Gicinto v. Credithrift of America, No. 3, Inc.

549 P.2d 870, 219 Kan. 766, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 784, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 8, 1976
Docket47,987
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 549 P.2d 870 (Gicinto v. Credithrift of America, No. 3, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gicinto v. Credithrift of America, No. 3, Inc., 549 P.2d 870, 219 Kan. 766, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 784, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 423 (kan 1976).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Foth, C.:

This is an aotion in replevin by Rozann Giointo, a used car dealer in Kansas City, Missouri, to recover three automobiles from the defendant, Credithrift of Amerioa, No. 3, Inc., a finance company with offices in Pittsburg, Kansias. The trial court gave plaintiff possession of the two cars still held by the defendant at the time of trial, plus $4,500 in damages for the wrongful detention of 'all three. The defendant has appealed.

In early 1973 the plaintiff, Mrs. Gicinto, operated her business through her husband Charles, who bought and sold cars for her. During the year prior to that time the Gicintos had developed a trading relationship with one James Norman, another used car *767 dealer who operated in Lamar, a town in southwest Missouri not far from the Kansas line. The Gicintos bought a few trucks from Norman, and Norman bought numerous cars from the Gicintos.

Normans purchases were made according to an established routine: He would go to plaintiff’s lot in Kansas City, pick out the cars he wanted to buy, negotiate a price, and drive or have 'them driven to his lot in Lamar. For the purchase price of each car he gave the Gicintos a check drawn on his bank in Jasper, Missouri. Plaintiff would attach each check to the certificate of title to the corresponding car, duly assigned, and forward it through her bank to Norman’s bank for collection. When Norman made appropriate 'arrangements with his bank to cover a check, that bank would remit its amount to plaintiff’s bank and release the certificate of title to Norman.

In February and March, 1973, Norman bought 26 cars from the Gicintos under this arrangement. Among them were the three oars involved in this lawsuit: a 1972 Chevrolet sedan purchased on February 4, 1973, for $1,900; a 1972 Ford sedan on March 5, 1973, for $1,800; and a 1972 Chevrolet station wagon on March 13, 1973, for $2,800. Each assigned certificate of title with check attached was forwarded to Norman’s bank in the usual manner, but none of the three checks was honored and none of the three certificates of title was ever delivered to Norman.

When summer came and these checks among others had not been paid, Charles Gicinto began looking for his oars. An undetermined number had been sold by Norman to customers in a four state area. He found that each of these three cars had been promptly sold by Norman to a customer who had financed his purchase with the defendant Credithrift. Further, each buyer had defaulted on his loan within three or four months, and Credithrift had repossessed the cars. At least one of them was picked up at Norman’s used oar lot, and all three were stored on a used car lot in Pittsburg.

In each case Credithrift bad made a loan to the car buyer and had taken a note and security agreement. Since the plaintiff’s certificates of title never left Norman’s bank in Jasper, it is apparent that Credithrift’s lien was never endorsed on any of those certificates. Credithrift’s manager testified that in the case of trustworthy dealers (like Norman) Credithrift would make the loan proceeds check payable jointly to the car buyer and seller, with a “rubber stamp” on the back requiring the dealer to endorse Cred- *768 ¡thrift’s lien on the certificate of title before delivering it to the buyer. In any event, Credithrift stipulated at trial that it is at best an “unperfeoted secured creditor” of each of the three buyers.

In late 1973 Charles Gidnto talked to the Credithrift manager in Pittsburg, saying he wanted the three cars. The manager said in turn that Credithrift wanted the titles and would pay for the cars. After some negotiations it appeared that Credithrift-wouldn’t pay for the cars unless Gicinto furnished an affidavit from Norman— the exact nature of which is unclear. Gicinto consulted counsel, and this suit was the result. Credithrift answered that its possession was lawful because of its security interest in the cars, and counterclaimed for the titles and damages for the depreciation of the cars.

The oase was 'tried to the court in December, 1974. The witnesses were plaintiff’s husband Charles Gicinto, the current Credithrift manager, and Richard Ham, a used car dealer in Pittsburg. Ham had had the Ford and Chevrolet sedans on his lot since Credithrift repossessed them in late June, 1973. He also had personally purchased the Chevrolet station wagon from Credithrift for $1,150 in November, 1973.

Ham valued the other two cars at about $900 to $1,000 when they were first put on his lot in mid-1973. Their present value (December, 1974) he put at $600 to $700 each. They had depreciated, he said, $250 to $300 apiece in the year and a half he had had them. All three, he said, were high mileage cars having respectively 98,000, 103,000 and 127,000 miles on them when he first saw them.

The trial court reached the following conclusions:

“1) That no tide to the 1972 Chevrolet Biscayne automobile, the 1972 Ford Torino and the 1972 Chevrolet station wagon involved in this action, passed to James Norman.
“2) That the sale of vehicles without the assignment of die Certificate of Tide is void.
“3) Where an agreement is made for sale of personal property and delivery is made, the seller has a right against the buyer or against an attaching creditor, to reclaim the property if the buyer fails to pay for the personal property.
“4) That Defendant’s rights are 'based upon the title of James Norman. James Norman having never obtained tide and having no right to the vehicles, the Defendant had no right to the possession of said vehicles and could not perfect a lien on said vehicles.”

The court’s findings as to title are obviously based on K. S. A. 8-135 (c) (6), which provides in substance that the sale of an *769 automobile without the delivery to the buyer of an assigned certificate of title is “fraudulent and void.” In such a case, title remains in the seller. Melton v. Prickett, 203 Kan. 501, 456 P. 2d 34; Elrod v. Preferred Risk Mutual Ins. Co., 201 Kan. 254, 440 P. 2d 544; Bankers Investment Co. v. Meeker, 166 Kan. 209, 201 P. 2d 117. The applicable Missouri statute, 15B V. A. Mo. Stat. § 301.210, is closely parallel to our 8-135 (c) (6), providing that “the sale of any motor vehicle or trailer registered under the laws of this state, without the assignment of such certificate of ownership, shall be fraudulent and void.”

On appeal Credithrift at first attacked these, findings, contending that Normans delivery of his checks to plaintiff constituted “payment” of the purchase price so that title passed to Norman under the principles set out in Elrod v. Preferred Risk Mutual Ins. Co., supra. We there held that where a car title was duly assigned and attached to a draft for delivery on collection, title passed when the seller received the purchase price. We there distinguished Laughlin Motors v. Universal C. I. T. Credit Corp., 173 Kan. 600, 251 P. 2d 857, which held that in a sale “for oash,” title does not pass until the seller receives payment. In Laughlin

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Bluebook (online)
549 P.2d 870, 219 Kan. 766, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 784, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gicinto-v-credithrift-of-america-no-3-inc-kan-1976.