Liquid Carbonic Co. v. Black

128 A. 514, 102 Conn. 390
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 128 A. 514 (Liquid Carbonic Co. v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liquid Carbonic Co. v. Black, 128 A. 514, 102 Conn. 390 (Colo. 1925).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The plaintiff, the Liquid Carbonic Company, and defendant Black, on January 15th, 1922, entered into a written agreement of conditional sale of the goods described in the complaint, by which the goods were delivered to Black and the title to them was to remain in the Liquid Carbonic Company until paid for according to stated terms, and subject to its right on default to repossess itself of the goods. The agreement was duly recorded and executed except that it was not acknowledged. On October 15th, 1922, plaintiff demanded of defendants the return of these goods and they refused to deliver the same, and on the following day, when this action was begun, there was due the plaintiff on the purchase price of the goods, $827.75. Black used these goods in his business from January, 1922, to September 29th, 1923, when he sold the same to defendant Wilson, who then had actual notice of the conditional bill of sale from plaintiff to Black and that there remained unpaid a part of the purchase price. At the time of the sale Black reserved $750 out of the price he received from Wilson for the purpose of satisfying the claim of the plaintiff, but said sum was not paid it, and after this action was begun the $750 was returned to Wilson by Black. The court rendered judgment for the plaintiff.

The defendants attack the judgment upon this appeal upon the three conclusions reached by the trial court, viz.:

1. In view of the circumstances of the sale and the fact that the defendant Wilson had actual knowledge of the plaintiff’s conditional bill of sale1, he is to be *392 regarded as a personal representative of the defendant Black within the meaning of the statute.

2. A vendee with notice is not to be regarded as a bona fide purchaser, but as an ordinary creditor, and is entitled only to what the creditor was entitled to, and in this respect is his personal representative.

3. The statute on conditional bills of sale was designed to protect bona fide purchasers and creditors, and a purchaser with notice should not be suffered to take advantage of a technical noncompliance with the statute and profit thereby, this not being the purpose or intent of the statute.

These conclusions must be tested by the construction placed upon General Statutes, § 4746: “All conditional sales of personal property not made in conformity with the provisions of section 4744 shall be held to be absolute sales, except as between the vendor and vendee or their personal representatives, and all such property shall be liable to be taken by attachment and execution for the debts of the vendee, in the same manner as any other property not exempted by law.”

Since the contract of conditional sale by the plaintiff to Black was not made in conformity with the statute because it had not been acknowledged (General Statutes, § 4744) it was wholly ineffective except as between the vendor and vendee or their personal representatives. The first conclusion of the trial court is that Black’s vendee, Wilson, was the personal representative of Black.

We held in the case of In re Wilcox & Howe Co., 70 Conn. 220, 39 Atl. 163, that this term may reasonably be held to include in addition to executors and administrators, trustees in insolvency, an assignee in bankruptcy and a receiver. The last three classes we pointed out “stand in the shoes of the debtor and represent him; . . . but they also, for some purposes, *393 stand in the shoes of creditors- and represent them.” We recognize the impossibility of giving this term its strict technical common law meaning, executor or administrator, and we have not heretofore done this. The trustee in insolvency, the assignee in bankruptcy and the receiver are each the personal representative of the vendor and vendee, but to hold that the term includes also the vendee of the vendee in the conditional sale, or such a vendee with notice, strains the statutory meaning to a point where reasonable construction cannot go. In the ordinary uses of language no one would think that such a vendee was a personal representative of his vendor. To reach this conclusion we must give to the language of the statute a meaning its framers never intended. In certain statutes- this term may mean heirs, next of kin, or descendants, and sometimes grantees, but no conditional sales statute has been called to our attention where the term is used in the sense of the vendee of the vendee in a conditional sale, or such a vendee with notice. There is sound reason for denying to the parties to a conditional sale the right to attack such sale because of a statutory informality in the execution, and to deny to those who stand in their shoes this right, but the same reason cannot be urged against the vendee of the vendee in the conditional sale. The first and second conclusions of the trial court are not sound.

The third conclusion of the trial court, that a purchaser from the vendee under a conditional sale with notice of such sale, ought not to be permitted to take advantage of a defect in the execution of the written contract of conditional sale, is a sound conclusion of law. Before the passage of our statute requiring conditional sales to be executed and recorded in conformity with its terms, contracts of conditional sale under our common law were not required to be re *394 corded, and between vendor and vendee such a contract was good. The possession and apparent ownership of the vendee under such a sale led creditors and purchasers to believe it to be an actual ownership, and this statute was enacted to “protect creditors and purchasers from the evils which had before resulted from the existence of lawful and valid conditional sales, but of which the public had no notice.” Cohen v. Schneider, 70 Conn. 505, 510, 40 Atl. 455; National Cash Register Co. v. Lesko, 77 Conn. 276, 280, 58 Atl. 967; In re Wilcox & Howe Co., 70 Conn. 220, 230, 39 Atl. 163. The public registration of the contract gave whoever cared to avail himself of it knowledge of the true owner of the goods in the possession of the conditional vendee; the registration was therefore constructive notice to all the world of the fact and the contents of this contract of sale, and hence to all subsequent purchasers of the articles held under such contract. The statute made the registration constructive notice to1 all purchasers just as in many instances the law conclusively presumes certain facts to operate as constructive notice to parties in interest. Any notice, whether actual or constructive, to subsequent purchasers will necessarily have the same legal effect as the constructive notice of the statutory registration. Unless this statute be read in this way, it will operate as a fraud upon innocent purchasers and permit the enrichment of one with the property of another which in good conscience and equity belongs to the other. A somewhat similar situation arose in Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Puritan Laundry, Inc., 95 Conn. 172, 111 Atl. 149. The Puritan Company gave its mortgage to the plaintiff and thereafter the Puritan Company sold the property covered by this mortgage to the Pratt Company under a contract of conditional sale with full notice to the latter of the existence of this mortgage,

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Bluebook (online)
128 A. 514, 102 Conn. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liquid-carbonic-co-v-black-conn-1925.