Hansford v. Commercial Credit Co.

57 S.W.2d 27, 247 Ky. 412, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 2, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 S.W.2d 27 (Hansford v. Commercial Credit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansford v. Commercial Credit Co., 57 S.W.2d 27, 247 Ky. 412, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 875 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This is an appeal from a judgment.of the Harlan circuit court recovered by the Commercial Credit Company, appellee, against W. S. Hansford, appellant, for *413 the snm of $505, balance dne on the note sued- oxi. Judgment was rendered after the court sustained appellee’s demurrers to the answer and amended answer of appellant and his declining to plead further.

There is no conflict in the evidence as to the facts in proof as shown by the record, which are these: In October, 1929, the appellant, W. S. Hansford, purchased from J. W. Foley, an automobile dealer doing business under tlie name of the Foley Motor Company at Pine-ville,' Ky.,‘ a Plymouth automobile for á total purchase price, including financing charges, of $881. ’.Of this amount he .paid $275 in cash, and for the reniainder executed his note in the sum of $606, payable in.twelve monthly and consecutive installments of $50.50 each. He further, to secure the payment of these deferred installments, at such time executed and delivered a mortgage upon the purchased car to the Foley Motor Company. Immediately thereupon, the Foley Motor Company sold and indorsed over without recourse the said note, together with the mortgage securing its payment, to the appellee Commercial Credit Company.

The mortgage contained certain precipitating clauses, among which was the one involved in this controversy, whereby it was covenanted that the appellant, the purchaser of the car, should not use the car, or permit the use of it, for the illegal transportation of liquor, etc., and further that, should it be so used for such or other unlawful purpose, it should be considered as a default under the mortgage, entitling the holder of the note to immediate and continued possession, by replevin or otherwise, of the car.

It further appears that the appellant paid according to the terms of his contract of purchase the November and December installments upon the car, thus discharging his obligation thereunder until January 19' following, when the third monthly payment would fall due.

It further appears that, on December 22, 1929, Walter Hansford, son of the. appellant, was arrested, while using this car, by federal prohibition agents, and charged with the illegal transportation of liquor therein. They also took over the possession of the car.

Later, upon Walter Hansford being called for trial *414 upon this charge, he entered a plea of guilty thereto.

The proof further shows that, after the car in question was taken over by the prohibition agents, they,, upon being informed by the Foley Motor Company of its purchase-money mortgage lien held against it, turned it over to the Foley Motor Company, mortgagee, from whom its possession was at once claimed and taken by the appellee Commercial Credit Company, its assignee of the note and mortgage.

The appellant, upon thus being deprived of the use of his purchased car and its use, at once instituted action against the Foley Motor Company and the Commercial Credit Company in the Bell circuit court, alleging in his petition that the defendants had wrongfully taken and converted the said automobile to their own use, thereby totally depriving him of its use, even though the same then rightfully belonged to the plaintiff-by reason of his prior contract of purchase thereof with the defendant Foley Motor Company, and that the defendants had kept possession of the converted car, with the result that he did not know where it was. He further alleged in his petition that he desired to waive suing the defendants for damages for such tortious conversion of his car and elected to sue for the recovery of the money paid by him to the Foley Motor Company on its purchase price, which he alleged amounted to the sum of $401.

Defendants each filed their separate answer consisting of two paragraphs, by the first of which they denied the allegations of the petition, and by the second affirmatively relied on and pleaded, in defense to plaintiff’s alleged right of recovery of the amounts paid them on the car’s purchase price, the terms of the contract of purchase made between plaintiff and defendant J. W. Foley and also the stipulation of the mortgage described supra, that, in the event of the plaintiff’s use or permitted use of the'car sold him for. the illegal transportation of liquor, etc., such would constitute a default in the mortgage by him, thereupon entitling the mortgagee to at once take and retain possession of the car, and, without appraisement thereof,, to sell and dispose of the same for the satisfaction of any then unpaid monthly installments • owing upon his purchase note of, $606; that the defendants had taken over the car in the exercise of their right and authority *415 given them under such provision of the mortgage contract; and, further, that while so acting the Commercial Credit Company, as alleged by it, as the owner and holder of said note and mortgage, had both recovered and sold this car so taken to the defendant Foley Motor Company for the sum of $505, representing the balance then owing it by the plaintiff as deferred installments upon his note.

The cause coming on for trial, the plaintiff recovered judgment against them for the sum of $300 of the amount alleged paid on the car.

Complaining of this judgment, defendants moved for an appeal, which it appears they have failed to ever further prosecute.

Thereafter the Commercial Credit Company filed its independent action against W. S. Hansford in the Harlan circuit court, seeking to recover against him payment of $505, the balance alleged owing by him upon his $606 note previously executed by him to the Foley Motor Company for the deferred payment upon the car.

To the petition filed against him in this action brought in the Harlan circuit court, W. S. Hansford filed answer thereto, pleading as res adjudicata of plaintiff’s claim upon the note that he had on March 21, 1930, instituted a common-law action, No. 17057, in the Bell circuit court, against the plaintiff here, the Commercial Credit Company, and the Foley Motor Company, wherein he had sought to recover against them “the sum of $401, the value of the automobile mentioned in the petition, and for the purchase price of which he executed his promissory note ($606), and that theretofore, as shown in said petition in the Bell Circuit Court, the Commercial Credit Company, now plaintiff in this action, and the Foley Motor Company had confiscated the automobile for which he executed the writing set up herein, and which was the consideration for said writing”; that in said'Bell circuit court action, the plaintiff Commercial Credit Company and the Foley Motor Company, defendants therein, set up by separate answers the same contract that the plaintiff Commercial Credit Company has sued on herein, which was “litigated out in the Bell circuit court to final trial and judgment,” whereby this defendant recovered against this plaintiff the sum of $300, which judgment therefor *416 is now in full force and effect.

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57 S.W.2d 27, 247 Ky. 412, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansford-v-commercial-credit-co-kyctapphigh-1932.