Allison v. Niehaus

102 P.2d 659, 44 N.M. 342
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1940
DocketNo. 4514.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 102 P.2d 659 (Allison v. Niehaus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Niehaus, 102 P.2d 659, 44 N.M. 342 (N.M. 1940).

Opinions

BICKLEY, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from the District Court of Bernalillo County from a judgment for the appellee in an action of replevin to recover a trailer-house in possession of the appellant. The defendant (appellant here), being employed by the plaintiff (appellee), arranged with the latter for purchase of a trailer-house so his family might live with him at Chama where he was working. Plaintiff paid for the trailer and took a bill of sale from the trailer factory in his own name. Defendant received immediate'possession of the trailer and was charged with the purchase price, on an open account on plaintiff’s books. Payments on the account, which included numerous other and smaller items, were made by deductions from defendant’s wages. No specific credits were made against the trailer charge nor against any of the other items, but all were carried to a general balance.

By appropriate motions defendant challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to establish that it was the intention of the parties that the title to the property was to be held in the seller. The court, at the conclusion of -plaintiff’s case, expressed grave doubt as to the retention of the title by the seller (plaintiff) but required the defendant to .go forward with his evidence. At the conclusion thereof the defendant renewed the motion made at the conclusion of plaintiff’s testimony. The court again expressed his doubts but announced his view in findings of fact, reserving decision until counsel should have an opportunity to submit briefs. Among these findings were the following: “Plaintiff contends that it was his intention to reserve title in himself to the trailer until such time as the trailer was paid out. The Court finds that' such was the intention of the plaintiff. The defendant is rather hazy on just what the details of the transaction were, from the standpoint of where title was. The Court is inclined to believe, and so finds, that the defendant didn’t give any particular consideration to the question of whether there was a title reservation in the plaintiff, or whether there wasn’t. In other words, all the defendant was interested in was getting the trailer and having time to pay it out. I think that is probably the true state of affairs, but the plaintiff intended to reserve title to protect himself and defendant was only interested in getting the trailer, and trying to pay it out as he worked, ajid never' gave a thought as to whether the trailer, by means of a reservation of title in plaintiff, stood as security or whether it didn’t.”

The court also -found at the request-of defendant: “That there was no contract or meeting of minds between the Plaintiff and defendant as to a conditional sales contract or reservation of title to the trailer in the Plaintiff.”

The court refused to make plaintiff’s requested findings No. 3 and 5, as follows:

“3. That before the trailer was purchased, plaintiff informed the defendant that title to the trailer should remain in plaintiff’s name until same was fully paid for. That plaintiff told defendant that when the trailer was fully paid out plaintiff would execute a bill of sale for said trailer to defendant. That it was agreed between plaintiff and defendant that defendant should pay interest on the unpaid amount due on the trailer.

* * * * *

“5. That plaintiff and defendant intended that title to such trailer would not pass-to defendant until defendant had paid plaintiff in full for said trailer.”

The court, however, adopted plaintiff’s requested conclusion of law No. 1: “1. That plaintiff is the owner of the trailer, and has been the owner of said trailer at all times material hereto.”

Appellant assigns error that this conclusion of law is contrary to and not supported by the findings of fact. For reasons hereafter appearing, we find it unnecessary to discuss that question in all its phases and we have recited this muqh of the record because it illustrates one of the reasons for the enactment of our statutes requiring that conditional sales contracts shall be in writing. Since the contract in the case at bar is not in writing, that disposes of the question of insufficiency of the evidence to show the existence of a contract for the retention of the-title in the seller.

By the principles of the common law, a contract of conditional sale need not be inr writing to be valid. This is a statement not susceptible of embellishment. In some states there are statutes expressly directing that they must be in writing, and in others the implication necessarily arises. Jones Chattel Mortgages and Conditional Sales, Sec. 980.

Since this question raised by appellant has not heretofore been directly passed on by us, it seems worthwhile to state our reasons for so construing our statute.

■ The New Mexico Territorial court, at an ■early day, though feeling itself constrained ■to uphold conditional sales contracts, nevertheless, expressed itself in sympathy with those courts which have voiced their ■disapproval of conditional sales agreements. Said the court in the case of Redewill v. Gillen, 4 N.M. 78, at page 84, 12 P. 872, 877: “These Illinois, Kentucky, and New York cases proceed upon the prin•ciple that, when one of two innocent persons must suffer by the fraud of a third, the one who puts it in the power of such third person to do the wrong should bear the injury. This position seems almost impregnable, and appeals strongly to our ■sense of justice, and we should hold with them, and thus uproot in this jurisdiction what we consider a pernicious system of secret titles concealed in the pockets of the owner, and calculated to entrap the unwary, were we not impelled by an overwhelming weight of authority to the contrary.”

Thus, while holding with the majority of courts that the conditional sales contract where not written was enforceable even as against innocent purchasers, the court decried such a result. The Territorial court abhorred secret titles concealed in the pockets of their owners even when written. How much more must it have abhorred them in absence of even a writing to detect their concealment.

Later in the case of Redewill v. Gillen, supra, the New Mexico court comments upon a decision of the United States Supreme Court in Harkness v. Russell, 118 U.S. 663, 7 S.Ct. 51, 30 L.Ed. 285, which declared itself in -support of the majority view and said: “In many states, however, the hardships that have resulted from the enforcement of this rule in favor of designing and wicked persons having been seen, laws have been passed invalidating all such contracts, and we venture to hope that the legislature will adopt some such salutary law here.”

Thus the court strongly suggested to the legislature that since it found itself helpless to remedy this evil, it lay within the power of the Legislature to invalidate all such conditional sales contracts which were not put on record, and that of necessity would include all oral conditional sales agreements because there would be no manner in which to file or record them.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P.2d 659, 44 N.M. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-v-niehaus-nm-1940.