Hyland v. Hyland

179 N.E. 612, 278 Mass. 112, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 790
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 179 N.E. 612 (Hyland v. Hyland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hyland v. Hyland, 179 N.E. 612, 278 Mass. 112, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 790 (Mass. 1932).

Opinion

Field, J.

This action of tort for conversion of a motor truck was brought in the District Court. The trial judge refused certain rulings requested by the defendant and found for the plaintiff. A report to the Appellate Division was dismissed and the defendant appealed.

The action concerns a motor truck purchased from the International Harvester Company of America, herein referred to as the seller. The judge found “that, as between the plaintiff and the defendant, the former was the real purchaser of the . . . truck . . . that, as between the plaintiff and the defendant, the beneficial title to the truck vested in the former at the time of such purchase, said beneficial interest being paid for by the delivery to and acceptance by the defendant of thirteen unsecured promissory notes of the plaintiff, totaling the purchase price of $1,765; that nine of these notes were paid by the plaintiff, three were sold by the defendant to the William H'. Flood Coal Company, which reduced them to a judgment against the plaintiff, upon which judgment he is now paying, and the remaining note for $500 was retained by the defendant who has not returned nor at any time offered to return it to the plaintiff; that, when the notes due the . . . [seller] upon the conditional sale contract covering the truck were [115]*115paid in full, legal title to the truck vested in the plaintiff and merged with the equitable title, which was already in him; that the action and expressed intention of the dedeprived the plaintiff of possession of the truck to which he was rightfully entitled, and constituted a conversion of the truck.”

The only questions of law raised by the report are whether it was error for the judge to refuse to make the following rulings, as requested by the defendant, (a) “Upon all the law and evidence the plaintiff cannot prevail in that upon the evidence taken most favorably for him it can’t be found that title, legal or equitable, to the truck in question was lodged in the plaintiff,” and (b) “There is no evidence of a conversion of said truck by the defendant.” The other so called “rulings” requested involved findings of fact, and the refusal to make them is not reviewable here. Duggan v. Matthew Cummings Co. 277 Mass. 445, 449.

1. It was not error for the judge to refuse to rule that “Upon all the law and evidence the plaintiff cannot prevail in that upon the evidence taken most favorably for him it can’t be found that title, legal or equitable, to the truck in question was lodged in the plaintiff.”

This ruling could not have been Smade if the evidence warranted a finding that the plaintiff, who was indisputably in possession of the truck at the time of the alleged conversion, was rightfully in possession thereof, as against the defendant, by reason of having a general or special property therein. See Raymond Syndicate v. Cuttentag, 177 Mass. 562, 564; Bacon v. George, 206 Mass. 566, 570. The evidence warranted a finding that the plaintiff at that time had such a property right in the truck.

There was evidence of the following facts: The plaintiff and the defendant agreed that the defendant would sign a conditional sale contract with the seller for the purchase of a truck, title to be taken in the defendant’s name, but “as between themselves the plaintiff would be the real purchaser of the truck.” The seller agreed to sell the truck in question for $1,765, payment to be made by the allowance of $865 for a truck belonging to the defendant and by [116]*116a conditional sale note for $900. On December 16, 1927, the defendant gave to the seller a conditional sale note for $900 payable in instalments of $100 monthly, beginning January 15, 1928, with interest. By the terms of this note title to the purchased truck was to remain in the seller until the note had been fully paid. It was further agreed that if the defendant attempted to sell or to remove the truck the seller might declare the note and all instalments thereof immediately due and payable, and take possession of the truck and sell it. The defendant signed an order for the truck in which it was stipulated that “title to the property herein ordered shall not pass to the purchaser until the full purchase price and all notes given therefor have been paid in cash.” Immediately thereafter the truck was driven by the plaintiff to the defendant’s office and arrangements were made to register and insure it in the name of the defendant in order to protect it against attachment by creditors of the plaintiff then pressing him. At the same time the plaintiff signed and delivered to the defendant thirteen notes, payable to the order of the defendant. Twelve notes for $100 each were payable at monthly intervals beginning January 15, 1928, and the thirteenth note for $565 was payable sometime after the twelfth $100 note became payable. When the plaintiff delivered these notes to the defendant, the defendant turned over the truck to the plaintiff. “No written instrument of title, bill of sale, lease or conditional sale contract was delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff or entered into between them either at that time or later.” The judge inferred as a fact that at the time the defendant turned over the truck to the plaintiff he “transferred to the plaintiff all and whatever right, title and interest the defendant had in the truck, subject to the lien on the rights in the truck which the . [seller] had by reason of the conditional sale contract which it held.”

The defendant paid his note to the seller, making the last payment on September 17, 1928, when the note was surrendered to him. The plaintiff paid his notes to the defendant up to and including the note for $100 payable [117]*117September 15, 1928, which was paid in October. Late in November, 1928, when the plaintiff’s notes due October 15, 1928, and November 15, 1928, were unpaid, the truck, which up to that time had been in the possession of the plaintiff, came into the possession of the defendant under such circumstances that the plaintiff contends that the defendant converted it. Thereafter the defendant sold the truck to the William H. Flood Coal Company together with the three unpaid $100 notes of the plaintiff, but retained the remaining note. ' The defendant admits in his brief that since this sale the three $100 notes have been reduced to a judgment against the plaintiff.

The plaintiff, on September 26, 1929, wrote to the town tax collector, who had endeavored to collect from him an excise tax on the truck for the year 1928, a letter in which he stated “that the truck did not belong to him for that tax period, but belonged to and was registered by the defendant instead, and that he (the plaintiff) was paying the defendant for use of it.” The judge found as a fact “that the letter was written by the plaintiff merely for the purpose of evading or attempting to evade the excise tax referred to.”

It is not disputed that the defendant bought the truck from the seller under a conditional sale contract whereby title was retained by the seller until full payment of the purchase price, and that the purchase price was fully paid before the alleged conversion. As purchaser under the contract the defendant acquired immediately an interest or special property in the truck — sometimes described as an equitable or beneficial interest, though recognized at law as well as in equity — defeasible upon default by him in performance of the conditions of the sale, which interest he could assign subject to the rights of the seller.

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Bluebook (online)
179 N.E. 612, 278 Mass. 112, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyland-v-hyland-mass-1932.