Carpenter v. Commercial Credit Co., Inc.

118 S.W.2d 581, 196 Ark. 475, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 27, 1938
Docket4-5119
StatusPublished

This text of 118 S.W.2d 581 (Carpenter v. Commercial Credit Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. Commercial Credit Co., Inc., 118 S.W.2d 581, 196 Ark. 475, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 213 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Humphreys, J.

This is a suit by appellee brought against appellant in the circuit court of Arkansas county, southern district, to replevy a "Willys standard sedan automobile based upon a conditional sales contract alleging a breach on the part of appellant in failing to make the monthly payments provided therein. It was alleged that a note was executed of even date with the sales contract covering the deferred monthly payments and that the title to the automobile was retained in T. S. McCollum Sales Co., of Stuttgart, Arkansas, until all the monthly payments should be made. It was also alleged that upon failure to make the payments, or any of them, T. S. Mc-Collum Sales Company, or its assignee, might take possession of the property by a replevin suit, if necessary, and that in default of the payment of the amount due on the monthly payments the ownership of the automobile should become absolute in the vendor of the automobile or its assignee.

It alleged that it purchased the contract and note executed by appellant to T. S.' McCollum Sales Co. for a valuable consideration before maturity and was an innocent purchaser thereof.

The prayer of the complaint was that appellee should have possession of said automobile, or its value, and the cost of the action.

The writ of replevin was served and, appellant failing to give a retaining bond, the automobile was delivered by the sheriff to appellee.

Appellant filed an answer denying that appellee was an innocent purchaser for value before maturity, and also denying iliat tlie conditional sales contract was negotiable.

It also alleged as a defense that appellant signed the note and conditional sales contract in blank with instructions to the T. S. McCollum Sales Co., from whom he bought the automobile, to insert the monthly payments of $18 in the contract and note and send him a duplicate thereof the next day, but that the T. S. McCollum Sales Co. failed to send it to him for more than thirty days and upon receiving it he discovered that monthly payments had been inserted in the note in the sum of $20.35, and that thereupon he took up the matter with said sales company and T. S. McCollum told him that a mistake had been made by appellee in Little Rock in entering the monthly payment and that he would have it corrected; that he did not do so, and when appellant received notice from appellee to make the first monthly payment of $20.35 he informed the company that the monthly payments should be $18, but finally made two subsequent monthly payments under protest and that when T. S. McCollum and appellee refused to make the correction in accordance with the contract he had with T. S. McCollum Sales Co., with reference to the sale, he offered to pay $18 a month and tendered same to them, but that they refused to accept less than $20.35 .per month, which had been inserted in the note.

Appellant also set out a number of other defenses, among them being that the car was sold to him as a new car, whereas it was a used car and set out all of the defects of the car on account of being a used car by way of counter-claim, and also pleaded that the agreement was iliat T. S. McCollum Sales Co. and the manufacturer of the car would readjust, service and make replacements and adjustments of all defective parts for a period of ninety days, which T. S. McCollum Sales Co. refused to do when demand was made, for service, replacements, etc.

He also alleged that appellee, without any authority on his part, had inserted the monthly payment in the note for more than the monthly payment agreed upon, claiming that such insertion was a change that voided the note.

Upon a hearing of the ease before the court and jury, appellant offered to introduce proof to sustain the defenses it had alleged, which the court excluded over- his objection and exception. The court did allow him to introduce evidence relative to the agreement that the monthly payments should be $18 and that that amount would be inserted in the note and contract as the monthly payment.

Ernst Carpenter testified, in substance, that he agreed to pay McCollum Sales Co. $595 for a new car; that he traded his old car in as a down payment for $225, leaving a balance of $370 to be financed over a period of twenty-four months; that the insurance and carrying charges brought the total price of the new car to $432, payable in twenty-four monthly installments of $18 each ; that he signed the note and contract in blank and left it with T. S. McCollum Sales Co. to be completed; that he was to receive a copy of the contract on the next day, but it was thirty days before he succeeded in obtaining a completed copy that when he received the first notice from appellee on August 6, thirty-three days after execution of the contract, that he was to pay $20.35 per month, he took the matter up with McCollum; that McCollum stated it was an error and that the monthly payment had been increased in the Little Rock office; that the note had been changed in the Little Rock office of appellee, but they had failed to fill out the blank in the conditional sales contract.

Ernst Carpenter was corroborated in this testimony by his brother, who was with him at the time he bought the car and also at the time he talked to T. S. McCollum about the mistake being made in entering the amount and where the entry in the note had occurred.

T. S. McCollum contradicted them, stating that the insurance was not included in the monthly payment of $18, and that when he got a manual relative to the insurance he figured out and filled the amount in the note himself and that lie did not send it to Little Rock to be filled in.

The conditional sales contract was incomplete as the amount of the monthU payment was never inserted in the blank space left for it.

The note had the amount of the monthly payment inserted in the blank space left and was complete.

The conditional sales contract contained the following provisions:

Said note is a negotiable instrument separate from this contract even though at the time of the execution it may he temporarily attached hereto by perforation or otherwise.

The note did not retain title of the property in the automohile and it did not refer to the conditional sales contract, and does not make any mention of the.automobile.

A money judgment upon the note was not prayed in the complaint.

At the conclusion of the testimony the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for appellant for the automobile and that unless appellant paid the amount of $460.31 due on the note, together with interest, the automobile should become the absolute property of appellee, from which judgment is this appeal.

Appellant pleaded defenses in his answer which were' good defenses, if the proof sustained them, against T. S. McCollum Sales Co. The court permitted appellant to make proof of the allegation that the monthly payment was to be $18 and that that amount should be inserted in the note and conditional sales contract. The court refused to allow appellant to make proof that the automobile was sold to him as a new one, whereas it was a used car, and also refused to allow him to make proof of an agreement between him and T. S.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 581, 196 Ark. 475, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-commercial-credit-co-inc-ark-1938.