the records for such an instrument. “The delivery and record of *229 a bill of sale absolute in form, but intended as security, without change of possession, does not have the legal effect of a chattel mortgage.” Petello v. Teutonia Fire Ins. Co., 89 Conn. 175, 180, 93 Atl. 137; Romeo v. Martucci, 72 Conn. 504, 509, 510, 45 Atl. 1, 99; 2 Swift’s Digest, 164. A conditional contract of sale is a contract by which the general property in the personal property constituting the subject of the sale remains in the vendor, but is ultimately to pass to the vendee for an agreed consideration on the performance by him of named conditions. “Where this is intended to be the effect, operation and main purpose of the contract, it will, as a rule, be held to be one of conditional sale, without much regard to the name or the form the parties may give to it.” In re Wilcox & Howe Co., 70 Conn. 220, 228, 39 Atl. 163. “The effect of the Act of 1895 [now General Statutes, § 5206] was to render conditional sales which should thereafter be made and which should not be made, acknowledged and recorded in conformity with the provisions of the Act, absolute sales as to creditors and bona fide purchasers of the vendee.” Cohen v. Schneider, 70 Conn. 505, 510, 40 Atl. 455.

Exhibit A was made, acknowledged and recorded in conformity with the requirements of General Statutes, § 5206, and if it be a contract of conditional sale and had been accompanied by delivery of possession, it would have been good as against the New Haven Bank and its vendee, the defendant. But if Exhibit A is in form a chattel mortgage, its record was no notice to the New Haven Bank, and as the plaintiffs failed to take possession of the subject of the mortgage, the title of the Bank as against the plaintiffs was absolute.

Let us examine the terms of Exhibit A to ascertain what the parties to it intended by it. The Progressive Motor Sales Company, the vendor, conveys, sells and delivers this truck to the vendees, the plaintiffs. A *230 conditional sale of personal property requires that the title shall remain in the vendor until certain conditions are fulfilled, when it shall pass to the vendee. Exhibit A recites a conveyance of personal property whose title is in the Sales Company and not in Adler, Salzman and Adler, the plaintiffs. The foundational requirement of a conditional sale is absent. The trial court in its memorandum of opinion holds that the parties have been erroneously described in Exhibit A, and that in fact the Sales Company is the conditional vendee and the plaintiffs the conditional vendors, and hence Exhibit A was sufficient to give notice, under the facts proven, to the New Haven Bank of the superior title of these plaintiffs. Exhibit A could not be reformed in this informal way. None of the parties ask for such reformation. Moreover, we have been unable to read the evidence as the trial court did. The evidence, as we interpret it, plainly shows that at no time did the plaintiffs acquire title to this truck. The plaintiffs’ position is that they furnished the funds with which to pay the sight draft attached to the bill of lading, and that their act gave to the Sales Company the ownership of the truck which it immediately transferred, by Exhibit A, to the plaintiffs, and retained possession thereof upon condition that, upon payment of its debt to plaintiffs, they would reconvey to it, and that this transaction in legal effect was the same as if the truck had been directly consigned to Adler, Salzman and Adler. This position concedes that the ownership passed directly from the consignor to the Sales Company. Adler, Salzman and Adler never acquired title to the trucks from the consignor. It also appears, as to the truck in controversy, that it was bought outright from the consignor and was not consigned with the other trucks, so that as to this truck Adler, Salzman and Adler, even upon their theory, did not acquire at *231 any time title to this truck. But if the truck had been among those consigned, we could not hold that the transfer by the Sales Company to Adler, Salzman and Adler was the equivalent of a transfer direct from the consignor to Adler, Salzman and Adler. The only interest in these trucks which they had came through the ownership of the Sales Company, and this may have given them a mortgagees’ interest, but could not make them conditional vendors of this truck. The plaintiffs also claim that title to these trucks passed to them by the symbolical delivery represented in the bill of lading. The facts found controvert this. On payment of the sight draft the bank turned over to the Sales Company the bill of lading and it then took possession. Adler, Salzman and Adler never had possession of the bill of lading. This disposes of the claim that Exhibit A is a contract of conditional sale.

Exhibit A recites the conveyance and delivery of the truck by the Sales Company to the plaintiffs, but in fact there was no delivery and the possession of the truck was continuously retained by the Sales Company, so that as against the New Haven Bank, Exhibit A, if intended to be a chattel mortgage, could not be effective as such. The form of conveyance was appropriate for a chattel mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 A. 268, 100 Conn. 223, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adler-v-ammerman-furniture-co-conn-1924.