Lugar v. Parker

14 Pa. D. & C. 613, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 437
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketNo. 698
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Pa. D. & C. 613 (Lugar v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lugar v. Parker, 14 Pa. D. & C. 613, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 437 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

MacDade, J.,

This is an action in assumpsit upon the part of George C. Lugar against the defendants, Clarence D. Parker and Albert H. Yarnall, to recover the sum of $130, claimed to be the amount paid by the plaintiff to the said Albert H. Yarnall for the sale of an automobile.

It seems that the said Clarence D. Parker, on or about Nov. 1, 1928, operated a garage in Media Borough, and had in his possession a Ford sedan, engine No. 14576325, with Maryland license plates on said car No. 211819.

This car, from what we can learn, was found abandoned on the streets of Media by the chief of police and he stored the said car with the said Clarence D.' Parker until further notice. As it developed later, the car was a stolen car, having been stolen from one Clem D. Way in May, 1928, the said Clem D. Way being a nonresident of this state.

On or about Nov. 1, 1928, the defendant, Clarence D. Parker, claimed that there was rent or storage due on said automobile amounting to $42.33, and, in order to satisfy the said rent or storage charges, he gave to Albert H. Yarnall, the other defendant, and a duly qualified constable, a landlord’s distress warrant with instructions to execute the same and levy upon the said automobile to satisfy the said rent or storage charges.

Whereupon, in pursuance of said distress warrant, the said Albert H. Yarnall, constable as aforesaid, did levy on the said Ford sedan and expose the same to public sale, whereat the said George C. Lugar, plaintiff aforesaid, purchased the said automobile for the sum of $130. The said sum of $130 was paid as the purchase price therefor by the said George C. Lugar to the said Albert H. Yarnall, as constable, and he has his receipt therefor.

Thereupon the said Albert H. Yarnall having received the said $130 in cash from the said Albert C. Lugar, plaintiff aforesaid, the automobile was delivered to him, the plaintiff, by the said Albert H. Yarnall, constable.

[614]*614Subsequently, on or about Dec. 13, 1928, there was issued out of this court a writ of replevin in which Clem D. Way was designated plaintiff and the said George C. Lugar, plaintiff aforesaid, was designated defendant, to recover the said Ford sedan, being the same automobile which the said George C. Lugar purchased from, and paid the sum of $130 cash therefor to, the said Albert H. Yarnall, constable, and one of the defendants aforesaid, which said automobile was delivered to Clem D. Way, under the said writ, the sheriff having taken possession of the same while in the custody of the said George C. Lugar and delivered it to the lawful and rightful owner, the said Clem D. Way.

The said George C. Lugar has made repeated demands upon Clarence D. Parker and Albert H. Yarnall for the said sum of $130^ being the amount paid in cash to the said Albert H. Yarnall for the said automobile, but they and each of them refused and still refuse to pay him the said amount, for the recovery of which this suit is brought.

In view of the above circumstances, we must conclude that the said automobile was abandoned on the streets of Media after it had been stolen, and, therefore, the title, it must be conceded, has never changed and the ownership was in the said Clem D. Way at all times, notwithstanding what may have transpired since the automobile came into the possession of the chief of police of Media and others.

It is a well recognized principle of law that a finder of lost property, and this would apply equally to stolen property, has no lien for expenses gratuitously incurred in taking care of it: Forster v. Juniata Bridge Co., 16 Pa. 393; Etter v. Edwards, 4 Watts, 63.

In the former case it was held that property carried adrift continues to be the property of him who owned it at the time of the flood. When located the owner has a right to enter upon the land and remove it, but is not bound to do so and may abandon it without incurring responsibility for injury by it.

The owner of the land in that case had no lien on property cast on it by a drift, and the same application can be made to an automobile which has been abandoned and placed in the custody of a garage owner by the chief of police of the town. Indeed, where the owner of the property proves his title or ownership in it, as the owner of the automobile did in this case, and the garage owner has actually converted it to his own use, the latter will be liable to him in trover and conversion for damages; therefore, the property was properly delivered by the sheriff under the writ of replevin to the said Clem D. Way, and the question is now whether the garage owner ever had a lien on the property for storage or a claim for rent. We think not.

This is an action in assumpsit to recover $130 paid by plaintiff to the defendant, Yarnall, for the purchase at public sale conducted by the said Yarnall, presumably as a constable under a landlord’! distress warrant, of the automobile in question, which belonged to a person who was a nonresident and from whom it was stolen and found abandoned on the streets of Media by the chief of police and then placed by him in the custody of the other defendant, Parker, as a garageman, for safe-keeping.

At that time it was the duty of Parker and the chief of police and of this constable (Yarnall) to report the circumstances surrounding possession of the car to the Secretary of Highways, as the acts of assembly require. This was not done. It proved later that the car had been reported stolen by the owner and then it was that the car was located when the plaintiff applied to the said Secretary of Highways for a certificate of title and registration. If the defendant, Parker, as a garageman, had reported the car, it would not have [615]*615been necessary to conduct any public sale to sell the said_ automobile for rent or storage. It was entirely the fault of the garageman and the chief of police that this unfortunate situation has arisen for failing to report the car.

Section 1220 of the Motor Vehicle Code of 1920 provides that the person in charge of any garage or repair shop in which has been left a motor vehicle of unknown ownership for a period of fifteen consecutive days, without being removed by its owner or other person duly authorized to remove the same, shall report to the department within twenty-four hours of the elapse of such fifteen-day period, giving the name, engine number, manufacturer’s serial number, registration plate number and the name and address of the person abandoning the same, if known.

In section 209 (d) of the same act, it is provided that it shall be the duty of every peace officer having knowledge of a stolen motor vehicle immediately to furnish the Secretary with full information in connection therewith. In lieu of this, this garageman attempted to sell the stolen motor vehicle for rent, and the plaintiff, either by design or carelessness, certainly, in disobeying the law, became the victim to the extent of having $130 wrested from him under the pretext of a legal distress. There could be no legal distress warrant issued, for there was no rent due. If anything was due it was for storage charges, and a landlord’s distress warrant cannot be legally issued for that: Baldwin Piano Co. v. Moyer, 21 Schuyl. Legal Rec. 405.

As a landlord himself issues the warrant, a constable need not accept and serve it, for a constable is not bound to serve writs of private persons.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Abrams
94 Pa. Super. 556 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Forster v. Juniata Bridge Co.
16 Pa. 393 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1851)
McElroy v. Dice
17 Pa. 163 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1851)
Davis & Pugh v. Bigler & Son
62 Pa. 242 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1869)
Estey Co. v. Dick
41 Pa. Super. 610 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1910)
Etter v. Edwards
4 Watts 63 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1835)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Pa. D. & C. 613, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lugar-v-parker-pactcompldelawa-1930.