Commercial Credit Corp. v. Joplin Automobile Auction Co.

430 S.W.2d 440, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 899, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 650
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 1968
Docket8668
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 430 S.W.2d 440 (Commercial Credit Corp. v. Joplin Automobile Auction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals 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. Joplin Automobile Auction Co., 430 S.W.2d 440, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 899, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 650 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

This is an action in trover by plaintiff Commercial Credit Corporation to recover from defendant Joplin Automobile Auction Company for the alleged wrongful conversion of seven automobiles (hereinafter thus referred to) covered by chattel mortgages executed and delivered by one Calvin Lacy, a used car dealer in Shawnee, Oklahoma, as mortgagor, to plaintiff as mortgagee, to secure payment of notes evidencing Lacy’s indebtedness for monies loaned by plaintiff in financing automobiles on the so-called floor plan. Pursuant to plaintiff’s motion at the close of the evidence, the court directed the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff in the principal sum of *442 $7,820 with interest of $1,238.16 thereon, or in the aggregate sum of $9,058.16. From the judgment entered on that verdict, defendant appeals.

In the course of floor plan financing for Lacy, plaintiff’s representatives made periodic checks of the automobiles, usually 25 to 30 in number, on his used car lot. During the latter part of August 1963, it was found that the seven automobiles were missing and that Lacy had disappeared. Efforts to locate the automobiles at that time were unsuccessful, but the following facts eventually came to light. Wholesale automobile auctions, at which only dealers were permitted to buy and sell, were conducted at Joplin, Missouri, by defendant Joplin Automobile Auction Company and at Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Tulsa Automobile Auction Company (hereinafter referred to as Tulsa Auction), then wholly owned by defendant. Earl Howard was president and general manager of both companies. Within the month prior to his disappearance, Lacy had become indebted to defendant and Tulsa Auction in a substantial sum (estimated by Lacy at $7,000 to $8,000 “I think” and said by defendant to have been “approximately $11,000”) on “no account checks” issued by Lacy for automobiles purchased at auctions conducted by those companies. Understandably, this generated “some” pressure by Howard for payment.

The original Oklahoma certificates of title to the seven automobiles had been delivered to, and were being held by, plaintiff; but, on the admittedly false representation that the originals had been lost, Lacy procured the issuance of duplicate certificates of title. On the same day those duplicates were received by him, to wit, on August 29, 1963, Lacy delivered the seven automobiles with keys and duplicate titles to Howard at Tulsa Auction; and, on the evening of August 30, 1963, those automobiles were sold at an auction conducted by defendant in Joplin, Missouri. Both Howard and Lacy were present. Checks for the net proceeds of sale were issued to Lacy who' immediately endorsed and redelivered them to defendant to be credited and applied on his (Lacy’s) preexisting indebtedness to that company and Tulsa Auction. There is no dispute but that, under the Uniform Commercial Code adopted in Oklahoma in 1961 [now O.S.A. Title 12A], plaintiff’s security interest in the seven automobiles had been perfected and Lacy was in default under the security agreements denominated “chattel mortgages” [see 12A O.S.A. § 9-105, subsec. (1) (b), and comment concerning “chattel paper” at p. 244], prior to defendant’s sale of those automobiles at auction on August 30, 1963.

Under “Points and Authorities,” defendant here undertakes to present only two “points,” the substance of which, as pieced out by reference to defendant’s two-page “Argument,” is (1) that, since “the automobiles were delivered to [defendant] in Oklahoma,” it'became “[a] buyer in ordinary course of business (subsection (9) of Section 1-201) other than a person buying farm products” [12A O.S.A. § 9-307] and therefore took free of plaintiff’s security interest, and (2) that plaintiff should be “deemed to have acquiesced in or consented to the sale” of the seven automobiles or to have waived or been estopped from any complaint concerning that sale, because (so defendant’s president Howard said) Lacy had, from time to time during the fifteen months prior to August 30, 1963, sold some eighty-eight automobiles through auctions conducted by defendant at Joplin and Tulsa.

Of point (1). This contention is wholly without foundation or merit. In the first place, defendant was not a “buyer” of the seven automobiles. For, in answers to interrogatories received in evidence defendant solemnly averred that it had sold the seven automobiles on August 30, 1963, “as auctioneer”; that they were sold “for Calvin Lacy, Shawnee, Oklahoma”; and again that “we sold cars owned by Calvin Lacy at auction, issued checks in payment of same to Mr. Lacy after collecting the *443 sale price from the purchaser and deducting our commission.1’ (All emphasis herein is ours.) In selling those automobiles for Lacy, defendant as auctioneer simply was acting as vendor Lacy’s agent. Pasley v. Ropp, Mo.App., 334 S.W.2d 254, 256(1), 80 A.L.R.2d 1231; Shopen v. Bone, 8 Cir., 328 F.2d 655, 658(2); 7 Am.Jur.2d Auctions and Auctioneers § 10, p. 231.

Furthermore, it was indisputably established by defendant’s answers to interrogatories that, as we have noted, the net proceeds derived from sale of the seven automobiles at auction were credited and applied on Lacy’s pre-existing monetary indebtedness to defendant and Tulsa Auction. Hence, in no event could defendant have been a “buyer in ordinary course of business” within the statutory definition in the Uniform Commercial Code: “ ‘Buyer in ordinary course of business’ means a person who in good faith and without knowledge that the sale to him is in violation of the ownership rights or security interest of a third party in the goods buys in ordinary course from a person in the business of selling goods of that kind * * *. ‘Buying’ may be for cash or by exchange of other property or on secured or unsecured credit and includes receiving goods or documents of title under a pre-existing contract for sale but does not include a transfer * * ⅝ in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt.” 12A O.S.A. § 1-201(9).

Of point (2). This point is equally devoid of substánce or value. For proper resolution of it, we need not essay definition or differentiation of acquiescence, consent, waiver and estoppel, the several theories commingled in the abstract statement constituting this point, as lifted from the only citation thereunder, to wit, annotation 96 A.L.R.2d 208, 233 (§ 13). Suffice it to say that, for any one of those theories, i. e., acquiescence, consent, waiver and es-toppel, to have become available and useful in defense of instant plaintiff’s cause of action, it would have been an indispensable prerequisite for the evidence to have permitted and justified a finding that, prior to August 30, 1963, plaintiff had knowledge, actual or constructive, of the alleged fact upon which defendant sought to charge plaintiff with such acquiescence, consent, waiver or estoppel, namely, that Lacy had sold eighty-eight automobiles through defendant or Tulsa Auction.

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430 S.W.2d 440, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 899, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-credit-corp-v-joplin-automobile-auction-co-moctapp-1968.