Court Opinion

ID: 3994359
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:53:13.738899+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:38:19.808672
License: Public Domain

The respondent, by bringing a claim and delivery action, sought to establish title and recover possession of a certain Buick sedan. Judgment was rendered in its favor, and this appeal follows.
The facts are not seriously in dispute. It appears from the record that one Greear originally purchased the automobile in question from the Eldridge Buick Company, ultimately giving to that company a chattel mortgage for the balance of the purchase price. Thereafter Greear was in possession of the car at all times, driving the same under a private license issued *Page 535 
in his name. Greear entered into the employ of one Roy Finch, doing business as the Finch Motor Company. Appellant bought the car in question from Greear. Appellant had learned that Greear had originally purchased the car from the Eldridge Buick Company, and had learned of the existence of the chattel mortgage in favor of that company, and, at the time she purchased the car and took delivery from Greear, who was then in possession, as a part of the purchase price, required the payment and satisfaction of the chattel mortgage to the Eldridge Buick Company.
About a month prior to the time appellant purchased the car, a conditional sales contract was executed by Finch and Greear, by the terms of which Finch contracted to sell to Greear the car in question. Finch has disappeared, and Greear refuses to testify, on the ground that his answers might tend to incriminate him.
[1] There is not a scintilla of evidence in this record from which the court can say that the title to this car was ever in Finch or the Finch Motor Company. Appellant's inquiry disclosed that the car had originally been purchased from the Eldridge Buick Company by Greear; that Greear was in possession, and had been at all times; that he was driving the car under a private license taken out in his own name.
Respondent made no investigation whatsoever of the title to this car, and any examination or investigation would have disclosed the fact that Finch had no title in so far as the public records were concerned, and the law of this state does not favor undisclosed titles to personal property. Flynn v. GarfordMotor Truck Co., 149 Wash. 264, 270 P. 806. Before there could be any effect given to the conditional sales contract between Finch and Greear, Finch must have had *Page 536 
title to the car. The title having been shown to be in Greear, it is presumed to continue until the contrary is shown. 22 C.J., p. 87, § 29. There is no testimony of any kind indicating any transfer of title to Finch.
At the time of appellant's purchase of the car, Greear disclosed a good record title, subject to the chattel mortgage; he had possession of the car, there were no circumstances present which would tend to put appellant on inquiry, and there were no instruments of record showing that Greear had ever sold or encumbered the car in any way, except the chattel mortgage to the Eldridge Buick Company and the purported conditional sales contract. Respondent, without investigation of any sort, purchased the conditional sales contract whereby Finch, as vendor, purported to sell this automobile to Greear. There is no instrument of record conveying the title to Finch, and the evidence completely negatives the idea that Finch ever had possession of the automobile. A conditional sales contract has been defined to be, "when it is agreed that until the price is paid, the title is to remain in the vendor." Rose v. Story, 1 Pa. St. 190; 44 Am. Dec. 121. The title could not remain in Finch; it was never there. Conditional sales contracts are not negotiable, only assignable, and under numerous decisions of this court, respondent could obtain no greater title to the automobile in question than Finch had.
This purported sales contract not being based on title in Finch, conveys no rights as against an innocent purchaser from Greear, who had both actual possession and apparently a clear title.
Reversed.
MILLARD, PARKER, and MAIN, JJ., concur.
FULLERTON, J., concurs in the result.
TOLMAN and HOLCOMB, JJ., dissent. *Page 537