General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Nuss

192 So. 248
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 1939
DocketNo. 17255.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 So. 248 (General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Nuss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Nuss, 192 So. 248 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

The General Motors Acceptance Corporation of the State of New York brought this suit against George L. Nuss, alleging that he was in possession of a certain 1937 model Chevrolet sedan, bearing motor number 634242 and serial number 3GA04-42986, on which it holds a chattel mortgage dated April IS, 1937, securing an unpaid balance of $375.20, with 8 per cent, interest from February IS, 1938, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees; that it acquired its mortgage for a valuable consideration from the Buford Chevrolet Company, a Chevrolet dealer in Fredericktown, Madison County, Missouri, who had sold the automobile to one Charles R. Caldwell, also a resident of Fredericktown, and who had given the mortgage to the Buford Chevrolet Company to secure an unpaid portion of the purchase price; that because of the-failure of Caldwell to pay several installments (the deferred portion of the purchase price was to be paid in installments), the-entire outstanding balance, under the terms. *249 •of the agreement of sale, became due; that the automobile was removed from the State of Missouri and brought to New Orleans without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff; that the chattel mortgage of plaintiff was “executed, filed and recorded in full ■compliance with the Missouri law * * * and that under Missouri law a chattel mortgage on property subsequently removed from the state where the mortgage was executed is effective against third persons notwithstanding it is not recorded in the ■state to which it is removed”.

It is alleged that George L. Nuss, who lias possession of the automobile, can remove, part with, or dispose of it, which plaintiff fears he will do. Consequently it asks that a writ of sequestration issue and that the automobile be seized and sold and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of ■plaintiff’s chattel mortgage. The automobile was seized and the sequestration bonded by Nuss. The General Finance Company •of Louisiana, Inc., a Louisiana corporation, intervened and united with the defendant in resisting plaintiff’s claim, asserting that the purported chattel mortgage declared upon was not valid in the State of Louisiana as against the rights of innocent third persons, particularly intervenor, for the reason that it was never recorded in this State in accordance with the laws of Louisiana and neither intervenor nor the defendant, Nuss, had any knowledge of the existence of the chattel mortgage; that intervenor is the holder of a certain promissory note issued by George L. Nuss, dated April 2, 1938, and payable to the order of bearer for the sum of $441, payable in eighteen monthly in-' stallments at $24.50 each; that the note was secured by an act of mortgage passed by Richard T. McBride, notary public, of even •date, bearing upon the same Chevrolet car seized by plaintiff under its writ of sequestration ; that Nuss has paid $245 on the principal of the mortgage note and that there is still due $196; that the note was given in part payment of the purchase price of the automobile to the Globe Used Car Lot in this City, from which organization Nuss purchased the automobile; that inter-venor has both a chattel mortgage and a vendor’s lien, duly recorded. The inter-venor’s petition concludes with the usual prayer for the recognition of prior lien.

On the trial of the case a stipulation of fact was entered into by all parties, wherein it was admitted that the General Motors Acceptance Corporation of New York, as well as the General Finance Company of Louisiana, Inc., were both in good faith and that the Missouri chattel mortgage relied upon by the former corporation was in all respects good and valid under the laws of Missouri, and the mortgage of the General Finance Company of Louisiana, Inc., was in all respects valid under the laws of Louisiana and acquired by the General Finance Company, Inc., without knowledge of the pre-existing mortgage or lien held by the General Motors Acceptance Corporation. It was further stipulated that George L. Nuss, the defendant, had purchased the automobile from the Globe Used Car Lot in good faith and without knowledge of any lien or equity resulting from any mortgage in favor of anyone.

There was judgment below in favor of plaintiff, the General Motors Acceptance Corporation, recognizing the validity of its Missouri mortgage and ordering the sequestered automobile sold and the proceeds applied first to the payment of plaintiff’s claim and thereafter to the satisfaction of intervenor’s claim, should there remain any residue. Defendant, Nuss, and intervenor, have both appealed to this Court.

Counsel for plaintiff assert that the overwhelming weight of authority supports the decision of the trial court. The following quotation from an Arizona case is typical of many others cited.

“Chattel mortgage, recorded in state where executed, and there conveying constructive notice, continues to have same effect when property is removed, into another state.
“General rule is mortgagee’s interest in chattel mortgage is recognized in state to which it is removed, whether recorded there or not. * * *
“Mortgagee, under mortgage recorded in foreign state in county where property was situated at time, was entitled to property as against subsequent assignee; mortgagee having priority in foreign state.” Davis v. Standard Accident Insurance Company, 35 Ariz. 392, 278 P. 384.

Other states in which this same rule is recognized are said to be Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, West Virginia and Wyoming.

*250 Counsel also cite Restatement of the Law — Conflict of Laws, § 268, page 354; Jones on Chattel Mortgages and Conditional Sales (Bowers Ed.) Volume 1, Sec. 299, page 479; 11 Corpus Juris, page 424; Huddy’s Encyclopedia of Automobile Law (Ninth Ed.)- Vol. 11, page 32; Blashfield’s Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Volume 7, Permanent Edition, page 327. The authorities are very numerous and respectable, but all of them are from our sister states in which the common law prevails. We might add, however, that all of the common law authorities are not in agreement with what appears to be the great majority, for Michigan, Pennsylvania and Texas constitute a formidable minority. Allison v. Teeters, 176 Mich. 216, 142 N.W. 340; Vining v. Miller, 116 Mich. 144, 74 N.W. 459; Corbett v. Littlefield, 84 Mich. 30, 47 N.W. 581, 11 L. R.A. 95, 22 Am.St.Rep. 681; Boydson v. Goodrich, 49 Mich. 65, 12 N.W. 913; Montgomery v. Wight, 8 Mich. 143; State Bank of Sherman v. Carr, 15 Pa.Super. 346; Armitage v. Spahn, 4 Pa.Dist.R. 270; MacCabe v. Blymyre, 9 Phila., Pa., 615; McKaig v. Jones, 3 Pa.L.J. 365, 2 Clark 123; Crosby v. Huston, 1 Tex. 203; Best v. Farmers’, etc., Bank, Tex.Civ.App., 141 S. W. 334. To quote briefly from one of the Michigan cases:

“It would be unreasonable to require a citizen of Michigan to take notice of the files and entries in Nebraska.” Corbett v. Littlefield, supra [84 Mich. 30, 47 N.W. 582, 11 L.R.A. 95, 22 Am.St.Rep. 681].

Until 1912, when the first of a number of chattel mortgage acts were adopted, Louisiana did not recognize chattel mortgages. Prior to that time only such objects as were mentioned in Articles 3283 and 3289 of the Revised Civil Code of 1870 were subject to mortgages.

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192 So. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-motors-acceptance-corporation-v-nuss-lactapp-1939.