Maryland Tire Co. v. Chesapeake Finance & Credit Co.

4 Balt. C. Rep. 565
CourtBaltimore City Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 565 (Maryland Tire Co. v. Chesapeake Finance & Credit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Tire Co. v. Chesapeake Finance & Credit Co., 4 Balt. C. Rep. 565 (Md. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

FRANK, J.

Most of tho facts in this case are uncontroverted. George Juratovae bought a second-hand Chevrolet car from the Park Circle Motor Company on February 18th, 1926, under a conditional sales agreement, whereby the vendor retained title until all payments should be made thereunder. The agreement contained a stipulation that any “equipment, repairs or accessories placed upon said car shall * * * become a component part thereof and included in the terms of this agreement.” On the same day this agreement was assigned to the defendant herein and duly recorded. The conditional vendee took possession of the car and used it for his own purposes.

On March 23, 1926, Juratovae went to the place of business of the plaintiff in Baltimore Ci(y and purchased from the plaintiff two Corduroy tires, Nos. 706,427 and 701,238, likewise under a conditional sales contract of that date. At the same time he executed a conditional sales contract and chattel mortgage. The conditional sales contract applies to the two tires, fully describing them. The chattel mortgage was stated to be upon a Chevrolet automobile, model 1923 tonring car, engine No. 30,834, and this is the automobile above referred to. A memorandum of the conditional contract of sales of the tires was duly recorded as provided by law, but the chattel mortgage upon the automobile was defectively executed and was never recorded. As together they constituted one paper, one of the questions raised by the defendant herein is as to the sufficiency of the memorandum so recorded.

The testimony further shows that Juratovae did not have the automobile with him at the time of the purchase of the tires, — they were simply delivered to him at the store of the plaintiff and were by him carried away, and his testimony is that some time later he took off two of the tires that were on the automobile at the time of its conditional purchase, replacing them with the two new tires bought from the plaintiff. He was soon in default in his payments under both of these conditional sales contracts, and a few days after the tires claimed by the plaintiff were placed on the car, and after they had been run only two hundred and fifty miles, and were still substantially new, the defendant repossessed the car under the terms of the conditional sales contract under which it had been sold. Although the testimony is in conflict on this point, I find, as a fact, that at the time of such repossession, the tires purchased from the plaintiff were upon the car. The defendant caused the car thus equipped to be taken to the garage of the Park Circle Motor Company, certain repairs to be made upon it, resold it and retained the sales price.

It is also undisputed that, prior to such resale, the plaintiff notified the defendant of its claim to the tires in question, demanded the return thereof, which demand was refused.

Upon this state of facts the question involved is as to whether or not tlie plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant the value of the tires at the time the car was taken by the defendant. Elaborate and carefully prepared briefs have been submitted on both sides in this case. The question involved is said to be of great importance to the parties and, although the amounts involved in similar controversies, just as in this case, were stated to be below the original jurisdiction of a Court of record, the frequency of the occasions upon which the question at issue is presented, has caused conn[566]*566sel to make a request that a written statement of the decision herein bo made. I shall merely announce my conclusions with as much brevity as possible.

The plaintiff in recording the memorandum of the conditional sales contract for the tires had done all that the law requires to preserve title in itself. Finance, &c., Co. vs. Truck Co., 145 Md. 94, 101. The chattel mortgage to it of the automobile, although defective, was an entirely separable portion of the paper including it and the conditional sales contract for the tires. It was fully and completely executed as respects the conditional sales contract portion thereof and a memorandum of that portion fully describing the tires (Salabes vs. Castleberg, 98 Md. 645, 652) and containing the other requisites prescribed by the statute was duly recorded. Unless, therefore, the facts of this case involve some circumstance which deprives the plaintiff of the title thus retained, the provisions of the contract should be given legal effect. There was no notice to the plaintiff, nor is there any evidence that it had actual knowledge, of the intention of Juratovac to use the tires upon the automobile to which the defendant had title under the conditional sales contract thereof. It is true that the defective chattel mortgage taken by the plaintiff was upon this automobile. Inasmuch, however, as this chattel mortgage was merely taken as additional security, it would be imposing an undue burden upon the plaintiff to charge it with the duty of inquiring as to whether or not these tires were to be used upon this particular car and then to examine the record as to the title to the car. In addition, it appears from the evidence in the case that, after the defendant repossessed, but before it resold, the automobile, it was offered the tires that had been upon the car at the time of the conditional sale, but refused to accept them and insisted upon retaining the newer tires claimed by the plaintiff.

First. The defendant claims the right to the new tires, first, upon the theory of accession or merger or confusion; that the tires having become an integral part of the automobile and the tires being incapable of use except in- connection with some automobile, and the automobile being unable to be run without tires, thereafter the tires could not be separated from the automobile without making both the tires and automobile useless. The answer to this contention is to be found, first, in the fact that the original tires upon the car, which constituted a part thereof at the time it was conditionally sold, were offered to the defendant and could readily have been replaced by the defendant upon the automobile, and this was all the security upon which the defendant could count. And in the second place, the fact is clear that tires, particularly of the size of those suitable for Chevrolet cars, are available for use upon literally thousands of similar cars. It does not seem to me, therefore, that the doctrine of accession, merger or confusion can be applied herein. The case is entirely different from that of something which after it is attached to the car becomes an inseparable part thereof, as, for example, paint that has been put upon it, as was suggested in the argument. Ample authority for the propositions above stated can be found. In the case of Clark vs. Wells, 45 Vt. 4, which is a leading case upon this subject, it was held that wheels, axles and whiffle trees furnished for a stage coach under a hire agreement did not pass to the purchaser of the entire coach. To similar effect are: A. Meister & Sons Co. vs. Harrison, 56 Cal. Appeals, 679, 681, &c. Hawlman vs. Dotan Foundry, 82 So. 642 (Ala. 1919). Netzorg vs. National Supply Co., 18-28 Ohio Circuit decision, p. 112. Clarke vs. Johnson, 43 Nevada 359. Alley vs. Adams, 44 Ala. 609. 1 C. J. 384, Sec. 40.

In Roberts vs. Robertson, 141 Md. 37 at 49, the Court of Appeals held that the plaintiff's claim of title reserved under a conditional sales agreement of cans did not extend to the contents of the cans which had been manufactured from materials furnished by other persons. The opening of the cans in order to remove the contents would render the cans of little value.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-tire-co-v-chesapeake-finance-credit-co-mdcityctbalt-1927.