General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Whiteley

252 N.W. 779, 217 Iowa 998
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 6, 1934
DocketNo. 41833.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 252 N.W. 779 (General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Whiteley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa 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. Whiteley, 252 N.W. 779, 217 Iowa 998 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

*1000 Evans, J.

Stansberry was an automobile dealer in the town of Seymour. He handled the Chevrolet line. The defendant Whiteley was likewise an automobile dealer in the town of Corydon and handled the Chevrolet line in that town. Stansberry w.as embarrassed financially and was aided financially by the plaintiff in carrying his stock of automobiles. He had upon his floor five new Chevrolet cars, which he had carried since the early summer of 1931. He was confronted with the possible necessity of carrying his stock over into the ensuing season. On Monday, October 26, 1931, he sold them to the defendant for an agreed price of $2,450. Four of them were worth approximately $550 each and the other one a little more. In settling with Stansberry, the defendant deducted from the purchase price an account owing by Stansberry to the defendant and his brother, and issued and delivered his check for Lhe balance of $2,138. He thereupon received the property. The defendant’s check was drawn upon a bank at Corydon. Stansberry deposited the check the same evening in the National Bank of Seymour. In the ordinary course of mail the check would reach the draw'ee-bank on Thursday. Immediately upon deposit of the check, Stansberry drew his own check upon the National Bank of Seymour to the plaintiff for $2,080, and mailed the same to the plaintiff. This ivas the amount owing to plaintiff by Stansberry under his conditional sales contract. Without the consent of or consultation with Stansberry, the National Bank of Seymour immediately charged against Stansberry’s account certain indebtedness owing by Stansberry to the bank and extingüished thereby the credit of Stansberry accordingly. The effect of this action on the part of the Seymour bank was to divert wholly the proceeds of the sale received from the defendant and to render worthless the check mailed by Stansberry to the plaintiff.

The foregoing may conveniently be deemed as the first chapter of the record. At this point the so-called “trust receipt” under which plaintiff claimed title to the property as a bailor came before the court for interpretation. The instrument comprised a purported trust receipt and a promissory note Tor the purchase price signed by Stansberry, both being parts of the same transaction. The court ruled that the instrument as a whole comprising both “receipt” and “note” constituted a conditional sales contract and not a bailment. If the court had interpreted this instrument to constitute a bailment, it would have entitled the plaintiff to recover *1001 regardless of notice to the purchaser. On the other hand, the holding of the court entitled the defendant to sustain his alleged purchase of the property upon a showing that he purchased from Stansberry in good faith and without notice and for value. For convenience of presentation, we treat that feature of the record as a second chapter. The plaintiff complains of this ruling of the court just noted, and we will consider it here before entering upon the other phases of the case.' Did the court err in holding as a matter of law that Stansberry was not a bailee? It is the contention of the appellant-plaintiff that the identical form of this trust receipt has been considered by other appellate courts wherein it has been held that it constituted a bailment. The question, of course, involves an interpretation of our own statute, section 10016. This section has been considered in many of our cases, and its interpretation is quite settled. It is perhaps sufficient to cite a comparatively recent case. Maxwell Motor Sales Corporation v. Bankers Mortgage & Securities Company, 195 Iowa 384, 192 N. W. 19. In that case we quoted from an earlier case (Bentley & Olmstead v. Snyder & Son, 101 Iowa 1, 69 N. W. 1023), as follows:

“The most infallible test by which to determine under which class the contract falls is to ascertain whether there is a promise by the purchaser to pay for the goods delivered. If there is such promise, then, no matter under what form the transaction is disguised, it is held to be a conditional sale, and not a bailment.”

Again we quote from Norwegian Plow Co. v. Clark, 102 Iowa 31, 70 N. W. 808, as follows:

“One of the principal tests by which to determine this question is, was there a binding promise on the part of the consignee to pay for the goods? If there was such promise, the contract is ordinarily held to be one of sale, and not of bailment.”

In the Maxwell case the trust instrument comprised not only the receipt but a promissory note, as here. We held the transaction to constitute a conditional sale and not a bailment. We do not find anything to the contrary in the Nebraska case cited by appellant. General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Hupfer, 113 Neb. 228, 202 N. W. 627. In that case only the so-called trust receipt was under consideration of the court. No promissory note attended the *1002 receipt in that case. We think the district court ruled at this point consistently with our previous holdings.

II. We proceed to the second feature of the record. When the Seymour hank, by sheer force of its position, appropriated to its own use the proceeds of the defendant’s purchase, it brought an outside confusion into the case. On Tuesday, October 27, two salesmen of the plaintiff (one of whom lived in Corydon) discovered what had happened and proceeded to the protection of ,their employer as best they could. For the purpose of repelling the intrusion of the Seymour bank, they besought the defendant to stop the payment of his check by notice to the drawee-bank at Corydon. It was known that by ordinary course of mail the check could not reach the drawee-bank until Thursday. It appears that in making the deposit of the check in the Seymour bank, the deposit slip used by Stansberry contained certain printed matter to the effect that the check was accepted only for collection and that the bank acted only as the agent of the depositor. Because of the printed words appearing upon this deposit slip, the plaintiff took the position, through its representatives, that payment for the property was incomplete. The defendant had some conferences with the salesmen. He hesitated and finally declined to stop payment of the check. This refusal on his part was featured on the trial as an offer of evidence tending to show bad faith on the part of the defendant and perhaps collusion with the bank. Two of the errors assigned by the appellant are predicated upon this part of the record. The plaintiff requested an instruction to the effect that if the defendant had notice of the right of the plaintiff before his check had been paid by the drawee thereof, and if he had an opportunity to stop payment on the check after having such notice, that his refusal to stop payment in such event “gave him no right in and to the cars superior to the appellant.” The court instructed the jury that under the undisputed evidence the defendant had paid for the cars. Complaint is made by the plaintiff at this point on the ground already indicated that the check was in the hands of the Seymour bank for collection only and that payment had not been completed until collection was actually made. We may consider these alleged errors together. The printed matter upon the deposit slip did not have the controlling effect contended for by appellant.

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252 N.W. 779, 217 Iowa 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-motors-acceptance-corp-v-whiteley-iowa-1934.