Stotts v. Johnson

235 P.2d 560, 234 P.2d 1059, 192 Or. 403, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 256
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 235 P.2d 560 (Stotts v. Johnson) 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
Stotts v. Johnson, 235 P.2d 560, 234 P.2d 1059, 192 Or. 403, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 256 (Or. 1951).

Opinions

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by Arthur Johnston (erroneously entered in the title of this case as Art Johnson), one of the two defendants, from a decree of the Circuit Court. The suit which culminated in the decree was instituted by the plaintiff-respondent, Roy O. Stotts, [407]*407for the purpose of obtaining the foreclosure of a bill of sale alleged to be, in truth, a chattel mortgage. That instrument described a tractor owned by Earl L. Marshall, one of the two defendants, who was the transferor in the bill of sale. The plaintiff was the transferee. The complaint alleged that the bill of sale was executed to secure payment to the plaintiff of a debt of $6,000 owing by Marshall to the plaintiff. It also alleged that the plaintiff, in order to preserve his interest in the tractor, was compelled to pay on July 23, 1948, to the Federal Collector of Internal Bevenue $1,320.71, the amount of a delinquent tax owing by Marshall. The defendant-appellant, Johnston, purchased the tractor from Marshall May 29, 1946. After the institution of this suit, and by virtue of a stipulation signed by the parties, one D. T. Wonderly, who had purchased the tractor from Johnston, deposited the sum of $9,000 with the clerk of the court as a substitute for the tractor. The record indicates that the deposit belongs, in fact, to Johnston.

The decree (1) granted the plaintiff judgment against Marshall in the amounts of $6,000 and $1,320.71, together with interest on each of those sums, and (2) directed the clerk of the court to pay to the plaintiff out of the fund of $9,000, which Wonderly had deposited with the clerk, the amounts just mentioned and deliver the remainder to Johnston.

In January of 1946 defendant Marshall, who is not an appellant, owned the tractor. The latter was then encumbered with a chattel mortgage held by one Otto W. Heider which secured payment of a promissory note upon which there was due January 26, 1946, $5,820. When Heider demanded payment and Marshall was unable to meet the demand, the plaintiff, at the [408]*408request of Marshall, paid Heider $5,820 January 26, 1946, and received the canceled note and mortgage. Concurrently therewith the plaintiff received from Marshall a hill of sale which described the tractor. The complaint avers, and the findings of fact declare, that the bill of sale was intended to serve as a chattel mortgage and secure to the plaintiff repayment of the aforementioned sum of $5,820 together with payment to him of the value of some services rendered by the plaintiff to Marshall. The total due to the plaintiff on account of those items, as found by the findings of fact, was $6,000.

Prior to May 29, 1946, Marshall offered to sell the tractor to defendant-appellant Johnston, and in so doing made representations concerning its condition which, stated succinctly, were that the tractor was in good mechanical condition. May 29, 1946, Johnston purchased the tractor and received from Marshall a bill of sale. One of the latter’s warranties, in referring to the tractor, said: “Free from all encumbrances except a note held by Boy Stoots. ’ ’ The name ‘ ‘ Stoots ’ ’ was erroneously entered when the plaintiff’s name “Stotts” was intended.

During the trial Johnston contended that (1) the relationship between the plaintiff and Marshall was not that of creditor and debtor, as claimed by the plaintiff, but that of co-venturers; (2) Marshall, in order to induce him (Johnston) to purchase the tractor, falsely represented to him that the tractor was in good working condition; (3) Marshall’s representations, were false; (4) since the plaintiff and Marshall were co-venturers (according to Johnston), the plaintiff was chargeable with Marshall’s purportedly false representations; and (5) if Marshall was indebted to the [409]*409plaintiff in any amount whatever, apart from the indebtedness arising out of the plaintiff’s payment of Marshall’s delinquent income tax, the amount was not $6,000, as the plaintiff claimed, but no more than $4,000.

Before Johnston purchased the tractor he was aware of the fact that Marshall was delinquent in the payment of his Federal income tax. For instance, referring to Marshall, Johnston testified: “He told me he owed money to the Internal Revenue and to the State, and, gosh, I wouldn’t remember who all.” Shortly after Johnston purchased the tractor the following, according to him, occurred: “The Internal Revenue placed some seizure notices on this tractor.” When the Federal Collector of Internal Revenue seized the tractor he also took into his custody some other logging equipment which Marshall owned, including a donkey engine. The record does not indicate exactly the amount of Marshall’s delinquent tax but it approximated $3,500. We notice from Johnston’s testimony that upon one occasion he offered to pay the Collector $2,200 of the tax if the Collector would release to him the donkey engine. Johnston’s exact words were: “I offered to pay $2,200, plus, to the Bureau of Internal Revenue to release the lien on that donkey.” The offer was refused and, according to Johnston, he received the following explanation: “They couldn’t accept that money, that donkey was seized and it must be sold at auction. ’ ’

After Johnston’s conditional offer to pay $2,200 of the delinquent tax had been rejected, some of Marshall’s equipment which had been seized by the Collector was sold, but a balance of $1,320.71 remained uncollected upon the tax. In the meantime, the tractor remained under seizure and was transported by the [410]*410Collector to Portland where preparations were under way for its sale. At that juncture the plaintiff paid to the Collector $1,320.71, the unpaid balance of the tax.

It will be recalled that the decree awarded the plaintiff judgment not only for $6,000, the amount secured by the bill of sale, but also for $1,320.71. The foregoing is a condensed explanation of the two amounts.

The findings of fact entered by the Circuit Court state:

“The Defendant Earl Marshall is indebted to the Plaintiff in the amount of $6,000.00, together with interest thereon from and after January 26, 1946, together with the further sum of $1,320.71, paid by Plaintiff to the Collector of Internal Revenue to prevent the sale of a certain D-8 Diesel Caterpillar tractor and equipment, together with interest on said latter sum from and after July 23, 1948.
“The bill of sale made and executed by the Defendant Earl Marshall conveying to the plaintiff the D-8 Diesel Caterpillar Tractor and equipment and dated January 26,1946, was and is a mortgage given to secure the payment of the $6,000.00 described in Paragraph (1) above. That the said bill of sale was a chattel mortgage on the said tractor and equipment on July 23,1948, the date of the payment of the tax lien thereagainst by the Collector of Internal Revenue.
“The Defendant Art Johnson was not an innocent purchaser of the D-8 Diesel Caterpillar Tractor and equipment as to the lien of the Plaintiff and that the Defendant’s interest in said tractor is subsequent in time and inferior in right to Plaintiff’s lien.”

We shall now consider the first assignment of error which reads as follows:

“The court erred in finding that the payment of $1,320.00 to the Collector of Internal Revenue [411]*411by respondent Stotts was a proper payment to protect Ms lien.”

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Stotts v. Johnson
235 P.2d 560 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
235 P.2d 560, 234 P.2d 1059, 192 Or. 403, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stotts-v-johnson-or-1951.