Northern Finance Corp. v. Meinhardt

226 N.W. 168, 209 Iowa 895
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1929
DocketNo. 39567.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 226 N.W. 168 (Northern Finance Corp. v. Meinhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Finance Corp. v. Meinhardt, 226 N.W. 168, 209 Iowa 895 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

Favíele, J.

On October 1, 1925, Tyrholm & Company, of Waseca, Minnesota, sold the automobile in question to the Creditors Protective Bureau of Minneapolis. The said Creditors Protective Bureau of Minneapolis was a trade name for an individual by the name of Lesselyoung. The car was delivered to the purchaser, and a written contract entered into between the parties on said date. The purchaser resided in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the car was either delivered in Minneapolis or was taken there at or about the time of the purchase. The written contract evidencing the sale was assigned to the appellee, the Northern Finance Corporation, on the same *897 date it was executed. The contract and the assignment thereof were duly filed in the office of the city clerk of Minneapolis on or about -October 8th. The said contract contained the following provision:

"The title to the ear and extra equipment, accessories and repairs being the property above described, shall not pass by delivery to the buyer, but shall remain vested in and be the property of the seller or assigns until the purchase price has been fully paid.”

In said contract the buyer agreed:

* * not to remove the property from the county where the buyer now resides save for the purpose of making a continuous trip, the termination of which is to be in said county;”

. It was also provided that the seller might exercise certain specified rights under the contract # if said car is removed or attempted to be removed from the county in which the buyer now resides without the written consent of the seller.”

It appears that, sometime previous to the month of February, 1926, one Ellinghouse, an agent and employee of the said Creditors Protective Bureau of Minneapolis, appeared with said car at Carroll, Iowa. The car was kept in storage in a garage in Carroll. The storage charges were unpaid. Subsequently, the proprietor of said garage proceeded to foreclose his lien on said ear for said storage, as provided by Chapter 457 of the Code, 1924. The property was bid in at sheriff’s sale by a third party, who in turn sold the same to the appellant. Subsequently, this action for replevin was instituted.

I. It is contended by the appellant that thé written instrument in question was a chattel mortgage, and not a conditional sales contract. The contract clearly and explicitly provides that the title to the car shall remain vested in and be the property of the seller until the purchase price has been fully paid. The instrument is distinct in character from one where there is an absolute sale, with title fully vested in the buyer, and :with a mortgage back to the seller to secure the purchase price. Budlong v. Cottrell, 64 Iowa 234; Wright v. Barnard Bros., 89 Iowa 166; Bentley Olmstead v. Snyder & Son, 101 Iowa 1; Max *898 well Mot. Sales Corp. v. Bankers Mtg. & Sec. Co., 195 Iowa 384; Miller & Kizer v. Des Moines City R. Co., 196 Iowa 1033; Ohio Sav. Bank & Tr. Co. v. Schneider, 202 Iowa 938; Hart v. Wood, 202 Iowa 58.

. We bold that it was a .conditional sales contract, and not a chattel mortgage.

The law of Minnesota is presumed to be the same as the law of this state, unless the contrary appears. There is no showing that the law of Minnesota differs from that of Iowa in this regard, and under the record, we think, it sufficiently appears that it is the same.

II. The contract being a conditional sales contract, it appears to have been properly executed and filed under the laws of the state of Minnesota pertaining to such contracts.

III. It does not appear in the record that the automobile .was brought from the state of Minnesota into the state of Iowa with the knowledge or consent of the seller or its assignee, the appellee. The buyer covenanted not to remove the property from the comfiy where he resided in the state of Minnesota. The automobile, however, was brought to the state of Iowa, and placed in a garage, where storage charges ac-Code Section 10345, which is a part of Chapter 457, is as follows: erued thereon.

“Livery and feed stable keepers, herders, feeders, and keepers of stock and of places for the storage of motor vehicles shall have a lien on all property coming into their hands, as such, for their charges and the expense of keeping, but such lien shall be subject to all prior liens of record.”

The lien created by this section of the statute is of the class that is commonly designated as a possessory lien. It is available to the keeper of a place for the storage of motor vehicles on a motor vehicle coming into his hands, for the charges and expense of keeping the same.

At this point, the question is whether this statutory lien, created in favor of the garage keeper for storage of a motor vehicle, is available as against the owner of said ear under a conditional sales contract executed and of record in a foreign *899 state, but not recorded in Iowa, where the car has been removed to this state without the knowledge or consent of the conditional sales vendor. The case presents an entirely different question from the one in State v. Kelsey, 206 Iowa 356, and State v. Jennings, 206 Iowa 361, wherein the question of forfeiture of an automobile used in violation of the criminal laws of this state was involved. The question here is one between rival claimants to the property. The question is analogous to that involved in cases where a chattel mortgage has been given and recorded in one state and the property is subsequently removed to a foreign state.

In the recent case of First Nat. Bank v. Ripley, 204 Iowa 590, we considered a situation where the owner of personal property gave a chattel mortgage thereon in the state of Minnesota, where he then resided. The mortgage was duly recorded, and subsequently transferred to the plaintiff in the action. Later, the mortgagor removed the property to Lyon County, Iowa, without the consent of the mortgagee, and thereafter gave a chattel mortgage on certain of the personal property covered by the former chattel mortgage. The latter mortgage was duly recorded in Lyon County. The question presented to this court involved priority of said liens. "We reviewed the authorities, and held that the lien of the mortgage executed in Minnesota was senior and superior to that of the mortgage executed in Iowa.

The instant case involves a conditional sales contract. The rule in respect to conditional sales where the property is taken to a foreign state is thus stated in Goodrich on Conflict of Laws, Section 150:

"The validity of a conditional sale, by which a seller retains title until payment of the purchase price by the buyer, is governed by the law of the place of delivery of the chattel to the buyer. If the seller’s title is valid, it will be recognized in another state as against the buyer or his creditors or assigns. By the better view, it is immaterial that the property was removed to the second state with the seller’s consent.

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226 N.W. 168, 209 Iowa 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-finance-corp-v-meinhardt-iowa-1929.