Libertyville Toyota v. U.S. Bank

864 N.E.2d 850, 371 Ill. App. 3d 1009, 309 Ill. Dec. 609, 2007 Ill. App. LEXIS 193
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 7, 2007
Docket1-05-4079
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 864 N.E.2d 850 (Libertyville Toyota v. U.S. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Libertyville Toyota v. U.S. Bank, 864 N.E.2d 850, 371 Ill. App. 3d 1009, 309 Ill. Dec. 609, 2007 Ill. App. LEXIS 193 (Ill. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

JUSTICE GREIMAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs Libertyville Toyota (Libertyville) and Volvo Sales and Service Center, doing business as Volvo of Lisle and also doing business as Honda of Lisle (Lisle), brought suit in the circuit court seeking declaration of ownership of several motor vehicles whose possession had been transferred from Libertyville and Lisle to defendant Automotive Lease Corporation (ALC) and thereafter transferred to defendant U.S. Bank.

Libertyville and Lisle are motor vehicle dealerships, ALC is a motor vehicle leasing company and U.S. Bank is a banking institution.

Following a bench trial, the trial court found that U.S. Bank owned the subject vehicles. Libertyville appeals. Neither Lisle nor ALC is a party to this appeal.

On appeal, Libertyville contends that the trial court’s determination that Libertyville and ALC intended ownership of the subject vehicles to be transferred at the time of the transfer of possession was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence and that ALC therefore did not have appropriate title or interest to the vehicles to allow a subsequent transfer to U.S. Bank.

Libertyville argues that ALC, not having title to the vehicles, could not transfer them pursuant to section 2 — 403(1) of the Uniform Commercial Code (the UCC) (810 ILCS 5/2 — 403(1) (West 2004)). Libertyville further argues that U.S. Bank was not a “buyer in the ordinary course of business” and therefore could not obtain ownership of the vehicles pursuant to section 2 — 403(2) of the UCC (810 ILCS 5/2— 403(2) (West 2004)). Finally, Libertyville argues that U.S. Bank was judicially estopped from claiming ownership of the vehicles because of its assertions in another action in the United States District Court relating to the issues presented here. We affirm.

At trial, Kevin Keefe, the president and general manager of Libertyville, Jeffrey Carr, the general sales manager of Lisle, and Timothy Cacciatore, the regional sales manager of U.S. Bank, testified. The evidentiary deposition of Robert Mueller, an assistant general counsel of the Illinois Secretary of State, was admitted. The following relevant evidence was adduced.

As an intermediary leasing company, ALC received requests for certain vehicles from its customers and, in turn, located those vehicles at motor vehicle dealerships, bought them, then leased or sold them to its customers. Libertyville and ALC had been doing business with one another for about two years.

Between April 15, 2002, and July 29, 2002, ALC arranged to buy six vehicles from Libertyville. As was their usual practice, Libertyville’s and ALC’s agents executed a contract for each vehicle. The contracts entered into by Libertyville and ALC were the same contracts used by Libertyville when it sold vehicles to retail customers. The contracts provided that the purchaser’s signature constituted a binding commitment to purchase the vehicles. Additionally, Keefe testified that he understood the contracts to be binding commitments to sell and purchase the vehicles. Each contract further provided that the written contract constituted the entirety of the agreement between the parties.

ALC then took possession of the vehicles; however, ALC did not pay for the vehicles at that time. Keefe testified that this was the parties’ usual custom: ALC would take possession of the vehicle, then, at a later date, sometimes as many as 45 days later, ALC would tender payment for the vehicle. As was its custom, and the custom of the industry, Libertyville retained the manufacturer’s certificates of origin (MCOs) for the vehicles until ALC tendered payment. An MCO is issued by the manufacturer of a vehicle and must be filed with the Secretary of State in order to obtain a title for the vehicle.

After taking possession of the vehicles, ALC leased them to its customers. ALC then sold the vehicles and its leases to U.S. Bank, with which it had been doing business since 1999. Though U.S. Bank’s formal internal guidelines required it to obtain a new vehicle’s MCO or a copy of the dealer’s buyer’s order listing U.S. Bank as the owner of the vehicle in order to fund such a transaction, Cacciatore testified that U.S. Bank’s custom in dealing with ALC was not to follow those guidelines. Instead, U.S. Bank obtained copies of the contracts between ALC and Libertyville before entering the agreement with ALC. 1 Again, the contracts were binding agreements for the purchase of the subject vehicles. After receiving the contracts, U.S. Bank provided funding to buy the vehicles from ALC, paid ALC for the vehicles and took possession of the vehicles.

Cacciatore testified that at the time of the agreement, he did not know whether ALC had already paid Libertyville for the vehicles but that he believed that, because ALC had possession of the vehicles, and because ALC had provided contracts reflecting the sale of the vehicles from Libertyville to ALC, ALC was the rightful owner of the vehicles. Cacciatore believed that after U.S. Bank paid ALC and ALC paid Libertyville, Libertyville would tender the MCOs. Though U.S. Bank paid ALC for the vehicles, ALC never paid Libertyville and Libertyville never tendered the MCOs to ALC or U.S. Bank. In August 2002, ALC went out of business.

After ALC went out of business, Cacciatore contacted Keefe, who indicated that Libertyville had never been paid for the vehicles. Accordingly, Keefe refused to tender U.S. Bank the MCOs for the vehicles, which would enable U.S. Bank to obtain titles for the vehicles. Cacciatore assured Keefe that U.S. Bank would work with Libertyville to resolve the conflict. Thereafter, on August 30, 2002, without informing Libertyville of its actions, U.S. Bank filed documents with the Secretary of State seeking titles for the vehicles on the grounds that ALC was a “defunct dealer.” U.S. Bank did not inform the Secretary of State of Libertyville’s competing ownership claims.

Six months later, U.S. Bank received titles for the six vehicles. Mueller testified that, had the Secretary of State known of Libertyville’ s claim of ownership, it would not have issued the titles and would instead have waited for a judicial order on the matter.

Meanwhile, also on August 30, 2002, U.S. Bank filed an action in the Northern District of Illinois against ALC in which it alleged that, though it had paid ALC for the vehicles, ALC had refused to pay Libertyville and Libertyville, in turn, had refused to turn over the MCOs for the vehicles. On April 4, 2003, U.S. Bank entered a consent judgment in that case. Neither party has cited to where in the record a copy of the consent judgment may be found. Moreover, neither offers an explanation of the substance of the consent judgment. However, in its brief and at oral argument, U.S. Bank maintained that it had never been paid or otherwise received a benefit pursuant to the consent judgment. Libertyville does not contest this assertion.

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Bluebook (online)
864 N.E.2d 850, 371 Ill. App. 3d 1009, 309 Ill. Dec. 609, 2007 Ill. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/libertyville-toyota-v-us-bank-illappct-2007.