Ruddy v. Oregon Automobile Credit Corp.

174 P.2d 603, 179 Or. 688, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 195
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 174 P.2d 603 (Ruddy v. Oregon Automobile Credit Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruddy v. Oregon Automobile Credit Corp., 174 P.2d 603, 179 Or. 688, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 195 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This is a suit for an accounting brought by plaintiff, S. L. Ruddy, against defendant, Oregon Automobile Credit Corporation, formerly Oregon Bond and Mortgage Company, a corporation. Prom á decree in favor of the plaintiff, defendant.has appealed.

After concluding the introduction of evidence on the question whether plaintiff was entitled to an accounting, an amended complaint was filed. In it plaintiff alleges that, during all the times therein mentioned, he was engaged in the business of buying and selling motor vehicles in the city of Portland, Oregon; that the Oregon Automobile Credit Corporation, then known as the Oregon Bond and Mortgage Company, was a corporation engaged, among other things, in the business of lending money and purchasing conditional sales contracts on motor vehicles; that Sandy Sales and Loan Company was a corporation engaged, among other things, in the business of lending money on motor vehicles as agent for the defendant, and that A- J. Muir was'the managing officer of the Sandy Sales and Loan Company. It is then alleged:

'•■“V. That during the year 1937, the plaintiff and. the defendant had a course of dealing with *690 respect to motor vehicles, wherein and whereby the plaintiff purchased used and wrecked motor vehicles from various third persons and repaired and reconditioned them for resale, and wherein and whereby the defendant, acting through the said Sandy Sales and Loan Company, and/or A. J. Muir as its agent, loaned the plaintiff certain sums of money upon such motor vehicles and took as security therefor the title to said motor vehicles as evidenced by the official certificate of title, and wherein and whereby said motor vehicles were left in the possession of the plaintiff, and wherein and whereby such motor vehicles, with one exception, were subsequently sold under the circumstances hereinafter set forth.
“VI. That pursuant to said course of dealing, the plaintiff did during said period purchase the following vehicles and repaired and reconditioned the same for resale, and borrowed from the defendant through its aforesaid agent or agents on the dates set opposite the respective vehicles, the amounts likewise set opposite thereto: * * * [Here follows a list of eleven motor vehicles and the respective amount borrowed on each].
‘ ‘VII. That thereafter all of said motor vehicles, save and except the above described 1936 Oldsmobile were sold by the Sandy Sales and Loan Company; that each and all of such sales' were subject to the control and approval of the defendant and in each instance defendant received the proceeds of such sales, whether in the form of conditional sales contracts, cash, or otherwise, in sums and amounts largely exceeding the aforesaid loans by defendant to plaintiff; that at the time of each of such sales and the receipt by the defendant of the proceeds thereof, the defendant had knowledge of the source of such proceeds and of plaintiff’s interest therein.”

It is further alleged that the. defendant sold the 1936 Oldsmobile mentioned in the preceding- para *691 graph for an amount unknown to plaintiff and retained the entire proceeds of such sale; that the defendant, upon receiving the proceeds from the sales of the automobiles referred to in the amended complaint “cancelled the loans which plaintiff had received thereon but failed and refused, with respect to all of said vehicles, to pay the plaintiff the excess realized on each and all of said vehicles over the amount of the loans to plaintiff thereon.” Plaintiff asks that defendant be required to render an accounting with respect to the transactions set forth in his amended complaint.

Defendant in its answer denies the material allegations of the amended complaint, except those relating to its incorporation and business in which it is engaged and the incorporation of Sandy Sales and Loan Company. Two affirmative defenses, one based on estoppel and the other on laches, are pleaded. The affirmative matter alleged in the answer was put in issue by plaintiff’s reply.

It was found by the circuit court that Sandy Sales and Loan Company was defendant’s agent in its dealing with plaintiff and based thereon a decree was entered in favor of plaintiff. Defendant asserts that this finding is not supported by the evidence.

The evidence discloses that Buddy, from 1925 to the first part of the year 1938, was engaged in buying wrecked cars, generally from insurance companies, repairing and reselling them. Prom 1928 to the latter part of 1935, most of the conditional sales contracts which Buddy received on cars sold by him were purchased by the defendant. In 1935 a dispute arose between defendant and Buddy concerning some of the contracts which the defendant was handling for *692 bjm and Euddy was advised by tbe defendant that it would not have any more business dealings with him. Shortly thereafter Euddy entered into an arrangement with Sandy Sales and Loan Company, through A; J. Muir, its manager, whereby that company would lend him money on the wrecked cars purchased by him to enable him to repair the same and act as his agent in selling them. Euddy, who had had an automobile dealer’s license up to and including the year 1936, did not renew it after appointing Sandy Sales -and Loan Company, which had such a license, his sales 'agent.-

In 1936 Muir organized the Sandy Sales ánd Loan Company. He was its principal stockholder and manager. All the business of the corporation was conducted by him. For 18 or 20 years prior to its incorporation Muir had been engaged in : buying and selling new and used automobiles. This business, which was very extensive, was thereafter conducted in- the name of the corporation. Approximately' sixty per cent of the business carried on by the defendant- was first with Muir and later with the corporation. It lent money to him and later to the corporation with which to. purchase and floor new and used motor vehicles. When a motor vehicle was sold by Muir or Sandy Sales and Loan Company on a conditional sales contract, the contract generally was bought by the defendant corporation, the dealer guaranteeing its payment.

The record is not entirely clear as to.tbe .number of motor vehicles sold by Sandy Sales and Loan Company-for the plaintiff during the year 1936. All; the vehicles involved in this suit were sold subsequent to 1936. .

When plaintiff purchased a wrecked' automobile, he' also-1■ received a certificate of title ■ théréfor eh- *693 dorsed on the back by the registered owner and' the legal owner, if any, with the space for dhe name of the new purchaser left blank. Then plaintiff would take this certificate of title, in the condition in which he received it, to Sandy Sales and Loan Company and borrow a certain sum of money on the-motor vehicle represented by it. In the first few transactions he had with that company, which are not involved in this proceeding, he gave a trust receipt on the motor vehicle to it, in addition to the certificate of title. On subsequent transactions only the certificate was delivered to the company. He gave the' company no note or other evidence of his indebtedness to it.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 603, 179 Or. 688, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruddy-v-oregon-automobile-credit-corp-or-1946.