Pacific Finance Corp. v. Gherna

287 P. 304, 36 Ariz. 509, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 214
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1930
DocketCivil No. 2910.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 287 P. 304 (Pacific Finance Corp. v. Gherna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Finance Corp. v. Gherna, 287 P. 304, 36 Ariz. 509, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 214 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, C. J.

Some time prior to the fifteenth day of December, 1927, the Gibbs Motor Company of Tucson, Arizona, came into the possession of a certain Chevrolet coupe carrying a foreign license. On the date named, it sold the coupe to Louis Gherna, hereinafter called defendant, upon a conditional sales contract in the usual form, part of the purchase price being paid down and the balance to he paid in installments of $38.31 per month. Shortly after the execution of this contract the motor company assigned its interest in the contract to Pacific Finance Corporation, a corporation, hereinafter called plaintiff, and thereafter went out of business. Defendant ran the car until about the 1st of March, 1928, when he was informed by a representative of the state highway department that he must not use it further without taking out an Arizona license, which he could not obtain without proof of title, requiring, since the car was of foreign origin, a tracing of title in the state of original registration. Defendant therefore appealed to the plaintiff, the *512 successor in interest of the defunct motor company, to secure him a certificate of title so that he could obtain a license, and plaintiff gave him the following letter:

"I wish to advise that Certificate of Title was referred to this company by the Gibbs Motor Company when your contract was purchased, and that we have in turn filed with the Arizona State Highway Department for an Arizona Title. Up to the present time, we have not received said title, and I would suggest that you show this letter to any officer who may stop you on account of said title. If it is not received within a reasonable time, kindly notify us at this office.”

Defendant exhibited this letter to the highway department, but was unable to secure either a certificate of title or license thereon. He continued making his monthly payments, appealing at frequent intervals to plaintiff for a certificate of title, until the last payment became due, and then tendered it on condition that the certificate be furnished him. Plaintiff declined to comply with his demand, and, defendant still refusing to pay the last installment unless the certificate was given him, plaintiff brought suit in replevin to recover the car. Defendant answered with a general denial and then counterclaimed, setting up his purchase of the car from the Gibbs Motor Company, the assignment of the contract of-sale to plaintiff, his payment of all installments up to the last one, his demand for the certificate of title, and the seizure and sale of the car by plaintiff, alleging that by such seizure plaintiff had breached the contract of sale', and praying judgment for the value of the car and its use. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of defendant for $783.10, being the amount paid by him on the car; whereupon plaintiff brought the matter before us for review.

*513 Appellants’ abstract of record filed herein fails to comply with the rules of this court in that it is not indexed at all, so that it is difficult for us to determine the exact state of the record; but, since the case involves a question of law of some general interest, we have considered it as best we may, instead of dismissing the appeal.

There are some six assignments of error which raise three questions of procedure and one on the merits. We consider the latter first. It is whether or not defendant was justified in refusing to make the final payment on the automobile in question until he received a certificate of title therefor. The “certificate of title” referred to, judging from the evidence and the argument of counsel, presumably means the certificate issued by the state highway department of Arizona for the purpose of establishing ownership of an automobile. Its general effect, when properly issued and indorsed, is to establish a prima facie title to the automobile in the person named in the certificate.

Under the common law, a sale of personal property did not necessarily involve the giving of a written evidence of ownership, as the title of the vendor, whatever it was, ordinarily passed upon the delivery of the possession of the property to the vendee. 35 Cyc. 305. Defendant could claim no right to receive a certificate of title by reason of the common law. The conditional sales contract herein is silent as to any requirement that the vendor of the automobile in question should furnish the certificate, so that it could not be demanded as a matter of express contract. It is urged, however, that the statutes of Arizona, properly construed, require the vendor of an automobile, upon the delivery of possession to the vendee, to furnish a certificate of title to the latter, whether the transaction be a completed *514 sale with passage of title or a conditional sale, with title reserved.

In 1927 the legislature of Arizona adopted chapter 2, Fourth Special Session of 1927, commonly known as the highway code. This, on its face and by its title, was intended to provide a complete code regarding the public highways of the state, and regulating the use of automobiles thereon. In said chapter certain regulations were made concerning the use and sale of automobiles within the state of Arizona. These regulations, so far as material to the present case, read as follows:

“Section 8. Every owner of a motor vehicle, trailer or semi-trailer intended to be operated upon any highway in this State shall, before the same is so operated, apply to the office of the vehicle division located in the county within the State of Arizona of which the owner of said motor vehicle shall be a resident, for and obtain the registration thereof. This section shall not apply to farm tractors, road rollers, and road machinery temporarily operated or moved upon the highway or to an owner permitted to operate a vehicle under the special provisions relating to lien holders, manufacturers, dealers and nonresident.
“Section 9. ... "When a vehicle, for which registration is applied, is a specially constructed, reconstructed, or foreign vehicle, such fact shall be stated in the application. The owner of every foreign vehicle which has been registered theretofore outside of this State shall exhibit to the vehicle division the certificate of title and registration card or other evidence, of such former registration or such other evidence as will satisfy the vehicle division that the applicant is the lawful owner or possessor of the vehicle. . . .
“Section 11. (a) The vehicle division upon registering a vehicle, and npon the payment of the annual license fee and the title registration fees, herein provided for, and the payment of the personal property tax therein for the current year (unless such personal property tax is secured by real estate assessed to the *515 owner within such county) shall issue to the owner a registration card and a certificate of title.....
“Section 17.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 P. 304, 36 Ariz. 509, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-finance-corp-v-gherna-ariz-1930.