Huettner v. Savings Bank of Baltimore

219 A.2d 559, 242 Md. 477, 1966 Md. LEXIS 659
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 24, 1966
Docket[No. 207, September Term, 1965.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 219 A.2d 559 (Huettner v. Savings Bank of Baltimore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huettner v. Savings Bank of Baltimore, 219 A.2d 559, 242 Md. 477, 1966 Md. LEXIS 659 (Md. 1966).

Opinion

Horney, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the judgment for costs entered by the lower court following the direction of a verdict in favor of The Savings Bank of Baltimore (defendant-appellee) in a suit brought by Clarence J. Huettner (plaintiff-appellant) for the conversion of an automobile purchased by the plaintiff-appellant but subsequently repossessed by the defendant-appellee.

The basic issue is whether the defendant had a right to repossess the automobile from the plaintiff. The appellant (usually hereinafter referred to as the purchaser) contends that the repossession by the appellee (usually hereinafter referred to as the bank) constituted a conversion (i) because the bank did not have title to the automobile; (ii) because the conditional sales agreement had not been properly recorded; and (iii) because the bank was estopped from asserting ownership of the automobile.

The automobile in question was one of one hundred and eighty 1959 Chevrolets purchased by Bittorf Ford from the Health Department of the State of Maryland and thereafter sold to Kernan Motors (usually hereinafter referred to as the buyer or dealer) under a conditional sales agreement which, after having been transferred and assigned to the bank, was recorded on the conditional contract of sales docket in Baltimore City. Kernan (as buyer) was given possession of all of the automobiles as well as their respective certificates of title. He displayed the automobiles, including the one in controversy, on a sales lot and was allowed to hold all certificates of title. With respect to the subject automobile, Bittorf (the seller) assigned the certificate of title to Kernan (the buyer) without indicating thereon that the automobile was encumbered. Under the terms of the as *480 signed conditional sales agreement, the dealer was supposed to pay the bank a certain amount, approximately $900, from the proceeds of each sale that was made.

The purchaser, having bought the automobile without checking the conditional sales records to ascertain whether it was subject to a lien, paid the dealer the purchase price of $1195 in cash and took possession of it. The dealer reassigned the apparently lien-free certificate of title to him and, in due course, a new certificate of title, indicating that the automobile was not encumbered, and a registration card, were issued to the purchaser by the Department of Motor Vehicles (D.M.V.). The dealer, however, did not pay the bank the amount due it from the sale of this automobile nor the amounts due it from other sale's made around the same time. And when the default was discovered, the bank repossessed the automobiles which were still on the sales lot as well as such of those it could find that had been sold out of trust including the one the purchaser had bought.

(i)

The contention of the purchaser that the bank did not have title to the automobile at the time it was repossessed is based on the fact that the seller (Bittorf) turned over possession of all of the automobiles and assigned the certificates of title thereto to the buyer (Kernan) without indicating thereon that the automobiles were encumbered. This, however, not only ignores the terms of the conditional sales agreement but the further fact that the agreement had been assigned to the bank as security for the money the seller had borrowed to purchase the automobiles from the Health Department, all of which could have been ascertained had the purchaser, instead of relying solely on the certificate of title, taken the precaution to examine the conditional sales records. Since the first provision of the conditional sales agreement provided that “title to said car[ 1 ] *481 shall remain in the seller until all amounts due hereunder are paid in cash” and that the “agreement may be transferred or assigned, or the payment thereof renewed or extended without passing title to said car to buyer,” it is apparent that title to the subject automobile was to remain in the seller, or his assignee, until the conditions were satisfied. There was therefore nothing in the agreement between the seller and buyer indicating that it was anything but a typical conditional sales contract whereby possession was delivered to the buyer but title and general ownership remained in the seller, or the bank as assignee, pending payment of the purchase price by the buyer-dealer, who sold the automobile to the purchaser. Such contracts have long been held to be valid and enforceable in this State. See Dinsmore v. Maag-Wahmann Co., 122 Md. 177, 89 Atl. 399 (1914). Furthermore, since the delivery of possession to the buyer under a conditional contract of sale is an essential characteristic of such a transaction, it is clear that the purchaser was not entitled to rely on the fact that the dealer had possession. Rather, inasmuch as the primary purpose of the recording statutes was to afford protection against the consequences of false or misleading appearances of ownership based on possession, Mohr v. Sands, 213 Md. 206, 131 A. 2d 732 (1957), the purchaser, not the bank, was obliged to protect himself.

The further contention of the purchaser that the intention of the seller to transfer an unencumbered title to the automobile was evidenced by the assignment of the certificate of title to the dealer without noting therein the existence of a lien, as required by § 47(b) of Article 66j4, concerning the sale and transfer of a motor vehicle from one registered dealer to another, overlooks the fact that while a conditional sales contract is an encumbrance within the meaning of the statute, cf. Auto. Acceptance Corp. v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp., 216 Md. 344, 139 A. 2d 683 (1959), the absence of its notation on the certificate of title did not mean that an encumbrance did not exist. The certificate of title issued by the D.M.V. is not a warrant of absolute ownership but is merely an indicia of own *482 ership, which, like possession, may be rebutted by other evidence. That this is a proper interpretation of those parts of Article 66yi concerning the registration and titling of motor vehicles is not only apparent from the wording of the statute, but from the fact that it is not a recording statute as was recognized by this Court in Auto. Acceptance Corp. v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp., supra (at p. 355 of 216 Md.) ; Phillips v. J. F. Johnson Lumber Co., 218 Md. 531, 539, 147 A. 2d 843 (1959); and Piedmont Land & Development Co. v. Carney, 232 Md. 21, 24, 192 A. 2d 67 (1963). That the D.M.V. is “not a record office for the recording of liens” and does “not guarantee the statement as to liens” is set forth on the face of every certificate of title issued pursuant to the statute.

If there was no evidence to the contrary, the certificate could be used to prove that an unencumbered title had been transferred to the dealer but in this case the conditional sales agreement between the seller and buyer-dealer makes it clear that the parties intended that title was to remain in the seller.

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Bluebook (online)
219 A.2d 559, 242 Md. 477, 1966 Md. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huettner-v-savings-bank-of-baltimore-md-1966.