Donn v. Auto Dealers Investment Co.

47 N.E.2d 568, 318 Ill. App. 95, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 841
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 10, 1943
DocketGen. No. 42,214
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 N.E.2d 568 (Donn v. Auto Dealers Investment Co.) 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
Donn v. Auto Dealers Investment Co., 47 N.E.2d 568, 318 Ill. App. 95, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 841 (Ill. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hebel

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears from the record in this case that on May 25, 1939, the plaintiff and Bussell Walter filed a declaration of intention with the then Secretary of State of Illinois that they expected to engage in trust receipt financing of used automobiles, the plaintiff to be the entruster and Walter the trustee. This statement of intention complied with the statute and no question is raised by the defendant .with reference to its propriety. The plaintiff and Walter did subsequently engage in a continuous course of trust receipt financing. Subsequently, about three months later, on August 16, 1939, the defendant and Walter also filed with the then Secretary of State of Illinois their declaration of intention to engage in trust receipt transactions of used automobiles, with the defendant, as entruster, and Walter as trustee.

After August 16,1939, both the plaintiff and defendant were engaged in trust receipt transactions with Walter, each apparently having no actual notice of the other’s transactions. Then, in the course of the continuous dealings engaged in by the plaintiff and Walter, the said Walter submitted to the plaintiff trust receipts involving' certain automobiles. The plaintiff, having no actual knowledge of any other transaction involving these automobiles and being well within the one year period of his filing, advanced the requested money to the said Walter.

• It also appears from the record that prior to this particular trust receipt transaction but after the original filing by the plaintiff, the defendant advanced money to Walter on the identical automobiles which were the subject matter of the plaintiff’s trust receipt transaction. On default by Walter, in paying, the defendant took possessio'n of the automobiles. Plaintiff notified the defendant of his claims to the automobiles in controversy, which defendant denied, stating that defendant’s rights were prior to the rights of the plaintiff. Defendant sold the automobiles at a public-sale for $2,300 and applied the proceeds on its debt. They were sold to one Fred Girard who, in turn, resold some of them to the plaintiff. Neither Walter nor anybody on his behalf paid to the plaintiff the amount of money which he had advanced to Walter on trust receipt, which advances amounted to $2,240, so that there is presently due and owing from Walter to the plaintiff $2,240, with interest thereon from January 1940. The plaintiff sued the defendant for conversion.

The plaintiff contends that by virtue of his prior filing of his declaration of intention to engage in trust receipt transactions with Walter, with the Secretary of State, in compliance with the Uniform Trust Receipts Act (Smith-Hurd’s Ann. Stats., ch. 121%, sec. 178 [Jones 111. Stats. Ann. 135.17 (13)]), the plaintiff acquired an inchoate security interest or inchoate lien for one year on Walter’s automobiles, which interest or lien was perfected when those automobiles became the subject matter of a trust receipt transaction between him and Walter within that year; and that the perfected interest or lien attached as of the date of the original filing under section 178 of the act.

It is claimed by the plaintiff that the filing with the Secretary of State under section 178 of the act constituted constructive notice to the defendant and to all subsequent entrusters of his right to perfect his inchoate security interest or inchoate lien on Walter’s automobiles by advancing money thereon and accepting trust receipts therefor at any time within one year from the date of his filing.

The defendant, in reply to plaintiff’s contention, suggests that the date which determines the priority of plaintiff’s and defendant’s claims is the date of the extension of credit as shown by the individual trust receipt, irrespective óf the date of the original filing with the Secretary of State. Defendant also contends that the plaintiff is estopped by virtue of his conduct.

The commissioners who drafted the Uniform Trust Receipts Act appended an explanatory note thereto. Their statement shows that they recognize the desirability of the trust receipt as a security device and also recognize the unfairness to other creditors of giving the entrustar a secret lien for an indefinite period of time. On page 298 of the cumulative annual pocket part of volume 9 of Thompson’s Uniform Laws Annotated, in discussing this problem they say as follows :

“On the other hand, where the trust receipt is held effective without recording, other creditors of the dealer are given no notice at all that his stock in trade and accounts receivable are subject to a prior lien to some financier which in the very case of need (to wit, drop in market followed by dealer’s insolvency) is likely to exhaust the dealer’s total assets.

“But for about a decade Ohio has been working with a statute along a line which satisfied not only the needs of business, but the needs of the financing agency, and the needs of other creditors. What is put on public record is not notice of lien on individual chattels, but notice that trust receipt financing of a dealer is, as to a given type of goods, being carried on by a named financier. That is all a creditor needs to know: it tells him not to rely on any merchandise of that description in the dealer’s hands.”

It is obvious that the commissioners sought to retain all the flexible advantages of the trust receipt as a security device and at the same time sought to eliminate its disadvantages which were primarily the secret lien which the entruster was given, and the opportunities for fraudulent manipulation which were presented.

Accordingly, we now discuss section 178 of the Illinois act, which is the only section in the entire act pertaining to recording, the material portions of which are as follows:

“Section 178 — Filing and Re-Filing Concerning Trust Receipt Transactions Covering Document or Goods.

“(1) Any entruster undertaking or contemplating trust receipt transactions with reference to . . . goods is entitled to file with the Secretary of State, a statement, signed by the entruster and the trustee containing: (a) a designation of the entruster and the trustee, and of the chief place of business of each •within this State . . . ; (b) a statement that the entruster is engaged, or expects to be engaged, in financing under trust receipt transactions the acquisition of goods by the trustee; and (c) a description of the kind or kinds of goods covered or to be covered by such financing.

“ (2) (This section prescribes a form of statement of trust receipt financing which' provides that the type of goods should be generally described, such as coffee, silk, automobiles or the like.)

“(3) It shall be the duty of the filing officer to mark each statement filed with a consecutive file number and with the date and hour of filing . . .; and to note and index the filing . . . according to the name of the trustee. . . .

“(4) Presentation for filing of the statement described in subsection one . . . shall constitute filing under this act in favor of the entruster, as to any . . . goods falling within the description in the ■ statement which are within one year from the date of such filing, or have been, within thirty days previous to such filing, the subject-matter of a trust receipt transaction between the entruster and the trustee.”

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.E.2d 568, 318 Ill. App. 95, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donn-v-auto-dealers-investment-co-illappct-1943.