Opinion
April 18, 1934.
October 3, 1934.
Bailments — Bailment lease — Validity against execution creditors of lessee — Rights of lessor.
In a sheriff's interpleader proceeding to determine the ownership of an automobile, the evidence established that a dealer in motor vehicles had possession of the car with authority to sell it for cash or dispose of it on a bailment lease. The dealer leased the car to a third person for a definite term at a stipulated monthly rental. The lease provided that the lessee should surrender the car at the expiration of the term and that if all the conditions of the lease had been complied with the lessor would sell the car to the lessee for a nominal consideration. The dealer thereafter for value assigned the lease to the plaintiff and while the car was in the possession of the lessee the defendant, a creditor of the lessee, levied upon it.
Held: (1) That the execution-defendant did not have title to the car but merely had possession of it as lessee under a bailment lease and (2) that a judgment entered for the plaintiff non obstante veredicto will be affirmed.
In such case the rights of the plaintiff were not affected by (1) a discussion between the dealer and the execution-defendant as to the "buying" of the car; (2) a notation, placed on the books of the dealer by its bookkeeper, describing the lease as a "bill receivable;" (3) the delivery by the dealer of an unsigned memorandum placed on a printed sales slip form; (4) an alleged agreement between the dealer and the execution-defendant that the car would not have to be surrendered at the expiration of the lease; and (5) the use of forms furnished by the Department of Revenue in securing a certificate of title wherein the execution-defendant was styled as owner.
Bailments — Conditional sales — Motor vehicles — Certificate of title — Act of May 12, 1925, P.L. 603 — Act of May 1, 1929, P.L. 905, Article II, Sections 201-211, as amended by the Act of June 22, 1931, P.L. 751.
The Conditional Sales Act of May 12, 1925, P.L. 603 does not affect the rights of the parties to a bailment lease.
A bailment lease is an approved and legal method by which one desiring to purchase an article of personal property, but unable to pay for it at the time, may secure possession of it, with the right to use and enjoy it as long as he pays the stipulated "rental," and the further right to become the absolute owner, on completing the instalment payments called for in the lease, by payment of an additional sum, which may be nominal in amount.
It was not necessary that a bailment lease contain a specific stipulation to return the leased article at the expiration of the term.
Under the Vehicle Code of May 1, 1929, P.L. 905, Article II, Sections 201-211, as amended by Act of June 22, 1931, P.L. 751, an "owner" is defined as including a "lessee."
Appeal No. 51, April T., 1934, by defendant from judgment and order of C.P., Lawrence County, December T., 1932, E.D. No. 10, in the case of General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Ralph Hartman, Asenath Hartman, his wife, and J. Clyde Gilfillan, now for use of Mary Elizabeth Gilfillan.
Before TREXLER, P.J., KELLER, BALDRIGE, STADTFELD, PARKER and JAMES, JJ. Affirmed.
Sheriff's interpleader to determine ownership of an automobile. Before CHAMBERS, J.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Superior Court.
Verdict for the defendant in the sum of $650. Subsequently the court, on motion, entered judgment for the plaintiff non obstante veredicto. Defendant appealed.
Error assigned, among others, was the entry of judgment.
J. Clyde Gilfillan, and with him Clarence A. Patterson, of Gilfillan Patterson, for appellant.
Dan T.R. Dickson, and with him William J. Caldwell of Hugus Caldwell, for appellee.
Argued April 18, 1934.
This is a sheriff's interpleader as to the ownership of an automobile. The appellant, use plaintiff in a judgment against Ralph Hartman et al., issued a writ of fieri facias, under which the sheriff levied on an Oldsmobile coupe as Hartman's property. The appellee, General Motors Acceptance Corporation, filed its claim of title and ownership, resulting in the award of an issue in sheriff's interpleader proceedings.
At the trial the lower court directed a verdict for the execution creditor, this appellant. The jury fixed the value of the automobile at $650. The court subsequently entered judgment non obstante veredicto for the claimant. This appeal followed.
The relevant facts are not in dispute.
Rogers Motor Company is a dealer in automobiles in the City of New Castle, Pennsylvania, and handles the Oldsmobile car, which is a product of General Motors Company. On August 19, 1932, Buick Oldsmobile Pontiac Sales Company of Pittsburgh made a bill of sale for an Oldsmobile coupe serial No. C-19292, motor No. F-311750, being the automobile in suit, to the General Motors Acceptance Corporation and on the same day the General Motors Acceptance Corporation delivered the car to Rogers Motor Company taking from it a `trust receipt.' No claim of title on the part of the General Motors Acceptance Corporation in this case is based on this `trust receipt.' Under it, Rogers Motor Company had authority to sell the automobile for cash or dispose of it on bailment lease, with the right in the lessee to purchase it: Com. v. Williams, 93 Pa. Super. 92; Hoeveler-Stutz Co. v. Cleveland Motor Sales, 92 Pa. Super. 425.
Ralph Hartman wanted to buy an Oldsmobile coupe, and was satisfied to take the one in the possession of Rogers Motor Company. The cash sale price was $1,005, but Hartman did not have the money to pay for it. He could pay $50 cash, and furnish oil, — in which he dealt, — to the amount of $305, making together $355, and leaving $650 to be raised some other way. Rogers Motor Company, accordingly, prepared a bailment lease of the automobile to Hartman on September 6, 1932, (dated September 1, 1932) under which Hartman was recited to have paid $355 as advance rental and agreed to pay rental in monthly instalments of $43 each for eighteen months, beginning October 7, 1932, with the right to purchase the car, after all instalments of rental had been paid, for the further sum of one dollar. The difference between the sum of the rental instalments, $759, and $650, represented interest, insurance and carrying charges. The bailment lease was signed by both parties, and following it, possession of the automobile was given Hartman. Rogers Motor Company at the same time executed an assignment of the bailment lease to General Motors Acceptance Corporation and Hartman signed a statement as to his financial worth. Rogers Motor Company also forwarded an application to the Department of Revenue for a certificate of title for the car, with an assignment endorsed thereon to Hartman, and a note made therein of an `encumbrance' in favor of General Motors Acceptance Corporation of $759.
Before the automobile had been in Hartman's possession thirty days and before the first instalment of rental was due under the bailment lease, it was levied upon by the sheriff under appellant's writ of fieri facias.
A recital of these undisputed facts would seem to justify a directed verdict for the appellee. Possession of the automobile was delivered to Hartman, the execution debtor, following, and pursuant to, his execution of a bailment lease for it, under which title and ownership to the car would not vest in him until he had paid all the instalments of rental provided in the lease and one dollar additional. The lessor had, at the time of such delivery, possession of the car and legal authority to sell it, or dispose of it by bailment lease; and it assigned the lease, together with the title to and ownership of the car, subject to the lease, for a valuable consideration, to the appellee, who made prompt claim for its property following the execution on the appellant's judgment. There was nothing concealed or fraudulent about it. A bailment lease has long been an approved and legal method, in force in this Commonwealth, by which one desiring to purchase an article of personal property, but unable to pay for it at the time, may secure possession of it, with the right to use and enjoy it as long as he pays the stipulated `rental,' and the further right to become the absolute owner, on completing the instalment payments called for in the lease, by payment of an additional sum, which may be nominal in amount. The enactment of the Conditional Sales Act of May 12, 1925, P.L. 603, did not affect our established law on this subject, for the provisions of the Uniform Conditional Sales Act in force in other states were changed, in our statute, so as to permit the continuance in force of our law as firmly established in the decisions of our courts of appeal: Stern Co. v. Paul, 96 Pa. Super. 112; General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. B. O.R.R. Co., 97 Pa. Super. 93; Leitch v. Sanford Motor Truck Co., 279 Pa. 160, 123 A. 658; Anchor Concrete Mach. Co. v. Penna. Brick Tile Co., 292 Pa. 86, 90, 140 A. 766; Schmidt v. Bader, 284 Pa. 41, 45, 130 A. 259; Mulholland v. Sterling Motor Truck Co., 309 Pa. 590, 592, 164 A. 597. The statement of the Supreme Court in Brown Bros. v. Billington, 163 Pa. 76, 80, 29 A. 904, still remains the law: "The purpose of the parties was to effectuate a sale in the future directly to the bailee, who was to have actual possession in the meantime under a different arrangement, and we gave it our sanction as against creditors of the bailee because of the contract. In other words, although the intent of the parties, and the effect of their agreement, was to vest the title at a future day in the purchaser, he having actual possession in the meantime, yet as the intervening arrangement was upon a valid contract of bailment as between the parties, the title of the bailor was preserved until terminated by compliance with the provision for a sale, at which time that portion of the agreement became operative." See Schmidt v. Bader, supra, p. 45; and Com. v. Motors Mtge. Corp., 297 Pa. 468, 471, 472, 147 A. 98.
What are the circumstances relied on by the appellant, in this case, to bring about a different result?
(1) She claims that the parties, both Hartman and the representative of Rogers Motor Company, had discussed the former's buying the car. Of course they had, and if Hartman had had the money to pay for it, he would have bought it. But he did not, and there is not a word of evidence to show any willingness or intention on the part of the motor company to sell it to him on credit. See Com. v. Overheim, 106 Pa. Super. 424, 427, 162 A. 475. If he was unable to buy it for cash, the only method considered was a `bailment lease,' by which, while the purpose was to effectuate a sale in the future, delivery would be made in the meantime to the intending purchaser and possession would be held by him, under a valid contract of bailment, which preserved the rights of the parties, with title in the bailor, — or his assignee — until terminated by compliance with the provision for sale: Brown Bros. v. Billington, supra, p. 80; Schmidt v. Bader, supra, p. 45. Unless Hartman had agreed to execute the bailment lease, Rogers Motor Company would not have delivered possession of the car. But, even if the original intention had been to make a sale, while the contract was still executory they might legally have changed it from one of sale into a bailment, with an alternative of future conversion into sale, on compliance with stipulated conditions: Goss Printing Co. v. Jordan, 171 Pa. 474, 477, 32 A. 1031.
(2) That Rogers Motor Company, or its bookkeeper, for its own convenience, in entering the transaction on its books, may have described it in terms of a sale, and the lease as a `bill receivable' could not affect either Hartman nor its assignee, General Motors Acceptance Corporation, nor change the bailment into a conditional sale. See Schmidt v. Bader, 284 Pa. 41, 43, 130 A. 259.
(3) Appellant claims that a bill of sale was executed by Rogers Motor Company and delivered to Hartman. The exhibit produced fails to substantiate the claim. It was not signed by Rogers Motor Company, or anyone on their behalf (see p. 66-a) and was nothing more than an unsigned memorandum showing the transaction, including the down payments and instalments to be paid by Hartman for eighteen months, and information needed for the registration of the car. That it was made on a partly printed sales slip form could not change the transaction from a bailment lease to a conditional sale.
(4) Appellant also, no doubt inadvertently, has misstated the letter of transmittal from Rogers Motor Company to General Motors Acceptance Corporation forwarding the lease, etc., making it read "Enclosed find lease and lessee's statement for purchase of new Oldsmobile coupe" etc.; whereas it really reads: "Enclosed find lease and lessee's statement for purchase. New Oldsmobile coupe" etc. The letter clearly refers to the purchase of the lease by General Motors Acceptance Corporation, and the words "New Oldsmobile coupe" only identify the subject matter of the lease, title to which, of course, subject to the lease, passed to the assignee: Com. v. Motors Mtge. Corp., 297 Pa. 468, pp. 471, 473, 147 A. 98.
(5) Nor was the oral testimony of the Rogers Motor Company's representative or of Hartman, as to the non-necessity for the return of the car to the lessor, after all instalments of rental had been paid, and the payment of the final dollar in order to pass title to the car, not alleged to have been omitted from the contract through fraud, accident or mistake, admissible to alter the terms of the contract: Gianni v. Russell, 281 Pa. 320, 126 A. 791; Schmidt v. Bader, supra, p. 46; Michael v. Stuber, 73 Pa. Super. 390, 397. It was not necessary that the bailment contain a specific stipulation to return the car at the expiration of the term: Jones v. Wands, 1 Pa. Super. 269; but it did so.
(6) The transaction was not affected by the forms used in securing the necessary certificate of title from the Department of Revenue, under the Vehicle Code of May 1, 1929, P.L. 905, Art. II, secs. 201-211 (pp. 913-916), as amended by Act of June 22, 1931, P.L. 751. The forms were prepared and furnished by the Department of Revenue. The Act of 1929 defines `owner' as including the `lessee' under a lease (p. 909); and the Act of 1931 substitutes `applicant' for `owner' as the person to apply for the certificate. Any money due under the contract, whether lease or conditional sale, is termed a lien or encumbrance in the application as prepared by the Department of Revenue. The purpose of such a certificate has been stated by us in Braham Co. v. Steinard-Hannon Motor Co., 97 Pa. Super. 19. It has no effect on the contract executed between the parties.
Appellant relies chiefly on Brunswick Balke Co. v. Hoover, 95 Pa. 508; Bowser Co. v. Franklin Mtge. Inv. Co., 305 Pa. 459, 158 A. 170; Root v. Republic Acceptance Corp., 279 Pa. 55, 123 A. 650; Bank of Secured Savings v. Rudolph, 83 Pa. Super. 439; Commercial Banking Corp. v. Meade, 104 Pa. Super. 447, 159 A. 180, and similar cases, but they are all easily distinguishable from this one. The cases which sustain the right of a creditor to levy on the claimed article as the property of the judgment debtor usually fall into one of the following classes: (1) Where the written instrument is, on its face and by its terms, a conditional sale rather than a bailment lease, such as Bowser Co. v. Franklin Mtge. Inv. Co., supra; Stadtfeld v. Huntsman, 92 Pa. 53; Ott v. Sweatman, 166 Pa. 217, 31 A. 102. The contract in the present case is, on its face and by its terms, one of bailment. It leases the automobile to Hartman for a definite term, during which he is to pay rental by the month, and stipulates for the return of the automobile to the lessor at the expiration of the term: Rieker v. Koechling, 4 Pa. Super. 286. (2) Where a sale has been made and completed, and a lease is entered into only as collateral security for the protection of the unpaid purchase price: Brunswick Balke Co. v. Hoover, supra; Bowser Co. v. Franklin Mtge. Inv. Co., supra; Bank of Secured Savings v. Rudolph, supra; Cooper Co. v. Whitmer, 18 W.N.C. 376, 6 A. 571. (3) Where a sale has been made and completed, and possession delivered, and subsequently the parties attempt to change it into a bailment: Wagner v. Com., 15 W.N.C. 14; Morgan-Gardner Electric Co. v. Brown, 193 Pa. 351, 44 A. 459; Wire Book Sewing Machine Co. v. Crowell, 19 W.N.C. 55, 57. See Com. v. Deibert, 106 Pa. Super. 497, 503, 163 A. 68. See, however, Michael v. Stuber, 73 Pa. Super. 390, as to the right to do this, where rights of creditors are not involved; or have not attached: Schmidt v. Bader, supra. (4) Where the lease is attempted to be made by one not in possession of the property leased — as where A sells and delivers a car to B, and the unpaid purchase money is sought to be secured by a lease to B from C, who never had possession of the car: Bank of Secured Savings v. Rudolph, supra; Commercial Banking Corp. v. Meade, supra. See also, Bowersox v. Weigle Myers, 77 Pa. Super. 367. (5) Where the owner of personal property borrows money on it and attempts to secure the loan by executing a bill of sale to the lender, and the latter executes a bailment lease back to the owner, without any change of possession: Root v. Republic Acceptance Corp., supra.
None of the artifices, schemes and subterfuges so forcefully criticized in Root v. Republic Acceptance Corp., as intended to camouflage the real transaction, are here present. The method adopted in this case has long been recognized as valid and legal in this State. Practically the same contract was upheld by us in General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. B. O.R.R. Co., supra, as a valid bailment lease. An examination and comparison of the two contracts shows no essential difference.
In Leitch v. Sanford Motor Truck Co. which is reported in the same volume of the State Reports as Root v. Republic Acceptance Corp. (see 279 Pa. 55 and 160, respectively), the Supreme Court say, on page 165, relative to such contracts: "If we were to sustain appellant's contention it would seriously interfere with the vast business done throughout the State on bailment leases, and property thus held would be at the peril of the bailors. Our decisions, however, follow a different course, protecting the owner's title as long as he does not knowingly permit the public to be misled."
The case of Bank of Secured Savings v. Rudolph, supra, on which appellant chiefly relies and which the lower court found hard to distinguish, gives us no trouble at all. In that case Leasure, the execution debtor, obtained a motor truck from Manchester Auto Machine Co. on a written order of purchase, with a provision that "the title to the truck shall remain in you [the seller] until purchase price is paid in full." It also provided that the balance of $3,723.34 remaining after a payment of $500 and delivery of two cars taken in trade, valued at $750, should be "covered by lease and 12 notes with Republic Mortgage Company [not the seller, nor person in possession], to be paid off within one year from date of delivery of truck." While it does not appear in the opinion, an examination of the appellant's paper book and record in the case (pp. 47 and 48) shows that the written order was duly accepted by the Manchester Auto Machine Co. and thus became a binding contract of conditional sale; and it appears in the case that the lessor, Republic Mortgage Company, under whom the Bank of Secured Savings claimed as assignee, never had possession of the truck, but that it remained continuously in the possession of the buyer after its delivery by Manchester Auto Machine Co., so that the case falls under both (2) and (4) of the classes cited above.
On careful consideration of the matter we are satisfied that the judgment of the court below was right.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.