Manufacturers Finance Acceptance Corp. v. Bramlett

154 S.E. 410, 157 S.C. 419, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 15, 1930
Docket12963
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 S.E. 410 (Manufacturers Finance Acceptance Corp. v. Bramlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manufacturers Finance Acceptance Corp. v. Bramlett, 154 S.E. 410, 157 S.C. 419, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 161 (S.C. 1930).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Brease.

In his efforts to enforce the laws forbidding the sale and transportation of alcoholic liquors, Sheriff Bramlett, of Greenville County, seized an automobile,' owned by, and in the possession of one W. FI. Brown, who was using the vehicle in the unlawful transportation of whisky. The respondent, claiming to be the owner and holder of a chattel mortgage on the automobile, brought suit in claim and delivery to recover the property.

The case was tried and decided by his Honor, County Judge M. F. Ansel, in the County Court of Greenville County on the following agreed statement of facts :

“W. H. Brown, on April 12, 1929, purchased from W. M. Thompson, Inc., of Greenville, a new Ford roadster, and executed purchase money notes and a mortgage thereon to secure the payment of the purchase price. Immediately this *421 mortgage was assigned to the plaintiff, who had no notice that Brown was a violator of the liquor law, and for the purposes of this case was an innocent purchaser. On May 21, 1929, Brown was arrested by the Sheriff while transporting liquor in the car. The Sheriff arrested him three times within two weeks for violating the liquor laws, once before the seizure and once after, but no arrests had been made before the execution of the plaintiff’s mortgage.
“The case is submitted to Judge Ansel upon the sole issue of whether or not an innocent holder of a chattel mortgage is protected under Section 885 of the Criminal Code of 1922 (Vol. 2).”

Upon the authority of the holdings in Seignious v. Lime-house, 107 S. C., 545, 93 S. E., 193, the County Judge rendered judgment against Sheriff Bramlett, the appellant, in favor of the respondent for the possession of the automobile.

On the theory that the principles announced in the Seignious case were not applicable to the facts of this case, the appeal here was taken. Before the case reached us, we handed down the opinion in Ward v. Greer, Sheriff, 155 S. C., 426, 152 S. E., 678. The appellant’s attorney, conceding that the conclusions there reached supported the holding of the County Judge in the case at bar, asked and received our permission to review that case, wherein the following principle was announced:

“Unpaid mortgagee without knowledge that- automobile was being used in transportation of liquors was entitled to recover car after seizure by Sheriff (Cr. Code, 1922, § 885).” Syllabus.

The appellant calls our attention to the decision of this Court in Merchants’ & Planters’ Bank v. Brigman, 106 S. C., 362, 91 S. E., 332, 334, L. R. A., 1917-E, 925, which related to the attachment of a motor vehicle for damages done to personal property upon a public highway, as provided for in Section 5706, Volume 3-, Code of 1922. In that case, it was decided that one who sustains personal injury or- *422 property damage from the illegal or negligent operation of a motor vehicle had a claim against such motor vehicle superior to that of any other person, except the State and county, even a holder of a mortgage covering the vehicle. In the opinion, the present Chief Justice, speaking for the Court, used this language:

“The mortgage in this case was given on August 8, 1914, and the Act of the Legislature was passed in 1912; the plaintiff took the mortgage with full knowledge of the Act in question. It was a public Act, and, being such, was notice to the world. The Act of the Legislature put the whole world on notice that it intended to make the claim of the injured one against the machine inflicting the injury superior to that of any other person who asserts a lien or claim to it, and that the claim could be enforced, not against the owner of the machine, but against the machine itself. It does not make any difference whether the owner consented or not.”

The argument is that, in the case at bar, the respondent purchased the mortgage over the automobile in question with full knowledge of the force and effect of Section 885 of the Criminal Code, and it cannot in any way claim that it is an innocent bona fide holder without notice. And it is said that the decision in the Brigman case is applicable here, and under that authority, it seems to be the position that our conclusion in the Ward case was erroneous.

It is our opinion that the question here, which was the identical question in the Ward case, is altogether different from the question decided in the Brigman case. The statute referred to in the Brigman case (Section 5706, Volume 3, Code of 1922) expressly provides that the party injured by the negligent operation of a motor vehicle on a public highway shall have a lien on the vehicle “next in priority to the lien for State and county taxes upon such motor vehicle. * * *” As the Court well said in Brigman’s case, the mortgagee took the mortgage with full knowledge that the General Assembly had passed that statute. The mortgagee knew when *423 he took the mortgage that the motor vehicle was likely to be the cause of damage to some person or to some property; he knew that if such damage took place, the machine would be liable if it had been operated negligently. He therefore took the risk as to what might happen when he took the mortgage.

The language of Section 885 of the Criminal Code, Volume 2, Code of 1922, relating to the forfeiture of vehicles used in the illegal transportation of alcoholic liquors, is quite different from Section 5706,of Volume 3 of the Code relating to the attachment of motor vehicles. By the terms of Section 885, vehicles are to be forfeited when “used in the illegal transportation of alcoholic liquors * * * and if so used with the knowledge or consent of the owner thereof or of the agent or servant of such owner in charge of such vehicle. * * * ”

In the law providing for-the attachment of an automobile because of its negligent operation, there is no provision to the effect that the machine may be attached only when the negligent operation has been occasioned by the consent of the actual owner or mortgagee of the machine. In the law as to-the confiscation of an automobile engaged in the illegal transportation of alcoholic liquors, it is expressly provided that there shall be no confiscation, unless the vehicle has been used for the illegal purpose “with the knowledge or consent of the owner thereof or of the agent or servant of such owner in charge of such vehicle. * •* * ” The General Assembly, as it had the right to do, seems to have made quite a distinction, and, in all likelihood, purposely so, in writing the' two enactments.

The mortgagee in this case is in a different position from that occupied by the mortgagee in the Brigman case. In that case, the mortgagee, as stated by the Court, had full knowledge of the passage of the Act which permitted the automobile to be attached under a lien superior to the lien of his mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.E. 410, 157 S.C. 419, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturers-finance-acceptance-corp-v-bramlett-sc-1930.