Bank of California v. Danamiller

215 P. 321, 125 Wash. 255, 36 A.L.R. 753, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 970
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1923
DocketNo. 17788
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 215 P. 321 (Bank of California v. Danamiller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of California v. Danamiller, 215 P. 321, 125 Wash. 255, 36 A.L.R. 753, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 970 (Wash. 1923).

Opinion

Bridges, J.

This is a replevin suit. The facts have been stipulated and are as follows: On September 21, [256]*2561921, the Vulcan Manufacturing Company was the owner of a certain motor truck. On that day it conditionally sold it to Eliza and C. J. Miller. The usual conditional sales contract was entered into, which, among other things, fixed the price to be paid, the terms of payment, and provided that title should remain in the Vulcan Manufacturing Company until the whole purchase price was paid. This instrument was executed in triplicate; one copy was given to the Millers, the purchasers, one was filed with the county auditor for record, and the third was. retained by the seller, Vulcan Manufacturing. Company. On the same day this transaction took place, the Vulcan company assigned the conditional sales contract to Frank Water-house & Company, a corporation, as purchaser. This assignment was filed for record. It seems to be assumed that by this assignment Frank Waterhouse & Company received not only the conditional sales contract itself, but also such title to the truck as had been reserved by the Vulcan company. Not long after these transactions, Waterhouse & Company borrowed from the appellant, Bank of California, $9,000, and gave its note evidencing such indebtedness. This note contained the following clause: “As collateral security for the payment of this note” the maker does “hereby pledge and deliver to payee the following securities; automobile contracts. . . Eliza and C. J. Miller, $2,768.32.”

At the time of the delivery of this note to the bank, the Vulcan Manufacturing Company-Miller conditional sale contract was physically delivered to the bank, Waterhouse & Company, indorsing its name on the back thereof. The Millers, being informed that the contract had been assigned to the bank, made two or three payments to it, according to the terms of their [257]*257contract. Thereafter it was agreed between Water-house & Company and the Millers that the latter should return to the former the truck covered by the conditional sales contract and receive another truck in its stead. This was done and a new conditional sales contract was made between Waterhouse & Company and the Millers covering the second truck, and the latter, assuming that that contract had also been, assigned to the bank, made certain payments to it. The bank had no knowledge whatever of the exchange of trucks and assumed that all of the payments that had been made to it by the Millers were on account of the conditional sales contract which it held. Waterhouse & Company put the first truck in its sales room and directly sold it to the respondent, who had no actual notice of any of the foregoing transactions. When the bank learned that the Millers had exchanged trucks and that the one covered by the conditional sales contract held by it had been sold by Waterhouse & Company to the respondent, it demanded of the latter either the possession of the truck bought by him or payment of such sums as the Millers had agreed to pay, less what they had paid. These demands being refused by the respondent, the bank replevied the truck. It should be stated that nothing whatever was put of record showing or tending to show that the bank was the owner of or interested in the truck purchased by the respondent, or the contract of sale thereof to- the Millers. It is conceded that the assignment to the bank was for security purposes only. The trial court held against the bank, and this appeal results.

The case now stands as though Waterhouse & Company were the original vendors, and no further mention need be made of the Vulcan Manufacturing Company.

[258]*258The argument of the respective parties takes a wide range. It is contended hy the appellant that the assignment of the contract to it not only vested in it all of the previous rights of Waterhouse & Company in the contract itself, but carried with it such title to the truck as that company had reserved by the terms of the contract, and that, since Waterhouse & Company had no interest either in the truck or the contract, it could not give to the respondent any title or any right of possession, because it had none to give. Or, it is argued, if the bank did not take the actual title to the truck, it did take all the interest which Waterhouse & Company had in the contract, including the right to take possession of the machine from the Millers in the event the latter failed to make the contractual payments; and that, since the Millers did pot make such payments, the right of possession of the truck vested in the bank, and that, because thereof, it had a right to maintain this action, which was one for possession. On the other hand, the respondent contends that the appellant took nothing but the right to receive the payments which the Millers had agreed to make under the contract, and that the title to the truck and the right to its possession, in the event the Millers failed to live up to the contract, were at all times in Waterhouse & Company, and that it therefore had the right to take possession from the Millers and thus give to the respondent — an innocent purchaser — both title and possession.

Since the appellant greatly relies on the case of State Bank of Black Diamond v. Johnson, 104 Wash. 550, 177 Pac. 340, 3 A. L. R. 235, we go at once to it. It is not necessary to here recite the controlling facts of that case. Unusual as they were, they are completely duplicated here, except as to the parties and except in that case the assignee of the contract was a purchaser, [259]*259while here the assignee took for purposes of security only. If the difference noticed does not distinguish this case from that, then, following the rule of that case, the judgment here must be reversed.

We held in that case that the assignee took not only the contract and all of the assignor’s interest therein, but also the title to the automobile itself. We also held that the assignor, having no title to the automobile and no right to its possession, had nothing which it could sell to the innocent purchaser, and consequently the latter took nothing by the attempted sale, and that the assignee, being the owner of the title to the automobile, and also being entitled to the possession because the contractual payments had not been made, was entitled to possession.

We are convinced that the mere assignment for security of a conditional sales contract does not vest in the assignee the title to the property covered by the contract, and which title is reserved in the vendór. There is, it seems to us, a clear-cut distinction between a purchaser of such a contract and one who receives it only as security. One who purchases outright places himself in the stead of him from whom he purchases. The money he pays represents the value of the property itself, plus the rights of the vendor in the contract. The assignee, being in the shoes of the vendor, must be considered as having taken the title to the property in order that he may comply with the terms of the contract made between the vendor and vendee. The very transaction itself indicates that it was the intention of the parties to transfer the title to the property covered by the contract. Such is the rule of the case of the State Bank of Black Diamond v. Johnson, supra. An assignment of such a contract to a purchaser is, in effect, in the nature' of a bill of sale cover[260]*260ing the property contracted for.

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Bluebook (online)
215 P. 321, 125 Wash. 255, 36 A.L.R. 753, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-california-v-danamiller-wash-1923.