In Re Petition of Hume

245 N.W. 514, 260 Mich. 555
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1932
DocketDocket No. 89, Calendar No. 36,791.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 245 N.W. 514 (In Re Petition of Hume) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Petition of Hume, 245 N.W. 514, 260 Mich. 555 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

*557 North, J.

Petition for the dissolution of Fitzjohn. Manufacturing Company (herein called defendant) was filed in the circuit court for the county of Muskegon, and a receiver was appointed July 13, 1931. F. E. Cruikshank & Company, a New York corporation (herein called plaintiff), presented its claim for allowance in the sum of $23,772.80. From a disallowance of this claim it has appealed.

In August, 1929, plaintiff entered into an agreement with the Fitzjohn Company for installing in its manufacturing plant a sprinkler equipment and for coverage of the same by fire insurance. The contract provided for the payment of $4,969 upon installation and a like annual payment on December 1, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933,- and 1934. Installation was completed, and the contract was filed as a chattel .mortgage and annual renewal certificates were also filed. The controlling question in this case is whether the instrument was in fact and law a chattel mortgage, as claimed by plaintiff, or whether it was a title-retaining sales contract, as asserted by defendant. On December 10, 1931, the receiver sold the assets of the Fitzjohn Manufacturing Company. This sale was subject to any rights of plaintiff in the sprinkler system. On the same date plaintiff gave notice of the sale of the property covered by its contract with defendant. The sale was conducted as a chattel mortgage sale, and the property sold to plaintiff • for the sum of $50. Its claim of $23,772.80 was for the balance which it assorted was due it from defendant under the contract for the installation of the sprinkler system. The trial judge held that the contract under which this sprinkler system was installed was' a title-retaining contract, and since plaintiff repossessed itself of the property and sold it, it had made an election of *558 its remedy and could not thereafter assert a claim in the receivership for the balance of the purchase price. In reviewing this determination, appellant asserts that the instrument executed by the defendant incident to the installation of the sprinkler system was in fact a chattel mortgage, and that therefore appellant was possessed of the right to foreclose its chattel mortgage and thereafter assert a claim in the receivership for any unpaid portion of the purchase price.

As noted above, the whole controversy turns upon the determination of whether the instrument in question is a chattel mortgage or a title-retaining sales contract. The instrument covers nine printed pages of the record, and we forego full reproduction. In it plaintiff is designated as the “company” and the defendant as the “purchaser.” It evidently was a form prepared and used by plaintiff. Aside from the use of the word “purchaser,” especial care seems to have been taken to avoid any expression indicative of a transfer of the title of the property by plaintiff to defendant prior to the time the payments provided for in the contract were made in full. After reciting that plaintiff agrees to procure fire insurance, covering defendant’s property in which the sprinkler system was to be installed, the contract recites:

“Clause 4. The company agrees * * * it will cause to be installed in the premises described * * * a wet and dry pipe system of approved fire extinguishing apparatus, * * * hereinafter referred to as a ‘sprinkler equipment,’ in accordance with plans * * * and to maintain same at its own expense for the period of this contract (subject to certain provisions not here material).
*559 “Clause 5. The purchaser agrees to pay the company the following' sums of money on the following dates: * * * If the purchaser makes any default hereunder or fails to make any one of the above payments on the date such payment be due, all payments then due and thereafter to become due hereunder shall at the option of the company become forthwith due and payable; that upon any default by the purchaser all the rights, title and interest, if any, of the purchaser in any improvements placed upon the assets (property of defendant) by the company shall immediately cease and the company with or without the aid of legal process may enter the assets (property of defendant) and * * * remove any part or all such improvements therefrom, * # * without claim for damages or otherwise against the company and without prejudice to its rights hereunder. * * * At the company’s option, the purchaser shall be deemed to have made default hereunder if it be adjudicated a bankrupt or become insolvent, or if a receiver be appointed for it. * * #
“Clause 7. The title to said sprinkler equipment shall remain at all times in the company, and the company agrees that at the full termination of this contract and upon the faithful compliance by the purchaser with the terms and conditions herein contained and the making of all the payments by it required to be made at the times fixed and specified for making same, all improvements which the company may place upon the premises and which then are in or upon said premises, shall become the sole property of the purchaser ancl the company shall make, execute, acknowledge and deliver at that time a proper bill of sale for same to the purchaser

Plaintiff: asserts that because of the provision in clause 5 that it may repossess itself of the property, and “without prejudice to its rights hereunder,” the instrument should be construed as a chattel mortgage; and that to hold otherwise de *560 prives the above-quoted provision of any meaning ■whatever in the instrument. We think this contention of plaintiff is not well founded; and that, instead, the meaning of the quoted expression is much more apparent if the instrument is construed as a title-retaining contract, by the terms of which it was intended to provide that the vendor might have the option of repossessing the property in case of default or declaring the balance of the contract due and payable forthwith. Such provisions are permissible in title-retaining sales contracts, but the vendor has the right to exercise only one of the optional remedies. Young v. Phillips, 203 Mich. 566.

Since this contract was prepared by plaintiff, any ambiguity therein must be construed more strongly against it than the opposite party. Patterson v. Miller, 249 Mich. 89. But aside from this rule of construction, it appears that this instrument expressly retains title in plaintiff, and nowhere does' it expressly or by fair implication transfer title to the defendant as a purchaser. It goes without saying that unless title to the property passed to defendant it could not give1 a chattel mortgage thereon. And further, if title did not pass to the defendant at the time of the execution of this instrument, so that it was in position to give a chattel mortgage at that time, it did not subsequently become vested with title and therefore could not and did not mortgage the property. It is not contended in behalf of appellant, nor could it be, that it had a right to elect at its option to hold under this instrument as a mortgagee or as a contract vendor retaining title.

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Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 514, 260 Mich. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-petition-of-hume-mich-1932.