Weidinger Chevrolet, Inc. v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corporation

501 F.2d 459
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 1974
Docket73-1681
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 501 F.2d 459 (Weidinger Chevrolet, Inc. v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weidinger Chevrolet, Inc. v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corporation, 501 F.2d 459 (8th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

WEBSTER, Circuit Judge.

This case presents for our review under the Uniform Commercial Code the scope and application of a security agreement granting a floor plan lender a broad security interest in the motor ve- *461 hide inventory of an automobile dealer with multiple locations and sources of financing.

Jim Swanson, not a party to this litigation, was a used car dealer in Belle, Missouri. Commencing in 1964, he financed the purchase of his used car inventory through a floor plan arrangement with GMCO Agency, Inc. of Vienna, Missouri. Under the terms of the floor plan, Swanson delivered a note and title to each new car which he purchased, and GMCO issued him a check in the amount of the note. Ten per cent of the principal balance of the note was due in 90 days. Leonard Weidinger owned a one-third interest in GMCO and together with his wife owned all of the shares of Weidinger Chevrolet, Inc. Swanson had a side arrangement with Weidinger under which Swanson from time to time relieved his maturing obligations to GMCO by assigning used cars to Weidinger Chevrolet. Weidinger Chevrolet would then issue its note to GMCO in release of Swanson’s note. Cars which Weidinger Chevrolet acquired in this manner were frequently left on Swanson’s used car lot and were sold by him on a commission basis.

In 1968, Swanson acquired a Chrysler-Plymouth Agency at a different location. For the purpose of financing the new car agency, Swanson entered into an “Agreement for Wholesale Financing” with Universal C.I.T. Corporation (C.I.T.). C.I.T. knew that GMCO had a floor plan agreement with Swanson and did not intend to floor plan Swanson’s used cars. On March 21, 1968, C.I.T. filed a financing statement executed by Swanson in favor of C.I.T. as the secured party and specifically disclosing a security interest which covered, inter alia:

(i) The following types of inventory, both new and used: automobiles, buses, trucks, truck tractors; trailers and semi-trailers; mobile homes, farm tractors and other farm equipment; boats, boat motors and other marine products and equipment * * *; (ii) leases covering any of the foregoing; and (iii) accounts and contracts rights now or hereafter owing to the debtor.

In December, 1969, C.I.T. discovered that Swanson had sold a substantial number of new Chryslers and Plymouths “out of trust” — that is without having paid C.I.T. in accordance with the terms of the security agreement. C.I.T. promptly brought a replevin action under Missouri law asserting an immediate right to possession under its “Agreement for Wholesale Financing”. C.I.T. caused all of the cars thus seized to be sold, including 22 cars which had previously been assigned to Weidinger Chevrolet. Weidinger Chevrolet thereafter brought this suit to recover the value of the ears alleged to have been converted unlawfully by C.I.T. In a trial to the court without a jury, the District Judge 1 found in favor of Wei-dinger Chevrolet and awarded actual damages of $34,290 and prejudgment interest of $7,200. It is from this judgment that C.I.T. appeals.

In an unpublished opinion and judgment, the District Judge intimated that by its course of dealing C.I.T. had waived its lien on the automobiles “by treating Swanson’s second hand car business as completely separate from the new car business which [C.I.T.] was financing.” He based his decision, however, upon the following clause which appears in the Agreement for Wholesale Financing:

You shall have all the rights of a secured party under the Uniform Commercial Code or at common law or in equity or under any other statute or under this agreement. Your rights and remedies hereunder shall be cumulative. It is agreed that new and used automobiles, trucks, are the subject of widely distributed standard price quotations and are customarily sold on and in a recognized *462 market. A private sale of any chattel to a dealer in such types of chattels for the amount we originally paid for such chattel or at any lesser fair price is a commercially reasonable disposition thereof.

The District Judge construed this clause as an authorization to Swanson to make a reasonable disposition at a private sale of any of the cars secured by the agreement, free of any of its provisions. Since C.I.T. agreed that the 22 cars involved were worth far less than Weidin-ger Chevrolet had paid for them, the earlier sales of the cars by Swanson to Weidinger Chevrolet must have been a “commercially reasonable disposition”, and Weidinger Chevrolet therefore acquired title free of C.I.T.’s security interest.

In this appeal, C.I.T. contends that it had a valid security interest in Swanson’s used car inventory superior to Weidinger Chevrolet’s claimed interest and that it did not waive, nor was it es-topped from, asserting its interest. Further, C.I.T. contends that even if Weidinger Chevrolet acquired the cars in question from Swanson free of C.I.T.’s security interest, it resubjected the cars to the security interest by leaving the cars on Swanson’s lot for resale.

Jurisdiction was based upon diversity of citizenship between C.I.T., a citizen of Delaware, and Weidinger Chevrolet, a citizen of Missouri. We apply law of Missouri, which has adopted the Uniform Commercial Code. 2

Acquisition of Security Interest

The first question presented is whether C.I.T. acquired a perfected security interest in the used cars which were subsequently replevied and sold. It is undisputed that GMCO made no attempt to file or otherwise perfect its own security interest, and we are therefore not confronted with a question of priority of liens.

No attack is mounted upon the sufficiency of the security agreement 3 and financing statement. Indeed the essential elements are fully set forth. The description of the inventory in the financing statement is more than adequate notice. Nor is it significant that the automobiles were located on a Swanson used ear lot rather than at the agency. It is only required that the financing statement reflect the signatures of the parties, give the address of the secured party from which information concerning the security interest may be obtained, give a mailing address of the debtor and contain a statement indicating the types, or describing the items, of collateral. V.A.M.S. § 400.9-402. Moreover, the security agreement itself refers to “All our inventory and equipment, wherever located . . . .”

Nothwithstanding the sufficiency of the security agreement, the District Judge found that language in the security agreement authorizing a commercially reasonable disposition of chattels constituted an express waiver by C. I.T. of its lien, provided the sale was a “commercially reasonable disposition”. 4 In so holding, the District Judge read the “commercially reasonable disposition” clause entirely out of context and erroneously interpreted this provision. The clause grants to C.I.T. “all the rights of a secured party under the Uniform Commercial Code . . . . ” Section 9-504(1) of the Uniform Commercial Code authorizes the sale of collater *463

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