Dearborn Motors Credit Corp. v. Hinton

74 So. 2d 739, 221 Miss. 643, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 571
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1954
Docket39262
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 74 So. 2d 739 (Dearborn Motors Credit Corp. v. Hinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dearborn Motors Credit Corp. v. Hinton, 74 So. 2d 739, 221 Miss. 643, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 571 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

*646 McGehee, C. J.

This is a suit to recover an alleged balance of $439.85 due under a conditional sales contract in connection with the sale of a Ford tractor, Dearborn plow, cultivator and disc harrow, and under which conditional sales contract there was originally due the sum of $1,239.85 as the balance of the purchase price of such equipment. The property was sold on September 8, 1951, by the V. M. Box Tractor Company at Corinth, Mississippi, to one Joe D. Bickman, but the contract was executed on that day between the said purchaser and the Hinton Tractor Company, a partnership composed of Frank F. Hinton and O. M. Hinton, which had bought the assets of the Y. M. Box Tractor Company on the same date. Thereupon, the conditional sales contract was duly assigned by the Hinton Tractor Company on the said 8th day of September, 1951, to the appellant, Dearborn Motors Credit Corporation. The contract was not only sold and assigned to the appellant but the assignor guaranteed unto the assignee the payment of the indebtedness in the event of default by the conditional vendee, Joe D. Bickman.

The indebtedness of $1,239.85 was due and payable on September 8, 1952, and default was made in the payment thereof. Whereupon, the appellant notified the Hinton Tractor Company and requested it to pay the indebtedness because of the terms of its guarantee. The appellees failed to pay the indebtedness pursuant to such demand, but on November 18, 1952, the appellee Frank Hinton wrote the appellant a letter stating that he had a cash offer of $900 for the equipment and “If you are. willing to take that for the paper, please advise at once.”

On November 26,1952, the appellant declined this offer of $900 for the property with the condition which had been attached that it was offered in full settlement of the indebtedness. But the appellant stated in its reply that “I suggest that if you can get the $900 that you would be in a better position to accept this and pay the *647 difference, as we expect to receive on this contract $1,239.85; as we bought the contract from you and this bears your endorsement which guarantees the payment to us.” In this letter the appellant further requested that the guarantor, Hinton Tractor Company, go ahead and pay off the indebtedness in accordance with the guarantee. Failing to receive payment of the indebtedness, the appellant, on January 13, 1953, repossessed the tractor and other equipment from the conditional vendee, Joe D. Rickman, and thereafter on February 4,1953, sold the same to the Grady Counce Tractor Company, successor to the Hinton Tractor Company, for the sum of $800. Thereupon, this purchaser made repairs on the equipment at a cost of approximately $186 and then sold the same from its place of business at a net profit of only $98.14.

The assignment executed by the Hinton Tractor Company, as contained on the reverse side of the conditional sales contract, provided, among other things, that “Upon our failure so to pay upon demand, assignee may sell the property described in the contract at public or private sale, with or without notice, and we shall be liable to assignee for any deficiency between the unpaid balance, plus expenses, and the net amount thus collected after deducting cost of sale therefrom.” The sale from the appellant to the Grady Counce Tractor Company was made at private sale, and without notice to appellees of the seizure and sale, the notice having been waived as above shown, and the proof discloses that the appellant accepted the offer of $800 from Grady Counce as the first offer made for the purchase of the property.

The question to be decided in this case is whether or not the appellant dealt unjustly with the equitable rights of the appellees as assignors and guarantors, or in any manner failed to exercise reasonable diligence to obtain the best price available in the sale of the property in question. The proof offered on behalf of the appellees, *648 as partners in the Hinton Tractor Company, is to the effect that the tractor and other equipment was worth between $1,200 and $1,500 at a fair cash market value at the time of the sale by the appellant to the Grady Counce Tractor Company, and that therefore they were damaged in an amount equal to or in excess of the balance sued for after the $800 was credited on the indebtedness of $1,-239.85. However, the proof on behalf of the appellees further discloses that they had obtained two offers of $900 each for the property after they had been notified of the default in payment of the indebtedness and requested to pay the same, prior to the time when the appellant took possession thereof on January 13, 1953. The appellee Frank Hinton testified that he had contacted a few people whom he thought might be interested in purchasing this kind of equipment and that “I had an offer of $900 as a starting price. The man said he would start at $900.” Q. “Did you feel the fellow would give more¶” A. “Yes, 1 knew he would.” He also had an offer from another prospective purchaser in the same amount. Nevertheless, he submitted the offer to the appellant for acceptance on condition that it would surrender the conditional sales contract papers and receive the $900 for the entire debt. The witness did not disclose to the appellant that he knew that one of these prospective purchasers would be willing to pay more than $900 for the tractor and other equipment. The record shows that except for trying to get released of liability in toto the appellees did not cooperate for the protection of their own interests, or that of the conditional vendee, Rickman, who was also primarily liable for the indebtedness. The appellee Frank Hinton did not ascertain how much more than $900 each of the prospective purchasers would have been willing to pay, but on the contrary he sought to induce the appellant to accept less for the property than he now contends it was fairly worth, and in full settlement of the entire indebtedness. Moreover, the appellant, by his letter of November 26, *649 1952, authorized the assignor and guarantor to aeeept the offer of $900 and to pay the difference. The appellees necessarily knew that if they should have succeeded in obtaining a better offer than $900 from either of the prospective purchasers their liability for the deficiency judgment would have been lessened. As the conditional vendor of the property, it was their duty to cooperate so as to protect the ultimate legal liability of their conditional vendee Rickman, who is not a party to this suit but against whom the appellees would have been subrogated as the original maker of the note and conditional sales contract.

It is to be noted by the terms of the assignment of the conditional sales contract and the guarantee by the assignor of the payment of the indebtedness therein mentioned, the sale of the property was authorized to be made either at public or private sale. The assignee saw fit to make a private sale of the property, and having done so, we find that, under the numerous authorities discussed in the briefs of counsel, it is well settled that both the conditional vendor and his assignee owed the duty to the conditional vendee, that is to say the original purchaser, to deal justly with his equitable rights and to use diligence to obtain the best price available for the property in making such a sale. Therefore the case of Federal Credit Company v. Boleware, 163 Miss. 830, 142 So.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 So. 2d 739, 221 Miss. 643, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dearborn-motors-credit-corp-v-hinton-miss-1954.