Schoenfelds' Standard Furniture Co. v. Stoe

27 P.2d 564, 175 Wash. 201, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 932
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1933
DocketNo. 24723. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 564 (Schoenfelds' Standard Furniture Co. v. Stoe) 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
Schoenfelds' Standard Furniture Co. v. Stoe, 27 P.2d 564, 175 Wash. 201, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 932 (Wash. 1933).

Opinion

Steinert, J.—

This is a replevin action wherein plaintiff sues to recover certain household furniture sold under conditional sales contract, or, in the alternative, for its value. The cause was tried before the court without a jury. The court granted plaintiff judgment against defendants Stoe for the amount found to be due and owing on the contract, but held that plaintiff was estopped, by its acts, from asserting title to the property as against defendants Wilson. In the judgment, it was decreed that the title of the Wilsons to the property was superior to that of plaintiff, and that the Wilsons should recover from plaintiff their costs and disbursements to be taxed. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment in so far as it is unfavorable to it.

The facts present an unusual situation. It appears that, on October 19, 1929, Paul Stoe, Inc., a corporation, entered into a real estate contract with Leslie Walderon and Helen B. Walderon, his wife, wherein the former agreed to sell, and the latter agreed to purchase, certain real estate in the city of Seattle, for a price of $5,600, of which $500 was then paid in cash, $2,500 was to be paid by the assumption of an existing mortgage, and the balance was to be paid in monthly installments. Upon the lot was a newly-constructed, but as yet unfurnished, house, whose street number was 8254 Interlake avenue. Included in the contract was certain personal property, consisting of an electric range, electric water heater and inlaid linoleum. *203 The contract was filed for record as a real estate contract and also as a conditional sales contract.

Mrs. Walderon was at the time engaged, in a small way, in buying residence properties, equipping them with furniture and selling them as furnished houses. The appellant knew that Mrs. Walderon was engaged in that business.

As a part of the transaction under which the above real estate contract was executed, Paul Stoe, individually, and the Walderons also had an agreement under which Stoe was to purchase from appellant certain household furniture to be installed in the new house. The arrangement between Stoe and Mrs. Walderon was that Mrs. Walderon was to select the furniture and Stoe was to sign the conditional sales contract therefor, as vendee, and to make the payments thereon. In some way not fully disclosed by the record, Mrs. Walderon was ultimately to repay Stoe, or possibly Paul Stoe, Inc., for the furniture.

Acting under this arrangement, Mrs. Walderon went to appellant’s store on or about October 19,1929, and, with the assistance of one of appellant’s salesmen, selected the furniture involved in this action. Mrs. Walderon explained to the salesman that the furniture was to be installed in a house which she intended to sell as a furnished house, the same as she had done on former occasions when furniture had been purchased by her, under conditional sales contracts, from the same salesman. She further explained to the salesman the arrangement that she had with Stoe. After the furniture had been selected, Stoe signed the contract, which bore date October 22,1929; Mrs. Walderon was in no way named or mentioned therein. The contract gave Stoe’s address as 600 East 77th street, Seattle, which was his place of residence.

The furniture sold was covered by seven order slips, *204 whose dates ranged between October 16th and November 1st, 1929. The furniture was evidently delivered in successive lots. In five of the slips, Stoe’s address was noted as being 600 East 77th street; in one it was given as 8450 Interlake; and in another as 8250 Inter-lake. In some of the slips, it appeared that Mrs. Wald-eron had given the particular order; in others, that Mr. Stoe had given it; and in still others, that both Stoe and Mrs. Walderon had given it. Three of the five slips giving Stoe’s address as 600 East 77th street indicate the place of delivery of the furniture as 8450 Interlake; the other two do not indicate the place of delivery.

In the conditional sales contract itself, which was duly filed for record, no mention was made of the Interlake address, but only of the address of Stoe at 600 East 77th street. The furniture was actually delivered, however, to Mrs. Walderon at 8254 Interlake avenue, where the house which she had purchased from Paul Stoe, Inc., was situated.

After the house had been furnished, Mrs. Walderon listed it for sale as a furnished house. Respondents contacted the real estate agent that had the property in charge, and through him entered into a real estate contract with the Walderons on January 11, 1930. By the terms of that contract, the respondents agreed to buy the real estate and the furniture here involved for the sum of $5,950. Attached to the contract was a complete inventory of the furniture. Of the purchase price, $350 was paid in cash, $2,500 by the assumption of the outstanding mortgage, and the balance of $3,100 was payable in installments of sixty dollars or more per month. It was further provided in the real estate contract that it should be considered as a conditional sales contract as to the personal property until the respondents had paid one thousand five hundred dol *205 lars, whereupon the title thereto was to vest in them as vendees.

Shortly after the respondents had gone into possession of the property, the Walderons either assigned, or else quitclaimed, their interest in the Wilson contract to Stoe, or to Paul Stoe, Inc. This transfer was made as a down payment on a second house that was being purchased by the Walderons from Paul Stoe, Inc. Mrs. Walderon then advised appellant that she had sold the first house, and that she was then ready to select other furniture for the second house, under the same arrangement as before; that Stoe was to" sign the conditional sales contract covering the furniture; and that she would then endeavor to sell the second house as a furnished house. The second arrangement regarding the furniture was carried out upon the same general terms as the first.

Within sixty days after the execution of the Wald-eron-Wilson contract, the respondents paid to Paul Stoe, Inc., about $473, bringing the balance of their contract down to five thousand dollars, which amount represented the outstanding mortgage and the interest of a finance company to whom Paul Stoe, Inc., had conveyed the property. Thereafter, the Wilsons made their monthly payments to the finance company, and Stoe continued to make the payments on the furniture to appellant until June 2,1931, when he defaulted. In May, 1932, more than two years after respondents had purchased the furnished house from the Walderons, and while they were paying their installments to the finance company, the appellant demanded of respondents that they pay the delinquent furniture installments. This was the first information that respondents had that the furniture was not paid for, or that there was any conditional sales contract affecting it. *206 They declined to make the payments demanded by appellant, and this action was commenced.

Appellant contends that the case falls squarely within the doctrine of caveat emptor. Section 23 (1) of the uniform sales act is relied on. That section reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 564, 175 Wash. 201, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoenfelds-standard-furniture-co-v-stoe-wash-1933.