Hertz Corp. v. Hardy

178 A.2d 833, 197 Pa. Super. 466, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 455
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1962
DocketAppeal, 351
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 178 A.2d 833 (Hertz Corp. v. Hardy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hertz Corp. v. Hardy, 178 A.2d 833, 197 Pa. Super. 466, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 455 (Pa. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Opinion by

Montgomery, J.,

In this action of replevin, in which bond and counter-bond were given, plaintiff-appellant, The Hertz Corporation, sought to recover a 1957 Oldsmobile automobile it had delivered to James Hardy, one of the defendants, under a rental agreement executed in Cleveland, Ohio. Sara Thompson and I. Edgar Thompson were added as additional defendants when the automobile Avas found in their possession in Waynesboro, Franklin County, Pennsylvania, by the sheriff of that county when executing the writ of replevin. At that time I. Edgar Thompson held a certificate of title for the ear issued by the Pennsylvania Bureau of Motor Vehicles. Thompsons, claiming legal title to the car to be in the husband by reason of a purchase by him from David J. Hoffman, a used car dealer in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania, defended the action, and the trial by jury resulted in a verdict in defendants’ (Thompsons’) favor. Hardy was not served with the writ, nor did he appear. Motions for judgment n.o.v. or a new trial having been refused, judgment Avas entered on the verdict and this appeal followed.

Additional established facts about which there is little, if any, question are as follows:

The Hertz office at the Cleveland (Ohio) Airport, on November 24, 1957, by the customary form of written agreement, rented the vehicle involved to James Hardy for a five day rental, Hardy making a cash deposit of $100. On November 29, the same Hertz office extended the rental for another 30 days, although the *470 company lias no record of the paper by which this was accomplished, or of the employe who- did it, or of any further rental having been received. The company reported the car as stolen several days after the 30 day extension period had expired. Prior to renting the car from Hertz, on July 6, 1957, Hardy, using the address of 73 East 80th Street, New York, New York, had prepared a bill of sale for the identical automobile from a Mrs. Mary Emerson of New York, and on the same day registered this vehicle with the Bureau of Motor Vehicles of New York. On November 28, 1957, he sold the car obtained from Hertz to West Brownsville (Pa.) Iron and Metal Company, a licensed Pennsylvania motor vehicle dealer located just across the Ohio line and used the New York registration for the purpose of establishing himself as the owner and of transferring title to the vehicle. Previously, on November 25, 1957, Hardy had obtained an Ohio certificate of title for the Hertz car which he also used in selling it to the Brownsville company. There actually was a Mary Emerson, but she denied knowing Hardy or ever having owned a 1957 Oldsmobile car. How Hardy accomplished this is unexplained.

The Brownsville company resold the car on December 6, 1957, at the regular automobile auction at Manheim, Pennsylvania, to David J. Hoffman, the used car dealer from whom Thompson purchased it on January 7,1958.

It is appellant’s contention that it is entitled to judgment in its favor because a purchaser from a thief, or any subsequent purchaser, has no ownership and cannot hold the property against the true.oAvner; and further, that it is not. estopped under the facts of this case from setting up its. title and reclaiming possession of the car. in a replevin action.

The appellee, Thompson, recognizes the established rule that a thief cannot convey, good title to personal *471 property, but contends that Hertz is estopped from- asserting its title because it failed to exercise due care or ordinary business prudence to the detriment of Thompson; and for this reason there should be enforcement of the rule that where one of two innocent persons must suffer, that person whose act or omission, as it pertains to the transaction, brings about the loss must necessarily be the person to suffer.

At the outset, it becomes apparent that a new trial is warranted in this case because of the injection of the issue of estoppel into it by the trial judge in his charge, and, in so doing, imposing upon the plaintiff the burden of disproving defendants’ right to invoke it, rather than upon the defendants to prove it. Estoppel is an affirmative defense which must be pleaded (Pa. R. C. P. 1030 & 1071) and the burden is upon the one asserting it and claiming its benefits to prove it. Nick v. Craig, 301 Pa. 50, 151 A. 573. Defendants did not plead estoppel, nor did they undertake to assert or to prove it. Their case rested entirely upon an alleged legal title as a bona fide purchaser for value without notice. Nevertheless, plaintiff, in order to establish its title, was required to show that it had been free of negligence and had exercised good business practices. This was clearly error.

However, under the evidence as presented, regardless of the pleadings or trial errors, plaintiff-appellant is entitled to judgment in its favor. Estoppel must be established by clear, precise and unequivocal evidence, Frazee v. Morris, 155 Pa. Superior Ct. 320, 38 A. 2d 526; Peoples National Bank of Ellwood City v. Bartel, 128 Pa. Superior Ct. 128, 193 A. 59, which was not done in this case. The facts referred to by the lower court in its charge to the jury and in its opinion, from which it permitted the jury to invoke an estoppel as to Hertz’s right to set up its title because it did “. . . not use reasonably effective, diligent,'- business methods designed *472 to safeguard persons who might later acquire a title that had been conveyed by a thief or a fraudulent bailee” were: (a) Hertz rented the car to Hardy under a regular lease agreement for five days at the Cleveland Airport and accepted a deposit of $100 according to its practice when sufficient credit references were not produced; (b) Hertz failed to produce the written application for the rental, which was missing from its files; (c) Hertz extended the rental for another 30 days by a notation op its copy of the original lease, but failed to prove the receipt of any additional rental or the facts concerning the renewal either by the clerk or the records (the clerk had left Hertz’s employment and gone to California, and the file contained no records); (d) Hertz did not detect, the fraud until after the expiration of the extension, which was after December 29, 1957, and did not report it as stolen to the police until January 6, 1958, which was the day on which it was sold at the Manheim Auto Auction to Hoffman, who sold it the next day to appellee Thompson.

On established facts the question of whether an estoppel has been made out is ordinarily for the court; however, if credibility is involved (none was involved herein since all of the testimony was elicited from plaintiff’s witness) or if more than one inference may be reasonably drawn, the question is for the jury. General Electric Company v. N. K. Ovalle, Inc., 335 Pa. 439, 6 A. 2d 835; Brubaker v. Okeson, 36 Pa. 519; 14 P.L.E., Estoppel, 33. The lower court, holding that the facts could lead to different inferences or conclusions, left the issue to the jury.' There was also error because there can be but one inference or conclusion drawn from the evidence; That conclusion is that the require: ments of the law for an estoppel to be invoked have not been met.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 A.2d 833, 197 Pa. Super. 466, 1962 Pa. Super. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hertz-corp-v-hardy-pasuperct-1962.