DeMello v. A. B. C. Loan Co.

12 Mass. App. Dec. 174

This text of 12 Mass. App. Dec. 174 (DeMello v. A. B. C. Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeMello v. A. B. C. Loan Co., 12 Mass. App. Dec. 174 (Mass. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Sgarzi, J.

This is an action of contract or tort alleging conversion of certain household furniture. The answer was a general denial and an allegation that no demand had been made upon the defendants for return of the goods.

There was evidence that on January 6, 1951 the plaintiffs as conditional vendors and one Harriet Ochs as conditional vendee signed a conditional sale agreement covering certain household furnishings which the vendee used in conducting a nursing home at 189 Bakerville Road, South Dartmouth. The agreement provided that title remain in the vendor and that the [175]*175vendee could not, without the consent of the vendor, sell, lease, mortgage or remove the property from the nursing home.

On March 7, 1951 the said Ochs and her husband mortgaged the real estate at 189 Bakerville Road, South Dartmouth to the defendant A. B. C. Loan Company, Inc., and as additional security gave to the mortgagee, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff a chattel mortgage covering the personal property in the nursing home, including the articles mentioned in the conditional sale agreement. The chattel mortgage was recorded and contained covenants of the mortgagor that she was the lawful owner of the property, that it was free of all encumbrances, that she had a good right to sell the same and that she would warrant and defend the title. The mortgagee A. B. C. Loan Company, Inc. had no knowledge of the conditional sale.

Both the real estate mortgage and the personal property mortgage were foreclosed on August 21, 1952. The A. B. C. Loan Company, Inc. was the purchaser at the sale and continued the operation of the nursing home with Harriet Ochs and her husband as employee until November 13, 1953 when it sold the nursing home business including the property in question, to the defendants Elsie Niemiec and Mary Nichols Kalares. They in turn gave A. B. C. Loan Company, Inc. a purchase-money mortgage covering the property.

Prior to the commencement of this action the individual defendants denied access to the property to the plaintiffs’ attorney contending that they had purchased it from A. B. C. Loan Company, Inc. and that the matter was one between A. B. C. Loan Company, Inc. and the plaintiff. The amount of indebtedness owed the plaintiff at the time of the alleged conversion was more than $2,000.00 but there is nothing in the report to indicate that payments were in default.

[176]*176There was evidence that at the time the mortgage was foreclosed and at the time the property was acquired by the defendants Niemiec and Kalares it had a fair market value of $1,291.57.

The plaintiffs made the following requests for rulings all of which were denied:

1. The foreclosure of the chattel mortgage by A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc. and the purchase of the mortgaged chattels by same, without the assent of the plaintiffs, constituted such an exercise of dominion over the goods as to amount to a conversion, insofar as relates to goods sold on conditional sate by plaintiffs to the conditional buyer and wrongfully mortgaged to said A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc.
2. A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc.’s sale to defendants Kalares and Niemiec of the goods sold by the plaintiffs on condition previously to one Ochs constituted a conversion.
3. The purchase of goods by defendants Kalares and Niemiec, their mortgage of same to A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc., their taking possession of and using same constituted a conversion of such goods as had been sold on condition by plaintiffs to one Ochs.
4. The statement by defendants Kalares and Niemiec that they had purchased the chattels at 189 Bakerville Road, Dartmouth, absolutely from the A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc, and were possessed of same as owners and would not permit plaintiffs or their attorney to identify the goods sold on conditional sale by plaintiffs nor permit their entry upon the premises numbered 189 Bakerville Road, Dartmouth, constituted such an exercise of dominion over the goods as to amount to conversion.
5. The statement by defendants Kalares and Niemiec that the rights if any of the plaintiffs to the goods would have to be asserted against the A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc. from whom said defendants had purchased same outright constituted a conversion of the goods in their possession which had been sold by plaintiffs to one Ochs on conditional sale.
6. The defendant A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc. is liable to plaintiffs for conversion,
7. The defendants Kalares and Niemiec are jointly and severally liable to plaintiffs for conversion.

[177]*177The defendants made the following requests for rulings, the first three of which were denied and the fourth denied as not applicable to the Court’s findings of fact:

1. The conditional sales contract upon which the plaintiffs base their claim is void because it does not comply with section 12, as amended of chapter 255 of Annotated Law's.
2. The conditional sales contract upon which the plaintiffs base their claim is void because it does not comply with section 12A of chapter 255 of the Annotated Laws.
3. The plaintiffs’ cause of action is prematurely brought because of the failure of the plaintiff to comply with section 13, as amended of chapter 255 of the Annotated Laws.
4. The date of the actual taking by the defendant A, B. C. Loan Co., Inc. is the date of conversion, if any conversion ■was made, and that damages if any are to be assessed, must be the fair market value of the articles on said date.

Subsequently the defendants made the following additional requests for rulings, all of which were granted:

1. The Court is warranted in finding that before the defendants foreclosed on their mortgage, the plaintiffs were duly notified of the intended foreclosure, and they did nothing to exercise their rights under their conditional lease.
2. The Court is warranted in finding that the plaintiffs made no demand for the return of their property, nor did the defendants refuse to return it.
3. As a matter of law, the Court should find for the defendants in that they did nothing to imply an assertion of title or a right of dominion over the plaintiffs’ property.

The Court found the following facts and found for the defendants.

"On January 6, 1951, a conditional sale was signed by Harriet Ochs as conditional vendee, and in behalf of the plaintiffs by Alvaro L. Rodrigues, as conditional vendors. This sales agreement covered certain household furniture and effects together with certain paints. As there was no evidence as to an alleged conversion of paints, the court will not consider the [178]*178same but will confine its decision to the household furniture and effects. This personal property was to be used in a rest home owned and run by Mrs. Ochs and her husband. On March 7, 1951, Mrs. Ochs, together with her husband mortgaged the rest home, being real estate, to the A. B. C. Loan Co., Inc., and as additional security gave a chattel mortgage of all the personal property in the home, including the property subject to the above mentioned conditional sale.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mass. App. Dec. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demello-v-a-b-c-loan-co-massdistctapp-1956.