Begay v. Foutz & Tanner, Inc.

619 P.2d 551, 95 N.M. 106
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1979
Docket3804, 3805
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 619 P.2d 551 (Begay v. Foutz & Tanner, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Begay v. Foutz & Tanner, Inc., 619 P.2d 551, 95 N.M. 106 (N.M. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

OPINION

WALTERS, Judge.

Plaintiffs Begay and Reeves are Indians who frequently pawned Indian jewelry articles with defendant trading company. Both complained, in separate suits below, that when they defaulted in payment of the loans collateralized by their pawned jewelry, defendant attempted to retain the collateral pursuant to § 505 of the Uniform Commercial Code (§ 55-9-505, N.M.S.A. 1978), instead of proceeding properly under § 504 which requires notice of intention to sell and delivery of any surplus to the debt- or. The jewelry was sold ultimately by defendants as “dead pawn” to a related corporation dealing in the retail and wholesale business of Indian jewelry. Plaintiff Reeves claimed in addition that she had not received the postcard notice sent by defendant of its intention to retain possession in discharge of her debt. The suits were consolidated for appeal.

In both cases (non-jury trial in one case being followed the next day by trial of the other) the court decided the issues in favor of plaintiffs.

I

We will discuss the Begay case first because defendant’s method of asserting its creditor’s right upon default was the same in both cases and, forgoing for the moment the issue of notice raised in Reeves, our resolution of the rights of the plaintiffs and the remedies available to defendant will apply to both cases.

The trial court found that plaintiff Begay was uneducated, did not speak English, and had a limited understañding of commercial and legal matters (Finding 9). It made the further findings that:

11. Tanner’s Big Dollar is a retail outlet which sells groceries and other merchandise, including Indian jewelry and other Indian goods, and which has a substantial pawn business.
12. That plaintiff, for many years prior to and during 1974, borrowed money from defendant’s pawn department, usually three or four times per month, using her Indian jewelry as collateral.
13. That plaintiff was a regular pawn loan customer of defendant and was known personally by the manager of defendant’s pawn department, who regarded her as a special customer and had loaned on her pawn approximately fifteen years.
15.That the value of the jewelry pawned by plaintiff in these transactions was several times greater than the amount loaned by defendant, which amount was $200.00 in each transaction.
16. That plaintiff did not repay the loans made by defendant.
17. That on or about November 26,1974, defendant sent plaintiff a notice of intent to retain the collateral with respect to each transaction, on a form regularly used by defendant for that purpose, a copy of which was admitted into evidence as Defendant’s Exhibit 1.
18. That in other transactions, defendant had previously kept plaintiff’s pawned jewelry after default until plaintiff was able to pay back the amount loaned.
19. That the course of prior dealings between the parties led plaintiff to expect that defendant would retain her jewelry for her until she could redeem it.
20. That defendant moved plaintiff’s jewelry into defendant’s sale inventory upon plaintiff’s default and a short time thereafter sold the jewelry-
21. That in accordance with its normal business practice, defendant sold the jewelry to Joe E. Tanner, president and a director of Foutz & Tanner, Inc., or to Joe E. Tanner, Inc., a corporation owned and operated by Joe E. Tanner and engaged in the retail and wholesale of Indian jewelry-
22. That defendant did not maintain records sufficient to identify the date on which the sale of a particular piece of pawn took place or for how much it was sold.
23. That Joe Tanner decided how much he would pay defendant for dead pawn by estimating the new replacement cost of a piece of jewelry and by delivering to defendant an amount equal to this cost figure plus 10 percent.
24. That Joe Tanner, on behalf of himself or of Joe E. Tanner, Inc., customarily resold dead pawn from Tanner’s Big Dollar to individuals or to other retail or wholesale establishments including retail outlets in Scottsdale, Arizona, and LaJolla, California, owned by Joe Tanner.
28. That the defendant, or its employees, including Robert Tanner, determined the amount of money that it would loan on a particular piece of Indian jewelry, and as a general rule loaned substantially less than what it determined to be the value of the jewelry, so that there would be virtually no chance of loss to defendant in the event of a default.
29. That in the instant case, the value of the jewelry pawned was several times greater than the amount of money borrowed from defendant.
30. That defendant never returned surplus proceeds from sales of dead pawn to the pawn debtors and did not return any surplus from the sale of the jewelry in question to plaintiff.
31. That defendant did not act in good faith in purporting to retain plaintiff’s jewelry instead of acknowledging that it sold the jewelry and accounting to her for any surplus received after satisfaction of her debt.
32. That the notice of intent to retain used by defendant stated that the debtor had thirty days from the date of preparation of said notice in which to object to the retention, rather than thirty days from receipt of the notice.
33. That the notice of intent to retain that was sent by defendant did not inform plaintiff that defendant would sell her jewelry in satisfaction of her debt.
34. That the notice of intent to retain sent by defendant did not inform plaintiff that she could require defendant to sell the jewelry and pay her any surplus received.
36. That defendant’s conduct in claiming to have retained collateral while in fact selling it and in selling dead pawn to a stockholder and director of a related corporation always resulted in a complete loss of the debt- or’s substantial equity in the collateral.
37. That the conduct of defendant in selling the collateral to a stockholder or related corporation in such a way as to result in a complete loss of the debtor’s substantial equity was not commercially reasonable.
38. That defendant’s conduct was not in good faith, considering the relative bargaining power of the parties.

The court concluded that § 55-9-504 applied to defendant’s sale of the collateral; that the section was violated because notice of sale was not given, the jewelry was not sold in a commercially reasonable manner and that “the surplus of such a sale” was not returned to Mrs.

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Vogel v. Carolina International, Inc.
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Begay v. Foutz & Tanner, Inc.
619 P.2d 551 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
619 P.2d 551, 95 N.M. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/begay-v-foutz-tanner-inc-nmctapp-1979.