In Re Wiegand

27 F. Supp. 725, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2675
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedJune 1, 1939
Docket33256-Y
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 27 F. Supp. 725 (In Re Wiegand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wiegand, 27 F. Supp. 725, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2675 (S.D. Cal. 1939).

Opinion

YANKWICH, District Judge.

An adjudication was made, upon a voluntary petition, on December 12, 1938.

The first meeting of creditors was held on January 3, 1939, at which time the trustee was elected.

The only assets listed in the bankrupt’s schedules, other than his wearing apparel, for which he claimed exemption, is a De Soto automobile, turned over to the trustee.

On January 17, 1939, the trustee filed a petition before the Referee, claiming ownership of the automobile and seeking an order to show cause directed to one Winnie H. Lenn, a lien claimant by virtue of a chattel mortgage on the automobile. The trustee challenged the validity of the lien.

After a hearing before the Referee, he ruled that the automobile belonged to the trustee free of the claimed lien.

The evidence presented at the hearing before the Referee, as summed up by him in his decision, was:

A receipt in favor of the bankrupt, dated June 3, 1936, and signed by the Rad-cliff Motor Company of Kansas City, Mo., for the sum of $610.05, which “appears to be a receipt for the purchase price of the De Soto automobile.”

A promissory note signed by the bankrupt in favor of Winnie H. Lenn for the same amount of money, to-wit: $610.05, dated at Kansas City, Mo., on June 3, 1936, payable twenty-four months after date. This convinced the Referee that Winnie H. Lenn “had loaned the bankrupt the money which he paid for the purchase price of the automobile.”

The bankrupt’s schedules show that on the 16th day of May, 1938, and eight days before the execution of the mortgage on the automobile to Winnie H. Lenn, a judgment was rendered against the bankrupt herein in a sum in excess of $200.

There was offered in evidence a chattel mortgage, dated May 24, 1938, and executed by the bankrupt in favor of Winnie H. Lenn, upon the De Soto automobile in question, to secure the payment of a promissory note in the sum of $681.95, payable *727 thirty months after date. It does not appear from the evidence that Winnie H. Lenn had had any previous security upon the obligation which the bankrupt owed her, although the bankrupt had owned the car in question since the date when Miss Lenn had first loaned him the $610.05.

The bankrupt and Miss Lenn were very close friends and had been “keeping company” for some time.

The original chattel mortgage was mailed to the Department of Motor Vehicles at Sacramento, California, for recording shortly after its execution. The Department of Motor Vehicles, on June 8, 1938, returned it to the mortgagee, with instructions to mail a copy of the mortgage with a notary’s certificate attached, certifying to the fact that the copy was true and correct, with a request also for a fee of $1, for filing.

On June 28, 1938, the Department addressed a communication to the mortgagee, in reply to a communication from her under date of June 24, 1938, calling her attention to their letter of June 8, 1938. On July 7th, the Department finally received a certified copy of the original mortgage and recorded it.

While the Referee found that the mortgagee paid value for the chattel mortgage, he held that the delay in recording it invalidated it against the trustee.

At the start, we are faced with the question whether the recording of a chattel mortgage on a motor vehicle is governed by Section 2957 of the California Civil Code or by Sections 195 and 196 of the Vehicle Code, as amended in 1935 (St. 1935, p. 118). Section 2957 of the California Civil Code has been a part of the law of California since the enactment of that Code in 1872. In substance, it declares all mortgages on personal property “void as against creditors of the mortgagor and subsequent purchasers and encumbrancers of the property in good faith and for value unless” it is acknowledged, proved and certified as a grant of real property and is recorded in the office of the Recorder of the County where the mortgagor resides.

Sections 195 and 196 of the Vehicle 'Code, originally adopted in 1931, read:

“195. Application for Chattel Mortgage. No chattel mortgage on any vehicle registered hereunder irrespective of whether such registration was effected prior or subsequent to the execution of such mortgage, is valid as against creditors or subsequent purchasers or encumbrancers until the mortgagee or his successor or assignee has deposited with the department, at its office in Sacramento, a copy of said mortgage with an attached certificate of a notary public stating that the same is a true and correct copy of the original, accompanied by a properly endorsed certificate of ownership to the vehicle described in said mortgage if said vehicle is then registered hereunder, or if said vehicle is not so registered, by an application in usual form for an original registration, together with an application for registration as legal owner, and upon payment of the fees as provided in this code. * * *
“196. Registration Effective to Give Notice. When the chattel mortgagee, his successor or assignee, has deposited with the department a copy of the chattel mortgage as provided in section 195 hereof, such deposit constitutes constructive notice of said mortgage and its contents to creditors and subsequent purchasers and encumbrancers but such mortgaged vehicle shall be subject to a lien as provided in Division VIII hereof.”

Previous enactments of this character (Sec. 45%, California Vehicle Act, Stats. 1929, pp. 508, 517) calling for registration of chattel mortgages on motor vehicles with the Motor Vehicle Department of California have been interpreted by California courts as merely an added requirement to the provisions of Section 2957 of the Civil Code. Washington Lumber & Millwork Co. v. McGuire, 1931, 213 Cal. 13, 1 P.2d 437. This because the courts could see no conflict between the requirements of the two statutes.

However, the Legislature of 1931 (page 2517), in amending Section 45% of the California Vehicle Act, specifically exempted, both in the title and in the body of the Amending Act, chattel mortgages on motor vehicles from the provisions of Sections 2959 and 2965 of the Civil Code and “those provisions of section 2957 of the Civil Code which relate to the recording of mortgages on personal property.”

But even these provisions were not considered repugnant, but merely complementary to the requirements of the Civil Code. Bush v. Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass’n, 1934, 1 Cal.App.2d 588, 37 P.2d 168. Evidently, to overcome *728 the effect of these decisions and to do away with the anomaly which required of the mortgagee under a chattel mortgage of a motor vehicle both a recording and a registration, the Legislature of 1935 enacted what is now Section 198 of the Vehicle Code (St.1935, p. 119), which reads:

“198. Exclusive Method of Giving Notice. The method provided in this chapter for giving constructive notice of a chattel mortgage on a vehicle registered hereunder is exclusive and

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. Supp. 725, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wiegand-casd-1939.