Long v. McAvoy

236 P. 806, 133 Wash. 472, 44 A.L.R. 483, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1194
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1925
DocketNo. 19067. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 236 P. 806 (Long v. McAvoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. McAvoy, 236 P. 806, 133 Wash. 472, 44 A.L.R. 483, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1194 (Wash. 1925).

Opinions

Bridges, J.

While the testimony is very conflicting, a careful reading of it convinces us that the following are the true facts of this case: One Stafford was the owner of an Elgin automobile. The Mikado Auto Company of Seattle was the local agent for the Moon car. Stafford bought of it one of its cars, turning in his Elgin and paying the balance in cash. The two oars were at once delivered to the respective purchasers. *473 As Stafford was about to drive away, the manager of the auto company asked him to sign a bill of sale for the Elgin car, at the same time presenting to him a paper which was represented to be a bill of sale. This Stafford signed. It turned out to be a conditional sale contract between the auto company and Stafford, showing that the latter bad agreed to purchase the Moon car and bad paid a designated portion of the purchase price, and was to pay the balance of some $900 upon installments, title meanwhile to remain in the auto company. An ordinary promissory note was embodied in and made a part of the conditional sale contract, and this as well as the contract itself, was signed by Stafford. He thought be was signing a bill of sale for the Elgin car. At that time the auto, company owed the defendant about $1,500, and it sold and assigned to him the conditional Sale contract, together with the auto which it covered, in part payment of what it owed him. This contract was at once filed with the county auditor. After driving the Moon car awhile, Stafford sold it to the plaintiff, who paid cash therefor. At that time be obtained from the auto company a bill of sale to the Moon car and delivered it to the plaintiff. Both the plaintiff and the defendant were ignorant of the fraud practiced by the auto company on Stafford.

The defendant, for sometime past, bad been doing considerable business with the auto company, apparently advancing money to it and purchasing its conditional sale contracts. To some extent be permitted the auto company to collect the payments on tbe various conditional sale contracts wbicb be purchased, the payments when collected. being turned over to him. One day the defendant found the automobile in question on one of the streets of Seattle and, acting under his contract (payments on which were in default), tookpossession of the car, and thereafter the plaintiff began this *474 suit in replevin, gave a bond and took backtbe ear. This all occurred several months after the conditional sale contract was given. Meanwhile the auto company had paid to the account of the defendant certain of the installments called for by the conditional sale contract, but at the time defendant took the car other installments were due and unpaid. Before he took the car, defendant had demanded of Stafford the payment of the delinquent installments, but he refused to make them and repudiated the conditional sale contract upon which they were based. He took the matter up with the auto company, which made some indefinite explanations, and which, apparently, were not understood, or at least fully appreciated, by him. At that time the manager explained to him that its relations with the defendant were not friendly and handed Stafford $50 and asked him to deliver that sum to the defendant, requesting that it be credited on the conditional sale contract. Stafford complied, but without any intention on his part to adopt or ratify the contract. The auto company also told him that he need not pay any further attention to the contract and that it would not trouble him further.

"We think the trial court was right in refusing to believe certain testimony to the effect that Stafford executed the conditional sale contract as an accommodation to the auto company. We are also satisfied that, had he read that instrument before signing it, he would have understood its purport and have known that it was not a bill of sale, and that in signing it he relied entirely upon the representations that it was a bill of sale. Our findings for the most part agree with those made by the trial court. It remains to apply the law to the facts as we have found them.

We have read many cases on fraud, estoppel, comparative innocence among buyers, and other subjects *475 which the facts of this case seem to involve, but we have been unable to find in them any rule, supported by a majority of the cases, that would lead us to a decision upon the facts of this case. Such being our situation, we have concluded to strike out for ourselves, as it were.

Comparative innocence ought, it seems tó us, to be the principle upon which this case should be decided. Where both parties to a suit are, in a general sense, innocent, but one must suffer, there ought to be no rules of law which would stand in the way of placing the loss on him who is the least innocent. That both appellant and respondent are, in a sense, innocent of any wrongdoing or carelessness must be conceded, and yet we think one of them is less innocent than the other. The appellant had no knowledge of the fraud which the auto company had practiced in securing the conditional sale contract which it had sold to him. It was fair upon its face; it was a document commonly dealt in; it had been properly executed; he had obtained it in the ordinary course of business; he was not guilty of any negligence or lack of caution. He was a purchaser without notice of any defects of title or of equities vested in other persons. It is true the respondent contends, and the testimony seems to show, that at times he permitted the auto company to collect and pay over to him installments due upon similar contracts held by him. But there is nothing unusual in that. That kind of agency would not make the appellant liable for the fraud committed by the auto company. For the most part he put his contracts in a bank which made the collections. If he had invariably followed the practice of collecting the payments himself the result must have been the same, both to him and to the respondent.

On the other hand, we think it may be said that if *476 Stafford should be charged with negligence in failing to read the conditional sale contract before he signed it, or to otherwise learn its contents, yet that negligence ought not to be attributable to the respondent. He knew nothing of this. He purchased the auto of Stafford and paid therefor. In these respects he was entirely blameless. But had he examined the public records, as was his duty, he would have discovered that this conditional sale contract was outstanding against this auto. That discovery would either have induced him to abandon the transaction or trace to its source the reason for the giving of the conditional sale contract. In either event, he would not have been injured. He failed to do that which an ordinarily reasonable man is called upon to do, to-wit, examine the public records for any instruments affecting the property which he is about to purchase. It seems clear to us that respondent was less innocent than appellant, and everything else being equal, he should stand the loss. What we said in National City Bank v. Parker-Bell Lumber Co., 122 Wash. 29, 210 Pac. 10, is applicable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 P. 806, 133 Wash. 472, 44 A.L.R. 483, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-mcavoy-wash-1925.