Nicewarner v. Alston

228 S.W.2d 872, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1987
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1950
Docket6037
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 228 S.W.2d 872 (Nicewarner v. Alston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicewarner v. Alston, 228 S.W.2d 872, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1987 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

On December 18, 1948, the Chevrolet Motor Division of General Motors Corpo^ ration, as manufacturer, sold and delivered to E. D. Mahan, an automobile dealer at DeLeon, Texas, a Chevrolet automobile and delivered to Mahan the usual manufacturer’s certificate as evidence of the title. Thereafter, the date not shown by the record, Mahan sold and delivered the automobile to W. V. Young, an automobile dealer at Abilene, and as evidence-of the title, he delivered the manufacturer’s certificate to the purchaser. On January 3, 1949, Young sold the automobile to; O. A. Alston, an automobile dealer , at Morton in Cochran County. In payment for the car Alston gave to Young a draft upon the First State Bank of Morton for the sum of $1950, to which the manufacturer’s certificate was attached. Young deposited the draft for collection in the Citizens’ National Bank of Abilene and the bank cleared it through the First National Bank in Dallas. The draft, with the certificate attached, reached the First State Bank of Morton on January 8, 1949 and was paid by the bank on that day. On January 5, 1949, two days after Alston purchased the car and three days before the draft reached the First State Bank at Morton, Alston , sold the automobile to the appellees, E. L. Winkles and his wife, Reta. When the sale was agreed upon Alston went with Winkles and his wife to the Tax Collect- or’s office at Morton to have the car registered through the State Highway Department and Winkles filled out the customary application therefor and delivered it'to the office deputy. She received it and then called for the manufacturer’s certificate for the purpose of sending the application and the certificate to the Highway Department at Austin as a basis for the regular registration certificate. The deputy collector was informed by Alston that he would bring it to her in a few days and she thereupon attached to the application a slip of paper upon which she noted “Hold for mgfc. cert. Fees paid,” and laid them aside pending delivery to her by Alston, of the Manufacturer’s certificate. The car delivered by Alston to appellees, Winkles and his wife, and they took it to their home at Brownfield where they kept it and used it until February 17, 1949, when it was taken from them by the sheriff of Cochran County under a writ of sequestration sued out by appellant, J. B. Nicewarner, in this suit.

The record shows that on January 8, 1949, the day upon which the First State Bank accepted and paid the draft given by Alston to Young for the car, Alston executed to the bank and appellant, J. B. Nicewarner, who was connected with the First State Bank, a chattel mortgage on the Chevrolet automobile in question and .another automobile, to secure his note to the bank of that date, payable January 18, 1949, in the sum of $4420. The principal of the note consisted of the amount due on the draft for $1950 given by Alston to Young and -the purchase price of another automobile for which Alston had drawn another draft on the bank. The note and chattel mortgage were afterwards transferred and assigned to appellant by the bank. The note was not paid when it matured but, on February 15, 1949, Alston paid $1000 on it and on February 16, 1949, appellant filed this suit against Alston, Mahan, Young and appellants Winkles and his wife, and, on the same day, he .sued out the writ of sequestration under which, on the next day, the sheriff of *874 Cochran County took possession of the automobile.

In his second amended original petition, upon which the case was tried, appellant set out the facts concerning the various sales of the automobile, the execution of the note by Alston, his failure to pay it, and alleged that appellees were not innocent purchasers of the car because when they purchased it from Alston, they did not demand nor receive the manufacturer’s certificate or any other written evidence of title. He alleged further that title to the car legally passed to him because the manufacturer’s certificate, which was the only evidence of the title, was attached to the draft which was paid and that, while the certificate did not contain an endorsement of the various sales of the car, its being attached to the draft was tantamount to such an endorsement and that the endorsement required by the statute was accomplished by the attachment of the certificate to the draft and to the note executed by Alston and the retention by appellant and the bank of the note and manufacturer’s certificate. He prayed for judgment against Alston for the balance due on the note, for foreclosure of the chattel mortgage lien and his asserted pledgee’s lien upon the automobile and the evidence of title thereto and for general relief.

The pleadings of the defendants in the case are lengthy and we do not deem it necessary to analyze them. Suffice it to say that proper issues were drawn, and the case was submitted to a jury upon special issues. In answer to the special issues the jury found that Alston gave to appellant the note of $4420, the chattel mortgage and the manufacturer’s certificate in connection with, and as security ■ for, the loan of $4420; that Alston paid Young for the car by giving to Young the draft with the manufacturer’s certificate attached; and that Alston had not received nor had in his possession the manufacturer’s certificate at the time he- sold the automobile ' to appellees.

While the note was made payable to the bank, and the chattel mortgage was made to both the appellant and the bank, the transaction seems really to have been, and was treated by all of the parties as, one between Alston and appellant, Nice-warner, insofar as those two documents were concerned.

Before the case was submitted to the jury appellees presented and urged a motion for an instructed verdict in their favor which was overruled. After the verdict was returned appellant urged a motion for judgment to be entered in his favor and appellees presented and urged a mo^tion for judgment non obstante veredicto. Appellant’s motion was overruled and ap-pellees’ motion for judgment was granted by the court. Judgment was entered in favor of appellant against Alston for the balance remaining due on the note but it denied him foreclosure of his chattel mortgage lien, or any other lien upon the automobile and decreed to appellees the title and possession of the automobile. Appellant filed and urged a motion for a new trial which was overruled and he entered proper exception to the judgment and gave notice of appeal which he has duly perfected.

Appellant contends the court erred in rendering judgment for appellees because, first, Alston did not receive the manufacturer’s certificate when he purchased the car; that he did not have any title to it when he attempted to convey it to appellees; and appellees therefore could not rely upon the sale as made to them by him. Secondly, he contends that the act of attaching the manufacturer’s certificate to the draft was equivalent to noting on the certificate itself the lien created by the transaction between appellant and Alston and gave constructive notice of such lien to the appellees; and, thirdly, that appellees relied solely upon the affirmative defense that they were innocent purchasers and they waived and abandoned such defense by failing to request a finding of the jury thereon.

Under his first contention appellant asserts that Alston never at any time became the owner of the automobile; that he had no title to it; and therefore he could not convey it to the appellees. In support of this contention, he cites us to such

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W.2d 872, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicewarner-v-alston-texapp-1950.