Creach v. Ralph Nichols Co.

267 S.W.2d 132, 37 Tenn. App. 586, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 4, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 267 S.W.2d 132 (Creach v. Ralph Nichols Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creach v. Ralph Nichols Co., 267 S.W.2d 132, 37 Tenn. App. 586, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 113 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

*587 HO'WELL, J.

The bill in this case alleged that on or abont March 22, 1949, complainant was the owner of a 1949 Mercury automobile, Motor No. 9CM-47902, that this car was stolen from the parking area of the Belle Meade Theatre in Nashville, and that complainant had no information as to the whereabouts of his car until it was located by the Federal Bureau of Investigation at Las Alamos, New Mexico, in the possession of D. C. McPherson. It is alleged that McPherson purchased the car from the Welsh Motor Company of Tulsa, Oklahoma, and later returned it to that Company and it was then in the possession of the Welsh Motor Company, that that Company had purchased the car from one Flippo to whom the car had been sold by the defendant Ralph Nichols Motor Co., and that the complainant at no time parted with the title or right to possession of this car and that the defendant is justly indebted to him for the proceeds of its sale, he having waived any right of action he may have had for tort. The bill prays that the defendant be required to answer under oath concerning the proceeds of the sale of the car and that he be given a judgment against the defendant for the amount for which it sold the car and interest.

The defendant filed an answer in which it denied that it was indebted to complainant in any amount and sets out: “That defendant has no record of any sale of an automobile bearing motor number 9CM-47902 to any person by the name of Flippo. That complainant’s records do reveal that in the usual course of business complainant did sell an automobile which it had bought in the usual course of business on September 6, 1949 to a Mr. O. C. Flippo, of 4422 West 2nd Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma. That the said automobile was a two door Mercury, 1949 model *588 bearing- motor number, according* to their records, of 9CM-48601. Defendant does not know whether this automobile was the automobile alleged to have been stolen from the plaintiff or not, but assumes in view of the differences in motor numbers that it was not the same automobile. Defendant demands strict proof of the fact that the said automobile was the same car, if deemed material by the Court. Defendant admits that the complainant has never had any transactions with the defendant, but denies that it ever knowingly took possession and sold any automobile in which the title or beneficial interests were in complainant. ’ ’

The case was regularly heard by the Chancellor who found the facts and decreed as follows:

■ “that on March 22d, 1949, complainant had title to a 1949 Mercury, 6 passenger coupe bearing motor No. 9CM-47902, said automobile was stolen from complainant by persons unknown. That thereafter on September 2d, 1949; the defendant in good faith, and without any knowledge that said automobile was stolen, purchased the said automobile in the usual course of its business from one Thomas M. Ferguson, for the purchase price of $2,053.21. That said sale was made to the defendant under a Michigan Certificate of Title showing a motor number 9CM-48601. That defendant’s representatives did not check the motor number on the title certificate and compare it with the true motor number on the chassis of the car. That four days later on September 6th, 1949, clefend-ant sold said automobile to one O. C. Flippo for the sum of $2,295.00, out of which sum the defendant paid a commission to its salesman of $114.75-.
“Complainant had notified all police authorities *589 throughout the United States of the theft of his said automobile and in October, 1952, said car was abandoned when caught in a flash flood in the State of New Mexico, and a police investigation of said vehicle showed it to hear motor number 9CM-47902 and to he the identical automobile stolen from complainant.
“Complainant in the original bill in this cause, waived the tort action against defendant for the conversion of his said automobile, and brought his action, instead, for money had and received, or the proceeds of the sale in the hands of the defendant.
■ “The Court is of the opinion that the defendant was at fault in failing to compare the motor number on the evidence of title with the motor number on the chassis of said automobile and that the equities in this cause are with the complainant.
“The Court is further of the opinion that the facts constitute a conversion by defendant. And that complainant has the right of election of remedies, and that he is entitled to waive action based upon the conversion and to maintain his present action against the defendant for the proceeds of said sale in the sum of $2,295.00.
“It Is Therefore Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed by the Court, that the complainant have and recover a judgment against the defendant, Ralph Nichols Company, in the amount of $2,295.00, together with the costs of this cause, for all of which execution may issue, if necessary.”
There is no controversy about the facts.

The defendant has appealed to this Court and has assigned errors which raise principally the question as to whether or not the complainant is entitled to recover *590 the value of the automobile or the proceeds of its sale by defendant or the profit made by the defendant in its purchase and sale of the car.

In the old case of McDaniel v. Adams, 1889, 87 Tenn. 756,11 S. "W. 939, 940, the Supreme Court said:

“The defendants acquired no title by their purchase from the thief, however innocent they may have been, and their subsequent sale of the property and their refusal to pay over the proceeds thereof to the true owner, upon demand, was a conversion of the property of plaintiff. See [Merchant’s National] Bank v. Trenholm [& Sons], 12 Heisk. [520] 521, [59 Tenn. 520], where it is held that the bank, which had advanced money upon the pledges by a factor of his principal’s goods, was liable in trover to the principal notwithstanding that the goods had been received in pledge and sold for payment of the factor’s debt, in good faith and in ignorance of the true title. This case is well supported by authority on principal. See 4 Amer. & Eng. Cyclop. Law [Vol. IV., pp.] 107-110, and cases cited. In Roach v. Turk, 9 Heisk. 708 [56 Tenn. 708], overruling Taylor [Code & McLeod] v. Pope, 5 Cold., 413 [45 Tenn. 413], it is said that where the defendant has either the property of another, wrongfully taken from the true owner, or the proceeds thereof, and refuses to surrender same, it is the assertion of an adverse claim, and constitutes a conversion. It is difficult to see how it is any more of a hardship upon the innocent purchaser of property stolen to be held liable for the proceeds of resale, than for the property itself. The withholding of the one is as much a conversion as the withholding of the other. ’ ’

*591 la the later case of Broadway Furniture Co. v. Bates, 170 Tenn. 36, 91 S. W. (2d) 300, 301, the Supreme Court said:

“The general rule is thus stated in 55 C.

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W.2d 132, 37 Tenn. App. 586, 1953 Tenn. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creach-v-ralph-nichols-co-tennctapp-1953.