Wynn & Robinson v. Tyner

78 S.E. 185, 139 Ga. 765, 1913 Ga. LEXIS 596
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 78 S.E. 185 (Wynn & Robinson v. Tyner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wynn & Robinson v. Tyner, 78 S.E. 185, 139 Ga. 765, 1913 Ga. LEXIS 596 (Ga. 1913).

Opinion

Lum:pkin, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. By the Civil Code, § 3306, it is declared that a bill of sale to secure a debt, with an obligation given to the debtor to reconvey the property upon payment being made, shall pass title to the “vendee” until the secured debt shall be paid, and shall be construed by the courts to be an absolute conveyance, with the right to have a reconveyance upon payment of the secured debt, and not a mortgage. By section 3318 a method is provided whereby one who sells and delivers personal property may retain the title as security until the purchase-price shall be paid. By section 3298 it is declared that “the owner of any bill of sale to personal property to secure a debt where the principal sum does not exceed one hundred dollars, may foreclose the same in the same manner as mortgages on personal property are now foreclosed, under the laws of this State.” By section 6031 a general provision is made by which a holder of title to secure a debt may reduce the debt to judgment, [768]*768file and have recorded a conveyance to the debtor, and levy on the property. In Berry v. Robinson & Overton, 122 Ga. 575 (50 S. E. 378), it was held, that where one purchased personal property and gave therefor a promissory note, in which it was agreed that the title should remain in the seller until the purchase-money should be paid, such an instrument was not a “bill of sale” made by the purchaser to the seller, and could not be foreclosed in the summary manner provided by section 3298. The promise to pay involved in the present case was for more than one hundred dollars principal, and moreover the paper was not a bill of sale jnade by the owner of property to' secure a debt, but an agreement by the purchaser for the seller to retain title until the purchase-money was paid. It is covered by the decision cited.

The argument that the instrument is a mortgage is without merit. Cases like that of Frost v. Allen, 57 Ga. 326, where the owner of property executed to a creditor an instrument to secure a debt, and the question was whether under its peculiar language it conveyed title or was a mere mortgage, are not applicable to an instrument like this. As to them see also Smith v. DeVaughn, 82 Ga. 575 (9 S. E. 425), and Pitts v. Maier, 115 Ga. 281 (41 S. E. 570).

2. It ,was argued that the purchaser agreed, if the obligation should not be promptly .paid at maturity, that the sellers might, “in addition to any other remedies provided by law for the enforcement of the collection hereof, at their option elect to treat this instrument as a mortgage upon the property title to which is retained by the said [sellers] by the terms hereof, and upon the execution of a bill of sale to the maker or makers hereof to such property, and the filing and recording of such bill of sale in the office of the clerk of the superior court, . . shall give the right to the said [sellers] to proceed to foreclose this instrument as a mortgage upon said property, together with the other property herein mortgaged, in the same manner as mortgages upon personal propertjr are foreclosed under the laws of this State.”

■In Smith v. DeVaughn, supra, the instrument under consideration seems to have included in the indebtedness secured, not only the purchase-money of the mule described, but also eighty dollars of a prior indebtedness. In it the purchaser promised to pay the sum named, and added: “I hereby mortgage and convey [769]*769unto the said payee, his heirs and assigns, the following described property [describing the mule], for which this note is given in part; said mule to remain the property of [the seller] until paid for.” We are aware that Mr. Justice Simmons, in discussing the peculiar language of this instrument, after holding that it was a conditional bill of sale, and not a mortgage, said: “If Smith [the purchaser] had paid the purchase-money of the mule, he would have acquired title thereto, and it is possible that the instrument might have been foreclosed as a mortgage for the $80; and this may have been the reason that the paper was written both .in the •form of a mortgage and a bill of sale.” But this mere suggestion of a possibility, and one which was not directly involved (the action being brought to recover possession of the property by the sellers), is very far from a ruling that a seller can retain title and also in the same instrument have a mortgage created in his favor on the same property, as being that of the purchaser, to secure the purchase-money.

The distinctive difference between a mortgage and a bill of sale to secure a debt, or the retention of title by a seller to secure the purchase-money, is that “a mortgage in this State is only security for a debt, and passes no title” (Civil Code, § 3256); a bill of sale to secure a debt, with an obligation to reconvey on payment, “shall pass the title of said property to the vendee till the debt or debts which said conveyance was made to 'secure shall be fully paid” (Civil Code, § 3306); and a conditional sale, with retention of title as security, leaves the title in the seller until the purchase-money is paid. Civil Code, § 3318. Just how the same instrument can convey title and not convey title at the same time, or retain title and not retain title but be a mere lien, as to the same property and for the same debt,' is not plain. It would seem to be an effort to reconcile the irreconcilable. Relatively to dower, year’s support, and the right of other creditors to levy their common-law executions, there is a wide difference between the status of a mortgage and a conveyance of title as security, or a retention of title for that purpose. To permit a creditor to word his contract so as to call it one or the other at his plea,sure, and substantially to get the benefits of each, frightening off other creditors by means of the declaration that the title is in him, and yet reserving the right of summary foreclosure of the instrument as a mortgage, would be [770]*770to allow a variable and uncertain form of legal' instrument. How shall a paper be classified which declares that it conveys title or does not convey title, as the creditor may at any time thereafter choose to declare?

If it be possible to frame an instrument so that it may be a mortgage or a reservation of title at the' option of the creditor, the instrument before us does not even do that. It seeks to hold all the benefits of a reservation of title, and yet to declare that a summary remedy may be applied to that situation when the statute has not so declared. A conveyance, or reconveyance, and levy after judgment is provided in cases where title is held as security,—omitting the provision for foreclosure of a bill of sale to secure a debt under $100. A summary foreclosure'by affidavit is provided for cases where no title is held by the creditor, but a mere lien is given. There are cases in which a party has an election of remedies, such as where a transaction partakes both of the nature of a tort and a contract, and where the party may sue for the tort, or waive the tort and sue on the contract; where the principal may ratify or repudiate the unauthorized act of his agent; where one has the option to declare a contract terminated because of a breach of a condition subsequent, or to insist upon its performance; and other instances which might be mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.E. 185, 139 Ga. 765, 1913 Ga. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wynn-robinson-v-tyner-ga-1913.