Beets v. John R. Jarnagin Motor Co.

175 S.W.2d 326, 180 Tenn. 358, 16 Beeler 358, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 31
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 326 (Beets v. John R. Jarnagin Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beets v. John R. Jarnagin Motor Co., 175 S.W.2d 326, 180 Tenn. 358, 16 Beeler 358, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 31 (Tenn. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gailor

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff, Beets, who has appealed, sued the defendant Jariiagin Motor Company in the Circuit Court of Grainger County for money had and received in the sum of $151.66'. The controversy arose out of a conditional sales contract which plaintiff made with defendant for the purchase of an automobile on September 30,1938. At the time of the contract, there was a cash payment of $50 and deferred balance of $319.60’ to be paid in monthly installments of $16.86. The vendee paid various installments on this contract until May 19,1939. Thereafter, the payments having ceased, defendant, on August 21, 1939, filed suit to repossess the car through the court of R. A. Johnson, a Justice of the Peace of Grainger County, and in the writ named a certain Poster Miracle as the defendant. Miracle had been introduced to Jarnagin as a possible purchaser of the car from the plaintiff. After a judgment for Jarnagin on the replevin on September the 5th, a sale of the ear was made to the Justice of the Peace, Johnson, from whose court the writ of replevin had issued. At this sale, the car was bought in for $15. On September the 8th, a warrant was sworn out by Jarnagin before Johnson against Beets for disposing- of mortgaged property. Beets was arrested on the warrant on September the 17th, but before any further steps were taken, he paid off the entire balance then due on the conditional sales contract, which amounted to $151.66. After this payment, he wrote to Jarnagin advising him of the payment made at the *360 bank which held his note for collection, requesting a dismissal^ the criminal warrant and the return of his note. Apparently, the criminal warrant was dismissed and the note is an exhibit to the plaintiff’s original declaration in the record before us here. In this declaration Beets sued for the recovery of the balance of $151.65 which he had paid at the bank to avoid prosecution under the criminal warrant, as authorized' by Code, section 7294.

At the trial of the present case in the circuit court, a judgment was rendered for the defendant Jarnagin. On plaintiff’s appeal to the Court of Appeals, this judgment was affirmed. We granted certiorari, have heard argument and the entire record is before us for disposition.

The plaintiff makes a number of assignments of error, but to dispose of this appeal, we find it necessary to consider only the fourth, which attacks the validity of the resale under the conditional sales contract and alleges a failure to comply with various provisions of the Code in that regard. This assignment is in substance as follows : That the Court of Appeals erred in finding that the three sales notices, filed as exhibits in this case, were legal and regular and complied with the Code provisions for conditional sales; that they are illegal and irregular because they fail to show the time of the sale; are not uniform; and that the sale was not held by the original vendor, his agent or assignee. The pertinent parts of section 7287, to which this assignment is directed, are as follows:

“When any personal property is so sold upon condition that the title remain in the seller, it shall be the duty of said-seller, having regained possession of said property because of the consideration remaining* unpaid at maturity, within ten days after regaining said possession, to *361 advertise said property for sale for cash.,,to the highest bidder, by written or printed posters posted at as many as three public places in the county where the property is to be sold, one of said places to be in the civil district in which said property is to be sold, one at the courthouse door in the county, and the third at any public place in. the county, said notices to be posted at least ten days before the day of sale, and to contain a description of the property to be sold, and time and place of said sale. Unless the debt is satisfied before the day of sale, then it shall be the duty of said original seller, or his assignee or agent, at the time and place as stated in said notices, to offer for sale, and sell, said property, . . .” (Emphasis ours.)

It is apparent, from an examination of the three copies of the notices for sale, which are exhibits in the record, that they are not identical copies, that they are partly -made on the typewriter with carbon paper and partly filled in in pen and ink. Only one of the three copies makes any pretense to give the hour at which the sale was proposed to be held, as “between hrs. 10 and 4 P. M.” This notation on the notice does not form a part of any grammatical sentence and is inserted at the bottom of the notice immediately after the words “J. R. Jarnagin Motor Company” and immediately before the words “This 26th day of August, 1939,” so that if we read the notice as written, there appears at the bottom of the sheet, “J. R. Jarnagin Motor Company, between hrs. 10' and 4 P. M., This 26th day of August, 1939.” The date, 26th day of Auguist, 1939, was the day on which the notice .was posted, so.that it is a perfectly reasonable construction, from the way the paper is written, to assume that the notice was posted between the hours of ten arid four *362 on the 26tli day of August, 1939. Apparently, this notice, from an endorsement on the back, was posted in the office of Squire Johnson. It is not said where the sale will be held, but there is another insertion in pen and ink alongside the typewritten J. R. Jarnagin Motor Company, “Dock Baileys, 6 Civil Dist Grainger Co.” Neither of the other two copies of the notice, as exhibited, refer to any time whatever, except to state that the sale will be held on the 5th day of September, 1939. These last two copies, however, do say that the sale will be held in the Sixth Civil District at Dock Bailey’s Liberty Hill.- It appears, from endorsements on the back, that both these last two notices were posted in the window of J. R. Jarnagin Motor Company. From the oral testimony of Bailey, summarized in the Wayside Bill of Exceptions, inference may be drawn that there was a fourth notice posted on a tree some four miles from Bailey’s residence, but whether the tree was in the 6th Civil District of Grainger County is not averred nor proved. It is not proved that that notice contained any statement of the hour for holding the sale, or that it was anywise different from those exhibited.

In a suit by the original vendee to recover money paid to conditional vendor after' repossession and resale, the burden is on the vendor to prove compliance with provisions of the Code with reference to repossession and resale. Whitelaw Furniture Co. v. Boon, 102 Tenn., 719, 52 S. W., 155, quoted with approval in Hobbs v. Smith, 171 Tenn., 176, 101 S. W. (2d), 474; Commerce Union Bank v. Jackson, 21 Tenn. App., 412, 416, 111 S. W. (2d), 870, 872.

Many previous decisions of this court hold a conditional vendor to strict compliance with the provisions of Code, sections 7287 and 7291. Murray v. Motor Truck Sales Corp., 160 Tenn., 140, 145, 22 S. W. (2d), 227, 23 S. W. *363 (2d), 913, Cowan v. Singer Manufacturing Co., 92 Tenn., 376, 21 S. W., 663;

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W.2d 326, 180 Tenn. 358, 16 Beeler 358, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beets-v-john-r-jarnagin-motor-co-tenn-1943.