E. L. Jones & Co. v. Unruh

182 A. 211, 37 Del. 241, 7 W.W. Harr. 241, 1935 Del. LEXIS 49
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 10, 1935
DocketNo. 74
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 182 A. 211 (E. L. Jones & Co. v. Unruh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. L. Jones & Co. v. Unruh, 182 A. 211, 37 Del. 241, 7 W.W. Harr. 241, 1935 Del. LEXIS 49 (Del. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Rodney, J.,

delivering the opinion of the Court:

The petitions present several interesting questions. First, has a conditional vendee such an interest in the chattel covered by the conditional sale contract as to subject it to an attachment or levy at the instance of his creditor? It may be conceded that the great weight of authority is to the effect that, at common law, the vendee had no such interest, though the reasons for these decisions are far from satisfactory. It has been determined in a number of cases that, at common law, until the vendee had complied with the condition of payment of the amount due that he acquired neither title nor any interest which could be levied on by his creditors. 17 R. C. L. 155; 1 Freeman on Executions (3d Ed.), § 124; Baker v. Hull, 250 N. Y. 484, 166 N. E. 175. See cases collected in 61 A. L. R. 782.

Many of these cases state that the vendee acquired merely a possessory right while not in default. One case, indeed, Mills v. Criss, 205 Ind. 578, 187 N. E. 375, says this possessory right is one given for the specific purpose of enabling the vendee to perform his part of the contract. Just how the possession of a non-productive chattel could facilitate the payment of indebtedness is not entirely clear.

Upon close analysis it will be seen that many of the cases involve only the question of priority of rights between the execution creditor and the conditional vendor, the former claiming under the execution levy and the latter under his reservation of title. Of course this is not the true question for, concededly, a creditor of the vendee should have no superior claim against a valid reservation of title; the true question is whether the vendee has an interest, subordinate to that of the vendor, which can be reached by execution process at the instance of a creditor. Freeman says (supra) :

“We see no reason why his [vendee’s] interest may not be [244]*244subject to execution, the purchaser at the execution sale acquiring the rights of the defendant in the writ, to wit, the right to take possession of the property and on compliance with the contract of purchase, to be vested with complete title thereto.”

It was determined in Flanagin v. Daws, 2 Houst. 476, 486, that all equitable interests in lands (save those involved in an active trust) were liable to execution and sale in Delaware. This conclusion was based upon the fact that for many years Delaware had no Court of equitable jurisdiction and the cited case followed similar decisions in Pennsylvania where the same situation existed. It is unnecessary to consider the effect of this decision as to the liability to execution of equitable interests in chattels, for it seems clear that the stated condition of the general law and the great growth of installment buying and the consequent numerical increase of conditional, sales were important factors leading to the enactment of . uniform legislation concerning Conditional Sales, w4iich, in Delaware, culminated in 1919, in the adoption of the Uniform Conditional Sales Law (Laws of Delaware, Volume 30, c. 192, p. 505). The conception that a conditional vendee who, having paid substantially all of the contract price but who defaulted on the last payment, acquired no right, interest or benefit of the payments save a possessory interest in the chattel until payment in full or until default, did not accord with modern and expanding views.

Section 13 of the Uniform Conditional Sales Act expressly states: “Unless the contract otherwise provides, the buyer may, without the consent of the seller, remove the goods from any filing district and sell, mortgage or otherwise dispose of his interest in them.” The statute then provides that, prior to the removal, sale, mortgage or other disposition of interest, due notice of such intention shall be given to the vendor and in default of such notice the seller may re-take the goods. It is apparent, however, [245]*245as pointed out in Continental Guaranty Corp. v. People’s Bus Line, 1 W. W. Harr. (31 Del.) 595, 117 A. 275, that, unless the contract so provides, the consent of the vendor is not required for the sale or disposition of the chattel, but it is requisite that the vendee give to the vendor the statutory-notice of the disposition of the interest so that the vendor may know with whom he is to deal. The foregoing statute seems to be the clearest legislative expression of the existence of an interest in the vendee in the absence of restrictive terms in the contract — an interest which the vendee can dispose of and one which is entirely different from a mere possessory interest. When I here used this word “interest” it is used in direct contra-distinction to “title.” The “title” of the conditional vendor who has complied with the provisions of the act is not disturbed and no vestige of title, as such, passes to the vendee until payment of the debt or other condition has been fulfilled. The mortgage, sale or other disposition of the interest by the conditional vendee is subordinated to the reservation of title in the seller.

The exact nature of the interest of the vendee is difficult to precisely define. It has been variously called “right,” “interest,” “property,” and “special property.” It is not solely an equitable interest, for certain rights are purely legal rights, viz., the right, when not in default, to have and maintain replevin proceedings for the possession of the chattel, even against the vendor, and the right to pay the amount due and succeed to full title and ownership. The vendee has, in some jurisdictions, been called the equitable owner (Welch v. Harnett, 127 Misc. 221, 215 N. Y. S. 540; Carolina, C. & O. R. Co. v. Unaka Springs Lumber Co., 130 Tenn. 354, 170 S. W. 591) but, if so, he must be an equitable owner vested with legal rights, and the term “equitable” refer solely to the “ownership” as connected with title. A fact that is entitled to some significance is the [246]*246attitude of the Legislature toward a conditional vendee. Under the Motor Vehicle Code (36 Del. Laws, c. 10) the conditional vendee is expressly included in the term “owner,” and in the registration of automobiles it is the conditional vendee who is listed as “owner.”

If a buyer or vendee under a conditional sale contract, then, has an interest which he can voluntarily sell, mortgage or otherwise dispose of, then such interest must be and rest in him even though he does not voluntarily dispose of such interest. If an interest is in him which he can voluntarily dispose of, it is difficult to see why such interest may not be seized on involuntary process at the instance of his creditors — subject always to the right or title of the vendor. Certainly the voluntary character of the disposition of interest is no criterion. The right or interest is disposable because it is such an interest and it does not cease to be such an interest because the disposition is involuntary. I can see little basis in principle for the holding of Picone v. Freeman ( Sup.), 115 N. Y. S. 128, where it.is said that a conditional vendee “has a vendible but not a leviable interest.”

The Courts of many jurisdictions (including some in which the interest of the vendee may not be levied on) have held that the buyer or vendee may mortgage his interest, Robinson v. Bird, 158 Mass. 357, 33 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
182 A. 211, 37 Del. 241, 7 W.W. Harr. 241, 1935 Del. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-l-jones-co-v-unruh-delsuperct-1935.