In the Matter of Robert Kenneth Ralston, D/B/A Ralston T. v. Sales & Service, Bankrupt. Ford Motor Credit Company v. James C. Baggott, Trustee

401 F.2d 293, 17 Ohio Misc. 165, 46 Ohio Op. 2d 19, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5449
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 26, 1968
Docket17743_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 401 F.2d 293 (In the Matter of Robert Kenneth Ralston, D/B/A Ralston T. v. Sales & Service, Bankrupt. Ford Motor Credit Company v. James C. Baggott, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Robert Kenneth Ralston, D/B/A Ralston T. v. Sales & Service, Bankrupt. Ford Motor Credit Company v. James C. Baggott, Trustee, 401 F.2d 293, 17 Ohio Misc. 165, 46 Ohio Op. 2d 19, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5449 (6th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

McCREE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment affirming the determination of a referee in bankruptcy that Ford Motor Credit Company (hereinafter Ford) did not have a valid security interest in four vehicles purchased from Ford’s assignor by the manager of the bankrupt’s business. By consent, the vehicles were sold to avoid depreciation during the pend-ency of litigation, and the liens, if found to be valid, are to attach to the proceeds.

Robert Kenneth Ralston (hereinafter Ralston or the bankrupt) owned and operated a business known as Ralston T.Y. Sales and Service in Dayton, Ohio. He employed one Millard Dunniek as sales manager and buyer of merchandise. Dunniek and Ralston had discussed the purchase of a vehicle or vehicles to be used in the business and obtained some price quotations from automobile dealers. The evidence is in conflict as to the exact details of the negotiations, but the referee found that Dunniek, who had no written authority to execute obligations or liens for Ralston, signed orders for the purchase of three trucks and a station wagon from Stenger’s Ford, Inc., an automobile dealer in the community, during Ralston’s absence from the city on December 18, 1964 and January 18, 1965. The down payments were made with Ralston’s checks and Dunniek executed promissory notes and security agreements for the balance in the name *294 of Ralston T.Y. Sales and Service by Mil Dunnick, Manager.

The security agreements and promissory notes were assigned for value to Ford and certificates of title were issued in the name of Ralston T.V. Sales and Service and memorandum certificates of title were given to Ralston T.V. Sales and Service with the notation of lien.

After Ralston returned to town, he complained about the purchases and the cost of the vehicles and told the seller that Dunnick had no authority to sign the orders. He disclaimed any intention to be liable and refused to sign the contracts upon request. He did not, however, at any time tender back the vehicles or request a refund of the down payments, and, subsequently, some installment payments were made with checks drawn on his business account although without Ralston’s actual knowledge.

Ralston filed a petition in bankruptcy on July 6,1965. When the sheriff seized the equipment, Ford discovered for the first time that Dunnick claimed to have purchased the station wagon for his own use, although in the bankrupt’s name, and that he was to have made the payments from his own funds.

The trustee in bankruptcy claimed the vehicles as part of the bankrupt’s estate and challenged Ford’s liens. Ford made no claim as a holder in due course but contended either that its liens were valid because the transaction, if unauthorized, had been ratified, or, if not, that title should be revested in the seller.

The referee found no fraud, and that since Dunnick was not authorized to make the purchases, the security agreements he executed were invalid. Nevertheless, he found that title vested in Ralston. He found that there had been no ratification of Dunnick’s unauthorized act as a matter of fact or law because of Ralston’s express disclaimer of liability before delivery of the vehicles. He also found that ratification was precluded by Ralston’s lack of complete knowledge of the financial arrangements and that there was no estoppel. Finally, he concluded that Ford’s liens were not valid because of its careless business practice of not investigating and discovering Ralston’s precarious financial condition at the time of the purchase.

The District Court affirmed the decision of the referee because his findings of fact were not clearly erroneous and because Stenger and Ford Motor Credit Company had been guilty of careless business practices. We reverse.

Bankruptcy General Order 47 provides in pertinent part: “ * * * and the judge shall accept (the referee’s) findings of fact unless clearly erroneous.” A finding is clearly erroneous when it is inconsistent with uncontra-dicted testimony on an issue and there is no question as to the credibility of the witness. Merchants National Bank and Trust Co. v. United States, 246 F.2d 410 (7th Cir. 1957); Soles v. Franzblau, 352 F.2d 47 (3rd Cir. 1965). Under this test, the finding that Ralston disclaimed liability before delivery may not stand. Ralston’s uncontradicted testimony on this issue is as follows:

Q. Did you contract (sic) Stenger’s Ford at any time to tell them that Mr. Dunnick did not have authority to buy the trucks and that you were going to rescind the contract and send them back the automobiles ?

A. No, I told them at the time that, I says who activated — after the trucks were delivered I said who signed the contracts and they said Mr. Dunnick, and I said I didn’t think that Mr. Dunnick could sign the contracts on these, that I personally owned that business and they asked me if I would like to sign a contract and I said “no”.

******

A. I didn’t contact them. I was talking to one of the salesmen in there. I was talk * * * I don’t know whether it was Mr. Farmer or the other fellow that was in charge of trucks. It has been sometime ago. I know they asked me if I would like to sign the contracts and I said “no”, the trucks are delivered and that I wouldn’t sign any contract because the *295 whole thing it was already set up, the financing had been arranged and everything.

It is undisputed that until the filing of his petition in bankruptcy, Ralston retained and used the trucks in his business after he had learned of Dunnick’s purchase of the vehicles encumbered by the liens evidence on the certificates of title.

The Restatement (Second), Agency § 99 (1958) provides:

Retention of Benefits as Affirmance. The retention by a purported principal, with knowledge of the facts and before he has changed his position, of something which he is not entitled to retain unless an act purported to be done on his account is affirmed, and to which he makes no claim except through such act, constitutes an af-firmance unless at the time of such retention he repudiates the act. Even if he repudiates the act, his retention constitutes an affirmance at the election of the other party to the transaction.

This proposition has been approved as correctly stating the law of Ohio on the ratification by a principal of the unauthorized act of an agent. See Lange v. P. J. Humphries & Co., 9 O.O. 158, 32 N.E.2d 55 (1936) and cases cited therein. There, the court considered the challenge of a receiver to the validity of chattel mortgages made in excess of his authority by a corporate officer. The consideration for the notes secured by the mortgages was money paid into and used by the corporation in its business. The court refused to permit the receiver to repudiate the lien and retain the benefits arising from the same transaction.

This proposition was reiterated in Ward v. National Bank of Paulding, 5 Ohio Misc. 140, 212 N.E.2d 191

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Bluebook (online)
401 F.2d 293, 17 Ohio Misc. 165, 46 Ohio Op. 2d 19, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 5449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-robert-kenneth-ralston-dba-ralston-t-v-sales-ca6-1968.