Raymond Bros. Impact Pulverizer Co. v. Thomas

294 P. 219, 159 Wash. 550, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 727
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1930
DocketNo. 22340. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 294 P. 219 (Raymond Bros. Impact Pulverizer Co. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond Bros. Impact Pulverizer Co. v. Thomas, 294 P. 219, 159 Wash. 550, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 727 (Wash. 1930).

Opinions

Main, J.

— This was an action in replevin to recover tbe possession of certain machinery. At tbe time tbe action was instituted, tbe plaintiff filed a bond and took possession of tbe property. By answer tbe defendant asserted title thereto. Tbe cause was tried to tbe court without a jury, and resulted in findings of fact from which tbe court'concluded that the title to tbe property was in tbe defendant, and ordered its return, or if this was not done, that the defendant would *551 be entitled to judgment against the plaintiff in the sum of $1,770. From the judgment entered in accordance with the findings and conclusions, the plaintiff appeals.

The appellant is a corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Illinois, having its principal place of business in the city of Chicago. The respondent did business in the city of Seattle under the trade name of The Thomas Company. October 6, 1927, the appellant sold to the respondent the machinery in question upon what purports to be a conditional sale contract. The purchase price was $1,770, of which $885 was paid in cash, the balance to become due sixty days after shipment. After the contract was executed, the machinery was shipped and subsequently installed in the respondent’s plant in Seattle. The second payment was not made when due, or at all. Thereafter, as above stated, the appellant began this action, filed a bond and took possession of the property.

The contract contains this provision:

“The title and right of possession to the machinery herein specified remains in the company until all payments hereunder (including deferred payments and notes or renewals thereof, if any) shall have been made in cash, and it is agreed that the said machinery shall remain the personal property of the company whatever may be the mode of its attachment to realty or otherwise, until fully paid for in cash. The purchaser shall take such legal steps as may be required by law for the preservation of the company’s title as herein provided, and in the event of the default by the purchaser in making any of said payments when due, as above provided, the full amount of said sums shall, at. the election of the company, become immediately due and payable, in which event the company or its agents or representatives shall have the right to take possession of said equipment or materials, wherever found, without process of law, and shall not be held liable for such seizure and the company shall seize and retake possession of said equipment or materials, *552 or any part thereof, and shall sell the same or otherwise and account for the proceeds thereof, all upon such notice and at such time as may be required by the provision of any statutes of the state where said equipment or materials may then be located, relating to the conditional sales of personal property applicable thereto and the respective rights and interests of the company and the purchaser in and to said equipment or materials, or any part thereof, so seized shall be determined by the provisions of said statutes then in force. Should there be in force in the state where said equipment or material so seized may then be located, no statute relating to the conditional sales of personal property, then the company may, at its election, upon written notice to the purchaser, deposited in the mails ten (10) days prior thereto addressed to the purchaser at his last known address, sell said equipment or materials or any part thereof, at public or private sale, and at which sale it shall be optional with the company to bid for and purchase said equipment or materials, or any part thereof. The company shall retain so much of the proceeds of such sale necessary to satisfy any balance remaining due it as aforesaid, together with the cost of such removal and sale, and any excess shall be paid to the purchaser. Should the proceeds of such sale not cover the balance remaining due the com-, pany, together with the cost of removal and sale, the purchaser shall pay the deficiency to the company forthwith after such sale. No judgments recovered by the company against the purchaser for unpaid installments shall have the effect of vesting title to the equipment or materials herein specified in the purchaser, until such judgment shall have been paid in full. ’ ’

The principal question upon this appeal is whether the contract, which purports to be one of conditional sale, was, by reason of its provisions, in fact a chattel mortgage. If the contract was, in fact, a chattel mortgage by reason of its provisions, then the judgment of the trial court should be sustained; on .the other hand, if it was one of conditional sale, then • the judgment should be reversed. From the excerpt *553 above quoted, it appears that the title to the property was to remain in the appellant until the purchase price thereof was fully paid, and in case of default the appellant had the right to retake possession.

After repossession the contract provides two methods of sale: One, in those states where the statutes relative to the conditional sales of personal property provide, after taking possession thereof, for notice and fixing the time for sale, and also provide what the respective rights and interests of the parties shall be in the equipment or material or the proceeds thereof after such sale; the other method of sale provided in the contract is to be adopted where the machinery is located, at the time of repossession, in a state where there is “no statute relating to the conditional sales of personal property.”

In making the statement, “no statute relating to the conditional sales of personal property,” reference, of course, was made to a statute or statutes similar to those which had just previously been mentioned as fixing notice, time, and the rights of the parties to the equipment or material or the proceeds thereof. In this state there is no statute touching the matter of notice, time, or the respective rights of the parties to the equipment or material or the proceeds thereof, when it has been repossessed and sold under a conditional sales contract. The property in question being located in this state, therefore, the second provision of the contract, or that applying to states in which there is no statute relating to the conditional sales of personal property, is controlling.

Looking to this provision, it is specified that, when possession is taken, ten days’ notice of the sale shall be given to the purchaser; the seller, the appellant, retains the proceeds of the sale necessary to satisfy any balance due upon the contract, together with the cost *554 of such removal and sale, and any excess shall he paid to the purchaser. Immediately following is this:

‘ ‘ Should the proceeds of such sale not cover the balance remaining due the company, together with the cost of removal and sale, the purchaser shall pay the deficiency to the company forthwith after such sale.”

By this provision, if the property should not sell for enough to pay the balance due, together with0 the costs incident to the sale and the retaking possession thereof, then the purchaser remains obligated to pay the balance. This would establish the relation of debtor and creditor between the parties after the repossession and sale. Under the cases of

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Bluebook (online)
294 P. 219, 159 Wash. 550, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-bros-impact-pulverizer-co-v-thomas-wash-1930.