Simmons National Bank v. Dalton

337 S.W.2d 667, 232 Ark. 359, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 412
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 6, 1960
Docket5-2164
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 337 S.W.2d 667 (Simmons National Bank v. Dalton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons National Bank v. Dalton, 337 S.W.2d 667, 232 Ark. 359, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 412 (Ark. 1960).

Opinion

Paul Ward, Associate Justice.

One of the principal questions presented on this appeal is whether there was a novation which discharged the maker of a note. The other question involved is whether certain transactions created a constructive trust. The trial court held that there was a novation but that there was no constructive trust. Appellant seeks a reversal on both questions.

The factual background out of which these questions arise is substantially as presently set forth.

On December 21, 1956 Ulysses G. Dalton, III, and his wife, Helen, (hereafter sometimes referred to merely as Dalton) purchased a 1957 Model Ford car from N. F. Trotter, executing to Trotter a conditional sales contract and also a note payable in monthly installments of $70.24 — the last payment falling due August 5, 1959. The contract and note were purchased by appellant, The Simmons National Bank of Pine Bluff. On December 19, 1957 Dalton’s car was involved in a collision with another car near Beebe, Arkansas, resulting in considerable damage to Dalton’s car. The record discloses that the insurance carrier on the other car involved paid $750.00 for the damage done to Dalton’s car. A few days after the collision Dalton traded his wrecked 1957 Ford for a new 1958 Ford (sales price of the new Ford being $3,180,000) with Guy Thompson who was at the time a Ford dealer at Beebe. In accordance with the trade agreement between Dalton and Thompson the latter received the $750.00 insurance payment heretofore mentioned, the wrecked 1957 Ford (valued at $2,180.00) and a note (with the conditional sales contract executed by Dalton to Thompson) in the amount of $2,400.00 payable in equal monthly installments. In addition, and as a part of said trade agreement, Thompson agreed with Dalton that he would pay the balance (amounting to approximately $1,400.00) due appellant by Dalton on the note and conditional sales contract heretofore mentioned. Thompson transferred, with recourse, to the Universal C.I.T. Credit Corporation (hereafter referred to as “C.I.T.”) the $2,400.00 note and conditional sales contract and received from C.I.T. a check for the full amount of $2,400.00.

Early in January 1958 Thompson mailed appellant a check for the balance due on the said Dalton note but about a month later appellant returned the check to Thompson (uncashed) because Thompson had asked to have the title to the 1957 Ford attached to the check and appellant did not have the title in its possession. It appears from the record that Dalton had not paid the sales tax on the 1957 Ford and consequently the Revenue Department of this State had not issued to him the said title. While appellant was holding Thompson’s check it notified Dalton about the absence of the title to the 1957 Ford and asked him to obtain same. Dalton made an effort to obtain a title certificate from the Revenue Department but for some reason failed to do so — and that was when appellant returned the $1,400 check to Thompson.

Following’ the above Thompson made three or more payments to appellant on the Dalton note but he did not make sufficient payment to keep the monthly payments current. Appellant in an effort to get Thompson to make regular payments on the note wrote him some nine or ten letters beginning on January 6, 1958 and ending on October 22, 1958. On or about the last mentioned date, when it became fully apparent to appellant that Thompson was insolvent and that he was not going to continue making payments on the note, it so informed Dalton, and it also told Dalton at that time that it was looking to him to pay the balance due on the note. Dalton, however, informed the Bank that he did not consider himself bound on the note for the reason that Thompson had agreed to pay it and thereupon appellant instituted this litigation.

In its Complaint in the Circuit Court appellant sought judgment not only against Dalton and his wife in the sum of $1,109.36, with interest, (the balance due on said note), but also asked that Dalton and the Credit Corporation “be made trustees to the extent of the aforesaid judgment of the 1958 four door Ford sedan” then in the possession of Dalton. Dalton filed a Cross Complaint, making Thompson a party defendant, and asked for judgment against him and C.I.T. C.I.T. entered a general denial and stated that it was a bona fide purchaser of the note and conditional sales contract executed for the purchase of the 1958 Ford. The cause was transferred to the Chancery Court.

After a hearing the Chancellor decree that there was a novation and relieved Dalton of all liability on the note, but refused to hold C.I.T. and Dalton, or either of them, liable to appellant as trustees. The Chancellor also dismissed Dalton’s Cross Complaint against Thompson and C.I.T. On appeal appellant contends (a) that the trial court erred in failing to hold C.I.T. and Dalton as constructive trustees, and (b) that it was error to release Dalton from the indebtedness.

Constructive Trust. In our opinion the Chancellor correctly refused to hold Dalton and C.I.T. liable to appellant as trustees. Apparently appellant concedes, as well it may, that neither of the above named parties was guilty of participating in any fraudulent transaction even though they both knew at the time the 1958 Ford was purchased that Dalton owed a balance on the 1957 Ford to the Bank. This is true because Dalton had a legal right to sell and Thompson had a legal right to buy or trade for the 1957 Ford without the knowledge or consent of appellant. See Dedman v. Earle, 52 Ark. 164, 12 S. W. 330, and Fairbanks, Morse & Company v. Parker, 167 Ark. 654, 269 S. W. 42. However, appellant says, citing authorities, that fraud is not always a necessary basis out of which a constructive trust relationship may arise. Even so, the cited authorities are of no avail to appellant under the facts of this case. Appellant relies on 89 C. J. S., Trust, Section 142, Page 1027, and also Restatement of the Law of Restitution, Section 160, Page 640, for authority that Dalton and C.I.T. hold funds ■which in equity and good conscience belong to it — the appellant — and that C.I.T. will be unjustly enriched if it is not held to be a trustee. We fail to see how this result would follow. Neither Dalton or C.I.T. has in any way impaired appellant’s security or imperiled its position — it still had Dalton on the note and it had a right to repossess the 1957 Ford. See Olson v. Moody, Knight & Lewis, Inc., 156 Ark. 319, 246 S. W. 3, and the cases cited therein. It is not denied that C.I.T. paid $2,-400.00 for the note and conditional sales contract given by Dalton to Guy Thompson and we know of no theory, under the facts of this case, that would constitute it a constructive trustee in favor of appellant. The same thing can be said in behalf of Dalton who legally purchased, for value, the 1958 Ford which he now has possession of. Nor do we agree with appellant that C.I.T. became a trustee in favor of appellant because it had knowledge that the $750.00 (paid by the insurance company for damage to Dalton’s 1957 Ford) was paid to Thompson as part of the purchase price for the new 1958 Ford. Even if it be conceded, as we do not here concede, that notice of the above facts would constitute C.I.T. as a trustee, we fail to find anything in the record to show that C.I.T. had such knowledge. No one testified to that fact and it was not shown on the conditional sales contract which C.I.T. purchased.

Novation.

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Bluebook (online)
337 S.W.2d 667, 232 Ark. 359, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-national-bank-v-dalton-ark-1960.