Motor Finance Co. v. Noyes

28 A.2d 235, 139 Me. 159, 1942 Me. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 29, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 A.2d 235 (Motor Finance Co. v. Noyes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Motor Finance Co. v. Noyes, 28 A.2d 235, 139 Me. 159, 1942 Me. LEXIS 50 (Me. 1942).

Opinion

Manser, J.

This case was heard by a Referee with right of exceptions reserved. To his report, filed in Superior Court, in favor of the plaintiff, objection was made by defendant that the correct legal principles governing the factual situation were not applied. The presiding Justice upheld the objection, and the report was not accepted. The case then came forward upon exceptions by the plaintiff to the ruling of the presiding Justice. Neither side disagrees with the Referee’s findings as to facts.

The case arose out of an automobile accident involving a truck operated by the defendant, Noyes, and an automobile operated by one Lloyd Hersom. Noyes was insured against liability of this character. His insurance carrier made an investigation, negotiated with Hersom, and arrived at a settlement by payment of $650. In the instant case the Referee found, and it is conceded that the defendant was legally responsible for the damages arising from the accident, and was accordingly in the position of a tort feasor. Hersom executed a general release [161]*161from all causes of action and especially as to the particular automobile accident. The settlement was completed November 8,1937. Almost a month later, on December 3,1937, the present plaintiff telegraphed the insurance carrier that it held a conditional bill of sale on the Hersom car and desired to be recognized in any settlement. Upon the evidence, the Referee found that neither the defendant nor his insurance carrier had any actual knowledge of the conditional sales contract at the time of the settlement.

It appears that Hersom purchased a new Ford car in the spring of 1937, receiving credit of $250 for a used car taken in exchange. A conditional sales agreement was entered into, requiring payment by Hersom of $491 in monthly installments of $25 each. These payments were regularly made for the four months intervening up to the time of the accident. The Referee found that Hersom, the conditional sales vendee, was then lawfully in possession of the automobile, but ruled that the release executed by Hersom, although intended to cover all damages to the automobile, did not constitute a defense in this action brought by the assignee of the conditional sales contract. There is no claim of fraud, collusion or bad faith in the transaction.

The issue, therefore, is whether, in the absence of fraud, a settlement with and release by a conditional vendee in lawful possession of an automobile, which settlement and release cover all damages occasioned to such automobile by a tort feasor, operates as a full discharge of the liability of the latter and bars a subsequent recovery by the conditional vendor.

The Referee ruled that the conditional vendor, not being a party to the release, was not bound thereby; that while the tort feasor had no actual knowledge of the conditional sale, he was charged with constructive notice thereof because the sales agreement had been properly recorded; that the conditional vendor, under the rule in Maine, held title to the automobile and occupied, in legal effect, the relationship of mortgagee so far as the rights of the third parties were concerned; that a [162]*162mortgagee, although not in possession, is entitled to recover to the extent of his interest in the chattel, and such right is superior to that of the conditional vendee and is not affected by his settlement with the tort feasor.

Starting with Chancellor Kent, the general rule is stated thus:

“As every bailee is in the lawful possession of the subject of the bailment, and may justly be considered, notwithstanding all the nice criticisms to the contrary, as having a special or qualified property in it for the protection of that possession; and as he is responsible to the bailor in a greater or less degree for the custody of it, he, as well as the bailor, may have an action against a third person for an injury to the thing; and he that begins the action has the preference; and a judgment obtained by one of them is a good bar to the action of the other.” 2 Kent Comm., 585.

This is practically the universal doctrine and has been uniformly followed by our Court. In Little v. Fossett, 34 Me., 545, 56 Am. Dec., 671, it was held that a bailee is entitled to damages commensurate with the injuries sustained to the subject of the bailment, and holds the balance beyond his own interest in trust for the general owner. Vining v. Baker, 53 Me., 544; Kerr v. Tea Co., 129 Me., 48, 149 A., 618; Harrington v. King, 121 Mass., 269; Thayer v. Hutchinson, 13 Vt., 504, 37 Am. Dec., 607; 6 Am. Jur., Bailments, §§302-304.

The Referee recognized the rule as thus adjudicated, but appears to have been of opinion that it was without application to the status of a conditional vendee. This presents the question: Is a bailee without a shadow of title in a better position than a conditional sales vendee, who has a special property interest in the chattel which entitles him to full and complete title by the payment of the balance of the sale price?

Our Court held in B. & M. R. R. Co. v. Warrior Co., 76 Me., 251 at 259:

[163]*163“It is true that an action cannot be maintained unless the plaintiff has an interest in the subject matter of the suit, but he may do so when he is not interested to the full extent of the damages to be recovered. Such are the familiar cases of injury to property in which there is a general and special owner, as bailor and bailee, consignor and consignee, principal and factor. In such cases the action may not be brought in the names of the two jointly, but may in the name of either.” ...
“as the injury was the result of a single wrongful act to the whole property the damage could not be apportioned but must all be recovered in that one action, the judgment in which would be conclusive against any suit by the general owner.”

In Stotts v. Puget Sound Co., 94 Wash., 339, 162 P. 519, L. R. A., 1917 D, 214, the reason that the rules governing conditional vendees and bailees are the same in this connection is well stated as follows:

“While having no element of title, the conditional sales vendee is bound to keep the property secure, and to pay its value to the vendor. The quantum of the title is the same in the vendor as in the bailor, and the want of title is the same in the vendee as in the bailee. The liability of the trespasser is the same, his only concern being that he shall not be put to the hazard of two recoveries.”

The general rule established by the great weight of judicial authority is that either the conditional vendor or vendee can prosecute an action for injury to the property by a third party and a judgment secured by either is a bar to an action by the other. In case of damage to a motor vehicle sold under a conditional contract of sale, the vendee has the right to maintain an action against a third person for injuries to the machine. The position of the vendee is certainly no less than that of a bailee who, having possession of a motor vehicle, though with[164]*164out title thereto, may maintain such an action, as a presumption of ownership attends the possession, and a tort feasor cannot dispute the ownership so presumed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 A.2d 235, 139 Me. 159, 1942 Me. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/motor-finance-co-v-noyes-me-1942.