Cloud Oak Flooring Co. v. J. A. Riggs Tractor Co.

266 S.W.2d 284, 223 Ark. 447
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 12, 1954
Docket5-255
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 266 S.W.2d 284 (Cloud Oak Flooring Co. v. J. A. Riggs Tractor Co.) 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
Cloud Oak Flooring Co. v. J. A. Riggs Tractor Co., 266 S.W.2d 284, 223 Ark. 447 (Ark. 1954).

Opinion

J. S. Daily, Special Justice.

The appellant argues only two questions in its brief. These are the only points properly presented here. Connell v. Robinson, 217 Ark. 1 at 4, 228 S. W. 2d 475; Bowling v. Stough, 101 Ark. 398 at 404, 142 S. W. 512; Purifoy v. Lester Mill Co., 99 Ark. 490 at 494, 138 S. W. 995.

Stated in inverse order these are: (1) Conversion is not a proper remedy of a conditional seller against one holding under his conditional buyer; and (2) A provision in a conditional sales contract conditioning the passage of title upon the payment by the buyer of open account indebtedness due the seller for repairs to the machine sold, and in addition to the deferred installments of the pur chase price, is not enforceable, after the full payment ol the purchase price, against one holding under the buyer.

For the first proposition stated appellant relies on Loden v. Paris Auto Co., 174 Ark. 720, 298 S. W. 78. But the point of that case, on the question of conversion, was that a conditional buyer has an interest which he can sell or mortgage without the consent of the conditional seller, Fairbanks, Morse & Co. v. Parker, 167 Ark. 654, 269 S. W. 42, and, therefore, a purchase from the buyer, alone and of itself, does not constitute a conversion. Appellant quotes from Olson v. Moody, et al., 156 Ark. 319, 246 S. W. 3, as follows:

“* * * This court is committed to the doctrine that a vendor who has retained purchase money has only two remedies for a breach of the contract. He may either treat the sale as canceled and bring suit in replevin for the property, or may treat the sale as absolute and sue for the unpaid purchase money, and, in aid thereof, attach the property * * *. There is no suggestion in any of the Arkansas cases that a third remedy is open to a vendor who has conditionally sold personal proper-•J-y * # # J ?

But there the seller sued in the Chancery Court for the debt representing the unpaid purchase price and sought to have a lien declared and foreclosed upon the subject of the sale. The question before the Court was the jurisdiction of equity to create a lien in favor of the conditional seller upon the subject of the sale in an action for the balance of the purchase price. The Court held not, and added to the language above quoted:

“* * * As stated befoi'e, a vendor has an adequate remedy at law, and no necessity exists for equity to mold a remedy to preserve his rights. * * * ”

Subsequently this Court has recognized and enforced the remedy of conversion in favor of conditional sellers against purchasers from the buyer under a proper showing. Wright Motor Co. v. Shaw, 171 Ark. 935, 287 S. W. 177; General Contract Purchase Corporation v. Row, 208 Ark. 951, 188 S. W. 2d 507; Schwartz v. Fulmer, 214 Ark. 572, 217 S. W. 2d 254; Bailey v. Tolleson, 219 Ark. 307, 241 S. W. 2d 110; Strickland v. Quality Building and Security Co., 220 Ark. 708, 249 S. W. 2d 557. These lay down the rule that conversion is a proper remedy of the conditional seller against one holding under the conditional buyer if such holder disposes of the subject of the sale, or withholds its possession, after notice of the seller’s claim and demand for possession by the seller following the conditional buyer’s default.

The appellant has brought into the transcript the testimony of its own general superintendent, in the form of his oral deposition taken by stipulation and filed with the trial Court. It conclusively shows that appellant retained and withheld possession of the tractor in controversy, having removed it out of the state, after the filing of the complaint and service of summons on appellant. The latter was full notice to the appellant of appellee’s claim of title under its conditional sales contract and of the conditional buyer’s default and constituted demand for possession. Therefore, all of the elements of conversion are present.

The second question presented by the appellant— validity of use of conditional sales contract to secure a subsequently incurred debt in addition to the purchase price — has not been clearly answered in Arkansas decisions. In this case it arises under the following contract provisions:

* * * *
“Title to the property aforesaid shall remain in the seller until the full purchase price thereof and all interest thereon and all reimbursable expenses incurred by seller shall have been paid in full.”
* * * #
“Buyer agrees, during the continuance of this contract, * * * to make any and all repairs thereon which may be necessary to keep said property and its equipment in as good condition as it is now, reasonable use and wear thereof excepted; * * *”
* # * *
“Should buyer fail to do or perform any of the acts or things required to be done by him under any of the terms hereof, seller may, at its option, do and perform any of such acts or things on the buyer’s behalf, and all moneys advanced or paid by seller in so doing shall be added to and be deemed a part of the balance due hereunder and bear interest at a like rate. ’ ’

Pending payment of the deferred purchase price installments the conditional seller, appellee, made repairs to the tractor in controversy, charging the costs of the parts and labor to the conditional buyer on open account. This open account indebtedness for repairs has never been paid and is the basis of the appellee’s claim of retained title as against appellant, mortgagee of the conditional buyer.

This question is the subject of an annotation found at 148 A. L. R. page 346 following Re Halferty, 136 F. 2d 640, 148 A. L. R. 342. In Be Halferty the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit had before it this precise question and lists the earlier decisions pro and con, including the three from Arkansas pertinent to the point and which are hereafter referred to separately. The decision in Be Halferty, upholding the validity of such contract provision as against the conditional buyer’s trustee in bankruptcy, is bottomed, however, upon % 29 of the Uniform Sales Act then in force in Illinois, locus of the sale (Ark. Stats. 1947, § 68-1420 is the same). But when our Legislature adopted the Uniform Sales Act (Act 428 of 1941) it appended a § 76 (c) 68-1479), not a part of the original uniform act, and this added section expressly excepted conditional sales-from the Uniform Sales Act’s operation and terms in our state. Therefore, Be Halferty is not of value in determining the issue in Arkansas.

In Faisst v. Waldo, 57 Ark. 270, 21 S. W. 436, the question was mooted and avoided by employment of the principle of application of payments to effectuate the evident intent of the parties. In Augusta Cooperage Company v. Parham, 139 Ark. 605, 213 S. W. 737, the Court assumed valid, as against a mortgagee of the conditional buyer without notice, a condition obligating payment of sums other than the purchase price, if incorporated in a title retention sale contract. But the lower court had found, on disputed testimony, that the contract was not so conditioned.

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266 S.W.2d 284, 223 Ark. 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cloud-oak-flooring-co-v-j-a-riggs-tractor-co-ark-1954.