Ellis v. Smithers

174 S.W.2d 568, 206 Ark. 247, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 25, 1943
Docket4-7134
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 568 (Ellis v. Smithers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. Smithers, 174 S.W.2d 568, 206 Ark. 247, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 139 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

Holt, J.

Orlando Ellis, appellant, on October 18, 1941, purchased an electric refrigerator from Reece and Charles 0. Smithers, appellees, under a conditional sales contract. The purchase price, including carrying charges, amounted -to $181.40. There was a down payment of $34.89, and appellant agreed to pay the balance in monthly payments of $8.51. Seven of these monthly payments were made, but in July, 1942, appellant was behind three payments.

■The sales contract contains, among others, the following provisions: ‘‘Title to said merchandise and any additions thereto, or substitutions therefor, is retained by you until all amounts payable hereunder are fully paid in cash. Said merchandise shall remain personal property and not become part of the freehold. Time is the essence hereof; if you deem the indebtedness insecure, or if I fail to pay any of said installments as above set forth, all remaining installments shall without notice become payable forthwith, and I agree to return said merchandise to you and you may without notice or demand and without legal process enter the premises and take possession of said merchandise and retain all prior payments as compensation for its use. Said merchandise may be sold with or without notice at private sale or public sale at which you may purchase, without having the merchandise present at the place of sale, and the proceeds thereof, less expenses, credited upon the amount unpaid, and in either event, as liquidated damages for the breach of this contract, I agree to pay any deficiency forthwith,.plus 15 per cent, thereof for attorneys’ fees. Waiver of any default shall not operate as a waiver of other defaults. Your assignee’s rights shall be independent of and free from any claim by me against you, all of which I agree to settle directly with you. Should I make payments to you for transmittal to C. I. T. Corporation you shall be acting as my agent and not as the agent of the C. I. T. Corporation. I agree to pay promptly when due all taxes upon said merchandise or upon this contract, and not to remove said merchandise from the address where installed without your prior written consent. Upon full payment by me C. I. T. Corporation may deliver any and all original papers to you for me. No other extension of credit exists or is to be made in connection with my down payment on this merchandise. No agreement, arrangement or understanding past or present, regarding my purchase or payments, and no guaranty, representation or warranty, whether oral or written, express or implied, shall be binding on you or your assigns unless expressly contained herein in writing duly authorized. I acknowledge receipt of a true copy hereof. ’ ’

Appellant, on June 12,1942, entered the army of the United States and has been in the'service since that date. When he entered the service, appellant left the refrigerator in question in care and custody of T. S. Cate.

Some time between July 30th and August 2, 1942, appellees instituted a replevin action, under the provisions of Chapter 142 of Pope’s Digest, in a court of a justice of the peace, making Mr. Cate, alone, defendant. Under these proceedings, there was a default judgment against Mr. Cate, and an order for delivery of the refrigerator to appellees. This order was immediately delivered to, and executed by, the sheriff of Saline county, and the refrigerator delivered to appellees, who shortly thereafter sold it to a third party for more than the unpaid balance due from appellant.

The present suit was filed September 3, 1942, by Orlando Ellis, to recover'damages for the alleged unlawful taking and conversion of the refrigerator. In his complaint, appellant alleged in effect that the replevin action in the justice of the peace» court was void and of no effect, that the repossession was wrongful and that appellant: “Under the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Relief Act of 1940, effective October 17, 1940, the plaintiff here was protected by the provisions for the postponements of suits, judgments, attachments,, garnishments, evictions, mortgages, foreclosures, repossession payments under installment purchases and conditional sales, etc. Under the above mentioned act the defendant, Reece Smithers, had no right to repossess this property.” Appellees answered with a.general denial. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellees. This appeal followed.

For reversal, appellant argues first “that the suit in justice court was wrongfully sued out and the order of delivery issued therein was void and, therefore, the taking possession of the ice box by Reece Smithers was a wrongful act.” While appellees concede here that the proceedings in the justice of the peace court, under which the refrigerator was repossessed by appellees, were void, we cannot agree with appellant that it necessarily follows that taking possession of the refrigerator in this manner by appellees was, under the contract in question, wrongful and would subject them to damages.

Under the plain terms of this sales contract, title was retained in appellees until the purchase price was paid in full. “Time is the essence hereof; ... if I fail to pay any of said installments as above set forth, all remaining installments shall without notice become payable forthwith, and I agree to return said merchandise to you and you may without notice or demand and without legal process enter the premises and take possession of said merchandise and retain all prior payments as compensation for its use.”

There is no dispute that, at the time appellees repossessed the refrigerator, appellant was behind three monthly installments. .Under the contract, therefore, appellees had the right to repossess the property with or without notice and without legal process. Possession was obtained by appellees peaceably and without fraud. The applicable rule, under the facts here, is stated in 55 C. 'J., p. 1287, § 1313b. (1). “The conditional seller’s right to possession of the goods sold on default of. the buyer may be exercised without recourse to the courts' by retaking possession provided this can be done peaceably; and this is especially true where the contract expressly so provides. The -seller is not deprived of this right merely because he attempts to exercise it by void writ of replevin, or seizure. ” ■ .

In support of the text is cited Mendels on v. Irving, 139 N. Y. S. 1065, 155 App. Div. 114, which was cited, with approval, by the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia in Kisner v. Commercial Credit Co., 114 W. Va. 811, 174 S. E. 330. In the latter case, it is said: “If one has the right to take possession of personal property without legal process, it is difficult to imagine upon what theory he could be deprived' of that right, if he attempted to exercise it, by legal process which subsequently turned out to be void. In either case plaintiffs’ position would be precisely the same. Mendelson v. Irving, 155 App. Div. 114, 139 N. Y. S. 1065.”

This court very recently in R. C. A. Photophone, Inc., v. Sharum, 189 Ark. 797, 75 S. W. 2d 59, where, under a contract containing provisions for repossession on default in payments, similar in effect to those in the contract before us, held (Headnote 2): “Under a contract giving to the seller of' a motion picture equipment the right to enter premises in which the equipment was located and repossess it upon default in payments, the purchaser after default could not recover damages for the seller’s entry and removal of a vital part of the equipment.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 568, 206 Ark. 247, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-smithers-ark-1943.