Commercial Credit Corp. v. Horan

60 N.E.2d 763, 325 Ill. App. 625, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 320
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 19, 1945
DocketGen. No. 43,291
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 60 N.E.2d 763 (Commercial Credit Corp. v. Horan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Credit Corp. v. Horan, 60 N.E.2d 763, 325 Ill. App. 625, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 320 (Ill. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a trial of right of property proceeding. Emma Hammond and Minerva Edmett procured a judgment for $423.47 against Samuel Leibold. They caused an execution to issue based on said judgment on May 10, 1944 and delivered it to the bailiff of the municipal court of Chicago who through one of his deputies made a levy on the Packard automobile involved herein. Plaintiff, Commercial Credit Corporation, instituted this action against Emma Hammond, Minerva Edmett and the bailiff of the municipal court of Chicago, as defendants, claiming ownership and possession of said automobile by reason of a Trust Receipt Financing transaction between it and Pearson Motor Sales, on April 8, 1944, as a result of which it became vested with a security interest in the Packard automobile (hereinafter for convenience referred to as Packard or automobile or car), which constituted a prior lien on same. The case was tried by the court without a jury and finding and judgment were entered in favor of plaintiff. Defendants Emma Hammond and Minerva Edmett appeal.

The Uniform Trust Receipts Act (pars. 166-187, ch. 121½, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943 [ Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 135.17 (1)-135.17(22)]) went into effect in this state in July 1935. Section 2, par. 167 of said Act, in so far as it is applicable to the situation presented here, provides as follows:

“What constitutes trust receipt transaction and trust receipt. (1) A trust receipt transaction within the meaning of this Act is any transaction to which an entruster and a trustee are parties for one of the purposes set forth in subsection three of this section, whereby . . . (c) the entruster gives new value in reliance upon the transfer by the trustee to such entruster of a security interest in goods ... in possession of the trustee and the possession of which is retained by the trustee; provided that . . . the giving of new value . . .
“(I) Be against the signing and delivery by the trustee of a writing designating the goods , . . concerned, and reciting that a security interest therein . . . has passed to or will pass to, the entruster
“ (II) (2) A writing such as is described in subsection one, paragraph (I), of this section signed by the trustee, and given in or pursuant to such a transaction, is designated in this Act as a ‘trust receipt’. No further formality of execution or authentication shall be necessary to the validity of a trust receipt.
“(3) A transaction shall not be deemed a trust receipt transaction unless the possession of the trustee thereunder is for a purpose substantially equivalent to any one of the- following:
“(a) In the case of goods . . . for the purpose of selling or exchanging them, or of procuring their sale or exchange. . . . ”

Under the terms of the Act where the trustee (borrower) has in his possession goods which are the subject matter of the trust receipt transaction and retains same in his possession, the security interest or lien of the entruster (lender) attaches to such goods when the trust receipt is executed and the loan is received by the trustee and is valid for 30 days thereafter without notice or filing of any kind. If within said 30 days a Statement of Trust Receipt Financing is filed with the secretary of state by the entruster “such filing shall be effective to preserve his security interest in . . . [the] goods against all persons,” with certain exceptions, none of which is applicable here. (Pars. 172 and 173, ch. 121½, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1943 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 135.17(7), 135.17(8)].)

The principal purpose of the Act wag to facilitate the financing of sales and other transactions and to afford the “lender every conceivable protection in handling trust receipt and pledge transactions, so that the use of these security devices may be increased.” (Professor Bogart, December 1935 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 3 (1), p. 38.) "While the Act was intended to afford' protection to the entruster principally against other creditors of the trustee, the security interest of .the entruster is also protected thereunder as against any person, other than a creditor of the trustee, who claims title to or an interest in the goods which are the subject matter of the trust receipt transaction. Here no other creditor of the trustee is claiming any right in or to the Packard but the defendants herein, judgment creditors of Samuel Leibold, claiming that the car ivas in the possession of the latter when the levy was made upon it, challenge the validity of plaintiff’s trust receipt transaction with Pearson Motor Sales (hereinafter referred to as Pearson).

To sustain the validity of its trust receipt transaction with Pearson and of its security interest in the automobile at the time it was levied upon by the bailiff to satisfy defendants’ judgment against Leibold, plaintiff presented in evidence six documentary exhibits. The first exhibit consisted of two bills of sale executed by Pearson on April 7, 1944 which cover eleven automobiles, including the Packard, and show the total sale price of said cars as $6,920, the Packard being listed at $700. The bills of sale warranted that Pearson was the absolute oAvner of the eleven cars and purported to transfer the title of them to plaintiff free and clear of encumbrances. The second exhibit consisted of two trust receipts from Pearson to plaintiff covering the same eleven' ears described in the bills of sale. Pearson executed the trust receipts on April 8, 1944 and agreed therein among other things that as trustee he would hold the automobiles in trust for the entruster; that he would deliver them to the entruster on demand; that his possession as trustee was for the purpose of selling the automobiles at retail in the usual course of business; that he would not encumber them; that he would not sell them at less than the minimum sale price at which each car was listed in the trust receipt, which as to the Packard was $700; and that he would immediately after the sale of each car deliver to the entrustar from the proceeds of such sale the said minimum price. The third exhibit is a Statement of Trust Receipt Financing executed by plaintiff and Pearson on April 8,1944 and filed in the office of the secretary of state on April 18, 1944. The fourth exhibit is a draft drawn by Pearson on April 8, 1944 on plaintiff for $6,920 payable to Pearson Motor Sales, 2252 No. Cicero avenue. The amount of this draft was paid to Pearson. The fifth exhibit was plaintiff’s notes receivable record showing that Pearson had not paid his indebtedness on the Packard car.

From the evidence thus far related there can be no question but that as to the Packard plaintiff and Pearson entered into a valid trust receipt financing transaction within the requirements of the Trust Receipts Act, if Pearson owned and had title to said car at the time of such transaction. In order to establish Pearson’s title to and ownership of the car at the time he executed and delivered 'his trust receipt covering same, plaintiff introduced in evidence as its exhibit 6 the original certificate of title issued on this car by the secretary of state on February 5, 1940 to one Carl O. Rinder.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.E.2d 763, 325 Ill. App. 625, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-credit-corp-v-horan-illappct-1945.