Williams v. Harper Brothers Automobile Dealers

1954 OK 233, 276 P.2d 217, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 663
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 14, 1954
Docket36180
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1954 OK 233 (Williams v. Harper Brothers Automobile Dealers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Harper Brothers Automobile Dealers, 1954 OK 233, 276 P.2d 217, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 663 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

The present action constitutes an effort by plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, to recover damages for conversion of his 1948 Model Buiclc automobile. According to his affidavit, one Martin Evans has admitted stealing it from him at Toledo, Ohio, on November 28th or 29th, in 1948. When Evans’ son, Martin Evans, Jr., brought the automobile to Durant, Oklahoma, the following month and sold it to Harper Brothers, used car dealers of that city, the title papers he delivered to said purchaser falsely represented that it was a Michigan car, and that the certificate of title on the form used in said state had been originally issued to a physician and his wife of Detroit and later assigned by them to the City Body Shop of Ypsilanti, Michigan, and thereafter, on September 28, 1948, assigned by said body shop to Newman Motor Sales of May-bee, Michigan. The original motor number stamped on the motor at the Buick factory had been obliterated and a new motor number corresponding with that shown on the Michigan certificate of title had been stamped in its place. With said Michigan certificate of title and the aforesaid assignments on its back, Martin Evans, Jr., presented to Joe Harper, who handled the purchase for Harper Brothers, two additional assignments of title on forms apparently approved and prescribed by Michigan statute. According to the testimony of Joe *218 Harper and an exhibit introduced in evidence, such forms were entitled: “Re-Assignments By Registered Motor Vehicle Dealer”, and one of them ostensibly effected an assignment of the title from Newman Motor Sales to Martin Evans and the other purported to be an assignment from Evans to Harper Brothers. Neither of the latter two assignments were introduced in evidence but Harper’s testimony concerning them is undisputed, and it is nowhere shown that any of such title papers were in any respect irregular on their face or that there was any circumstance connected with their appearance or execution to put Harper on notice that they did not evidence genuine and valid transfers of title to the particular automobile Evans delivered to him. And in this connection, Harper testified that he knew Martin Evans, from his previous dealings with Durant dealers, to he a Michigan used auto or “motor vehicle” dealer.

At the time Martin Evans, Jr., delivered the Buick to Harper Brothers, its first Oklahoma purchaser, together with the above-described title papers, Joe Harper paid him $2,050 for it. This was within $155 of the car’s original retail price. According to the application introduced in evidence, Harper Brothers, again through Joe Harper as their legal agent, applied twelve days after said sale, or on December 16, 1948, to the tag agent at Durant for the first Oklahoma registration of the car, and, on the same date, they were issued an Oklahoma certificate of title to it and an Oklahoma license tag hearing a Pottawatomie County number. (According to the testimony, the reason the tag bore a Pottawatomie County, instead of a Bryan County number is that all of the tags bearing the latter county’s numbers had been sold and the Oklahoma Tax Commission, as was its custom in such situations, had authorized the use of tags originally manufactured for other counties, but not then in use). Thereafter, Harper Brothers sold the Buick to Messrs. Chick Davis and Cecil Pullen of Elk City, but their 'names do not appear on any of the title papers of the car and it appears from Joe Harper’s testimony that when he executed and delivered to these buyers the assignment dated February 10th, 1949, on the back of the Oklahoma certificate of title previously issued to him in December, no assignee’s name was written into the space provided for that purpose. This enabled Davis and Pullen, when they thereafter sold the car to W. F. Cuthbert of Elk City, to effect transfer of the paper title to said purchaser by merely filling his name into the blank provided for that purpose. This practice was termed “title jumping” by at least one of the witnesses at the trial and it was indicated that such practice is not infrequently engaged in by used car dealers.

Some of the evidence at the trial seems to raise a question as to whether the car was ever legitimately licensed in Oklahoma for the year 1949. When Cuthbert applied for his 1950 license, the 1949 license number shown on his application was a Pottawatomie County one (No. 6-9472) originally issued February 25, 1949, to one Claud T. Hall of Maud, Oklahoma, for a Chevrolet automobile, and shown by the Oklahoma Tax Commission’s records to have been replaced by a new tag with a different duplicate tag number issued to Hall on or about July 4, 1949, after the latter had filed an affidavit that his original tag had been lost. In his testimony, Cuthbert shed no light on the matter except to say that he didn’t believe he ever applied for any license on the car except the one for 1950. He further testified that when he consented to buy the car from Davis and Pullen, • they agreed that it would have a 1949 license.

After driving the car approximately sixteen months in his work as a general contractor, Cuthbert, on June 8, 1950, traded it in to Gregory Motor Company of Elk City, on a new 1950 Model Buick. Gregory Motor Company then, on the same day, sold it to C. H. Thomas of that City and also accomplished a “title jump” by obtaining an assignment of Cuthbert’s title executed by him in blank so that Thomas’ name was filled in said assignment as the assignee and Gregory Motor Company’s name never appeared thereon. In September, 1950, Thomas had the Buick repainted, changing its color from its original gun-metal gray to a color called “mist green”. Later, in June, 1951, Thomas traded it in to Galloway Mo *219 tor Company of Elk City, on a 1949 Model Buick. After displaying it on its used car lot in Elk City for approximately a month, Galloway Motor Company sold it to one Terry Gibson in July, and, upon his default in making the payments thereon, repossessed it in October of the same year and immediately resold it to one Melvin Mc-Comas, also of Elk City. The Buick was in the latter’s wife’s possession when, on January 17, 1952, James R. Sullivan, a Special Agent for the National Automobile Theft Bureau, during the course of his investigation of the car’s theft, found it, took it to a garage there at Elk City, and, with the help of a mechanic, removed various parts of the car, including a part of the motor, and, after examining various clues thus discovered, including what he termed a “duplicate” or “secret” motor number, identified the car as the one that had been stolen from plaintiff more than three and a half years previously at Toledo, Ohio.

Thereafter, with evidence gathered by Sullivan, plaintiff, on October 2, 1952, commenced the present action for damages for conversion of the Buick, against not only McComas or “McCombs”, the then owner of the car, but also joined as defendants in said action, all of the above named individuals and automobile dealers who had purchased and/or sold the car, after it was brought to Oklahoma, except Chick Davis and Cecil Pullen.

Upon trial of the action, without a jury, the trial court sustained the defendants’ plea that plaintiff’s action was barred by the two year statute of limitations, and rendered judgment for them. Plaintiff has lodged the present appeal. In dealing with the questions involved herein, we will continue our reference to the parties by their trial court designations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 233, 276 P.2d 217, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-harper-brothers-automobile-dealers-okla-1954.