State Savings Bank v. Universal Credit Co.

12 N.W.2d 890, 234 Iowa 443, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 544
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1944
DocketNo. 46333.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 890 (State Savings Bank v. Universal Credit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Savings Bank v. Universal Credit Co., 12 N.W.2d 890, 234 Iowa 443, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 544 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The appellant is a bank in Taylor county, with a branch at Gravity, about six miles north of Bedford. Ed Bray, doing business as the Bray Motor Company, lived at Bedford but banked with the Gravity branch. He handled Ford automobiles on what is commonly known as a floor-plan arrangement with appellee, Universal Credit Company, a Des Moines concern. By this arrangement Bray purchased cars from the Ford Motor Company on conditional-sale contracts. The Ford Motor Company then sold these contracts to appellee. Involved in this controversy are four automobiles purchased from the Ford Company in four different deliveries and sold by Bray under conditional-sale contracts to four of his employees, which contracts retained the title in the seller. These purchasers executed notes to the Bray Motor Company and entered into conditional-sale contracts accompanying the notes, dated respectively October 20,1940, December 19,1940, March 20,1941, and March 18, 1941, and designated as Exhibits A, A-l; B, B-l; C, C-l; and D, D-l. The Ford Company sales contracts for these cars, and assigned to appellee, were all dated prior to the dates of the sales of these cars by Bray to his employees and transfer of said conditional-sale contracts to appellant.

On the purchase of cars from the Ford Company, the bills of lading and invoices were sent by that company to the Gravity branch of appellant bank, with instructions to collect certain small sums and to secure the signature of Bray to the contracts. AVhen this signature was obtained, and the instruments were acknowledged, the bank delivered the bills of lading to Bray and forwarded the various amounts collected, together with the *445 signed contracts, to the Ford Motor Company at Des Moines, and the latter then sold and assigned the contracts to Universal Credit Company, appellee, but such contracts had been neither filed nor recorded at the time of the sale of the employees’ contracts by Bray to the appellant bank.

On or about May 2,1941, appellee, claiming the cars under its contracts, took possession of them in Taylor county and drove them into Adams county. An action of replevin was then begun by appellant. The writ issued but appellee executed bond and resumed possession .of the cars. There was trial to a jury in the Adams-County District Court and the jury returned a verdict awarding possession of the cars to defendant (appellee) and judgment was entered thereon. Motion for new trial, exceptions to instructions, and 'motion to set aside the verdict were all overruled, and,plaintiff appeals.

The questions involved in this case have been before this court heretofore in State Savings Bank v. Universal Credit Co., 233 Iowa 247, 8 N. W. 2d 719, decided April 6, 1943, after the trial of the present ease in the district court. The issues and the evidence are practically the same in both cases. As is stated by appellant in its argument, the Polk county case was between the same parties, “involving the same questions of law, almost the same witnesses, in fact all of the main witnesses, and having almost the same facts. * * * Essential exhibits were the same or had been filled in on the same kind of printed forms. Exhibits 1, a wholesale floor plan conditional sales contract and number 5 an underlying agreement in this case were exhibits 1 and 6 in the former case. ’ ’ To this statement of appellant, the appellee in its argument adds: “As pointed out by the appellant the evidence was in a great degree similar to the evidence given at the trial of the companion case tried in Polk County, Iowa * * So we have here a case which in its facts is substantially on all fours with one which was decided by us less than a year ago. It is therefore unnecessary, and would be repetition, to discuss many of the questions decided in that case, the same having been fully reviewed by Justice Oliver in his opinion. In substance, that case held iliat the note and contract between Bray and his employee were accommodation instruments which the parties thereto intended should acquire legal vigor by assignment from *446 Bray to a third person and payment thereof to Bray; that Bray’s retention of the automobile would not in itself render the contract invalid; that the unconditional sale and assignment by a vendor to a purchaser vests the assignee with title, is in the nature of a bill of sale, and the assignee is a purchaser within the contemplation of the recording act. It further recites the rule that under the recording act a prior conditional sale is to be regarded as invalid, as such, against a purchaser, in the absence of notice, actual or constructive. And it is held that an assignee who takes a conditional-sale contract, regular upon its face, in good faith and for value, and without notice of its accommodation character is a purchaser as against a prior unrecorded conditional-sale contract of which he is without notice and which is therefore invalid. This, in brief, is the substance of our holding in the first case as to the law governing transactions such as the one in the instant case.

Both parties in their arguments agree that this case turns upon the relative merits and priorities of the retail conditional-sale contracts held by appellant, and the wholesale floor-plan conditional-sale contracts held by appellee. The four notes and four retail conditional-sale contracts purchased by appellant 'bank from Bray were all on the same printed forms. Appellant’s conditional-sale contracts, Exhibits A-l, B-l, 0-1, and D-l were all substantially the same, except as to names and dates, as were the contracts involved in the Polk county case.

I. The principal and determinative question in this case, paralleling as it does the former case, is whether or not the evidence of notice to the assignee of Bray presented a jury question. As stated in the former opinion, the burden was upon the assignee, appellant herein. The Universal Credit Company in the former case contended, as it does here, that the record conclusively showed the bank had such information as to put it on notice and that there should have been a directed verdict. This court ruled against such contention but did hold that the evidence presented a jury question. This court said [233 Iowa 247, 255, 8 N. W. 2d 719, 724] :

“Whether information is sufficient to put a purchaser or creditor on notice of an unrecorded instrument has been said to bo a mixed question of law and fact. It is sufficient if it would *447 put a-reasonable man upon inquiry which would certainly lead to a discovery of the rights under said instrument. ’ ’

The opinion further sets out that the contract, with a bill of lading attached, had been sent to the bank with instructions to collect a small differential payment and secvne the signature of Bray, hut that this was not sufficient of itself to constitute notice; and the court held that the question of whether the assignee bank was put upon notice which required it, in good conscience, to make inquiry of the credit company concerning the title of the bank’s customer was a question upon which reasonable minds might well differ, and hence was for the jury, as was also the question whether the hank had knowledge sufficient to put it upon inquiry that the contract between Bray and his employee was merely an accommodation instrument and as between the parties thereto did not represent a bona fide conditional sale.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W.2d 890, 234 Iowa 443, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-savings-bank-v-universal-credit-co-iowa-1944.