General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Berry

167 A. 553, 86 N.H. 280, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 29, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 167 A. 553 (General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Berry, 167 A. 553, 86 N.H. 280, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 43 (N.H. 1933).

Opinion

Marble, J.

The life of the doctrine of the trust receipt has been characterized as a short but adventurous one. 36 Harv. Law Rev. 229.

Professor Williston in the second edition of his work on Sales, published in 1924, says (p. 797): “It seems probable that if the practice-of permitting validity to unrecorded liens by way of trust receipts is, to continue, limits must be fixed either judicially or by statute to the-kinds of transactions in which such receipts may be used. At present, the question has not been fully considered how far public policy should permit such a secret title to prevail over general creditors if these trust receipts come into general use in domestic as well as foreign-business, but the question is likely before many years to be forced upon the attention of courts. In the automobile business, the trust, receipt is, it seems, already coming into general use.”

Since these words were written, resort to this method of financing has become so general that in 1931 it was estimated that the total number of trust receipts in the United States amounted to several, hundred thousand annually and represented a value considerably in. excess of a billion dollars. 19 Cal. Law Rev. 273.

This particular form of commercial instrument (which has nothing whatever to do with trusts, technically so called) has been variously-held to constitute a chattel mortgage, a conditional sale, a bailment, or pledge, and “an independent type of security device, not falling: within any of the established categories, the borrower having the-beneficial interest in the goods, and the lender having a security title-derived not from the borrower himself, but from a third person.” 44. Harv. Law Rev. 304. Many authorities have deemed this latter-circumstance of controlling importance. 2 Collier, Bankruptcy (13th ed.), p. 1527.

*283 Since, however, “the principal purpose of the users of trust receipts in distinguishing their device from the chattel mortgage is to get away from the recording requirements” (19 Cal. Law Rev. 273), courts are more and more inclined to look beyond the form to the real nature of the specific transaction. In re Bettman-Johnson Co., 250 Fed. Rep. 657, 664; 15 Cornell Law Quarterly, 567, 568.

“Trust receipt is an expression that was first given general currency in transactions involving the importation of goods. In the importing transactions it contemplates a tri-partite arrangement — seller, bank and buyer. The seller tranfers ownership to the bank. The bank transfers possession to the buyer. The bank keeps its ownership to secure certain obligations of the buyer. The conventional doctrine is that this is a novel and distinct security device and that it is valid without filing or record.” Hanna, “Trust Receipts,” 29 Columbia Law Rev., 545. See Void, “Trust Receipt Security in Financing of Sales,” 15 Cornell Law Quarterly, 543.

Cases on the subject are collected in 25 A. L. R. 332; 31 A. L. R. 937; 49 A. L. R. 282; A. L. R. Blue Book of Supplementary Decisions, 1932, p. 544.

Professor Hanna believes that the fundamental idea in the importing and automobile cases is one of pledge. 29 Columbia Law Rev., 550. But “The surrender of goods by a pledgee to a pledgor is said to destroy the pledge unless the entrusting is for a special or temporary purpose.” 1 Williston, Sales (2d ed.), p. 794. See, also, Danforth v. Denny, 25 N. H. 155, 167; Walcott v. Keith, 22 N. H. 196, 209; Colby v. Cressy, 5 N. H. 237, 239.

Says Karl T. Frederick: “The arrangement does not constitute a pledge. The security of a pledge depends entirely upon possession in the party secured. When possession is lost, the security is lost. The title in the case of a pledge is assumed to be in the pledgor or at least in another than the pledgee. This is exactly contrary to the trust receipt situation, where the title is intended to remain in the party secured while possession is entrusted to another who has a certain interest... in the property.” 22 Columbia Law Rev., 399. And Professor Hanna himself concedes that “in many jurisdictions, it is perhaps too late to work out a trust receipt doctrine within the bounds of the law of pledges.” 19 Cal. Law Rev., 280.

Where, as here, the dealer is under no obligation to account for the proceeds of the property when sold, but executes a promissory note for the purchase price, the transaction does not constitute a consignment. Eaton v. Welton, 32 N. H. 352, 357.

*284 Neither does it amount to a conditional sale in the strict sense of the term. “The finance company,” says Professor Hanna, “is simply not a seller. The holder of the trust receipt has only a limited security interest in the goods. The holder of a trust receipt is assumed to be able to reclaim the goods at any time, while the conditional seller must await a default.” 19 Cal. Law Rev., 268. See also Simons v. Company, 271 Mass. 285, 290. (The close distinctions drawn by many courts between a conditional sale and a chattel mortgage are unimportant so far as the present controversy is concerned, since record is essential in either case. P. L., c. 216, ss. 2, 27. See Commonwealth Finance Corp. v. Schutt, 97 N. J. Law, 225, 228.)

We are of the opinion, however, that the situation presents all the essential elements of a chattel mortgage. To be sure, in the-, cage of the ordinary mortgage the security title is transferred from debtor to creditor. But the transaction is no less a mortgage if the security is transferred to the creditor by a third person. 1 Jones, Mortgages (8th ed.), s. 405, and cases cited; 19 Cal. Law Rev., 268; 22 Columbia Law Rev. 402.

The rule is elementary that the intention of the parties is^to be gathered from the various instruments, construed together (Hill v. Huntress, 43 N. H. 480, 483) in the light of the surrounding circumstances (We ston v. Ball, 80 N. H. 275, 276, 277, and cases cited).

In the present case, the sales company applied to Wentworth, the seller, for the automobiles in question, paying him one-tenth of the purchase price and signing a promissory note for the balance, payable to the plaintiff. The sales company was engaged in retailing cars and is designated in both note and receipt as a dealer. The cars were obtained for exhibition and sale. The sales company assumed the risk of all loss or injury to the cars, and agreed to pay all taxes, encumbrances and claims relative thereto. By the terms of a document entitled “Instructions to Dealer,” provision is made for the release of specific cars upon payment of stipulated amounts to be applied in reduction of the amount due on the dealer’s promissory note.

The only logical inference to be drawn from these facts is that the title which Wentworth conveyed to the plaintiff, at the sales company’s implied request, was for the purpose of security only, and that the sales company bought and received a beneficial interest in the cars.

Nor is this result in conflict with Lord v.

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167 A. 553, 86 N.H. 280, 1933 N.H. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-motors-acceptance-corp-v-berry-nh-1933.