Renaire Corporation v. Vaughn

Decision Date03 June 1958
Docket NumberNo. 2141.,2141.
Citation142 A.2d 148
PartiesRENAIRE CORPORATION, Appellant, v. Kenneth J. VAUGHN, Appellee.
CourtD.C. Court of Appeals

Marvin E. Perlis, Washington, D. C., for appellant.

John J. Spriggs, Jr., Washington, D. C., for appellee.

Before ROVER, Chief Judge, and HOOD and QUINN, Associate Judges.

HOOD, Associate Judge.

The basic question on this appeal is whether appellant, the seller under a conditional sales contract, committed a trespass in retaking the chattel from the home of appellee, the purchaser. The question is governed by the law of Virginia where the purchaser lived and where the contract provided the chattel should be kept and where the retaking took place.1 The contract provided:

"For the purpose of enforcing the Vendor's rights hereunder, the Purchaser authorizes the Seller or assigns to enter upon the premises with or without notice and remove said property, and hereby waives any action or right of action arising out of said entry and repossession, * * *."

The facts of the case are mainly undisputed. The purchaser lived in his own home on a country road outside the city limits of Fredericksburg, Virginia. He purchased the chattel, a food freezer, and it was installed in his home. He made payments for about a year and then defaulted because of an injury to his back requiring a surgical operation. Because of this operation he found it necessary to move his wife and children to Takoma Park, Maryland, where he was in a hospital. They were away from home for two or three months. Before leaving his home he locked the house and left the key with a neighbor. When he returned he found a rear window broken and the front door unlocked and discovered that the freezer and his mechanics' tools were missing.

The seller admitted that it had retaken the freezer during the absence of the purchaser and his family. The seller's agent testified he had attempted on four different occasions to retake it but on each occasion found no one at home, and that on his fifth visit he broke a window open, entered the house through the window, removed the freezer through the front door, and then locked the door from the inside and left by climbing out the window. He and his assistant both testified they saw no tools on the premises.

It is generally held that a conditional vendor may repossess the property without resort to legal process if he can do so peaceably,2 and such is the rule in Virginia. In Universal Credit Co. v. Taylor, 164 Va. 624, 180 S.E. 277, 280, it was said:

"The right to possession of chattels may be exercised without recourse to the courts, provided this can be done peaceably. It is only when a right of one is denied or resisted by another, that such party must resort to appropriate legal proceedings to enforce that right."3

Our question is whether a retaking by breaking and entering a private dwelling is a peaceable retaking. We have found no Virginia case to guide us on this question. The cases elsewhere are not entirely in accord,4 but we think the better reasoned cases hold that the act of the vendor in this case constituted a trespass.

In Stewart v. F. A. North Co., 1916, 65 Pa.Super. 195, 200, the court said:

"We are unwilling to give to the contract under consideration a construction which would permit the lessor to batter down doors or break windows or engage in other acts of violence in the exercise even of an undoubted right to the possession of the chattel."

In Girard v. Anderson, 1934, 219 Iowa 142, 257 N.W. 400, 402-3, it is said:

"An agreement permitting a family's home to be broken open and entered for the purpose of forcibly taking possession of property therein is contrary to good public policy and void to that extent."

In Childers v. Judson Mills Store Co., 1939, 189 S.C. 224, 200 S.E. 770, 774, it was said:

"A man's home is his castle and no outsider has the right to enter the home in the absence of the occupants without the permission, express or implied, of the occupants, and if one does so he becomes a trespasser, under the facts of this case * * *."

In the three foregoing cases the retaking, as here, was from the home in the family's absence.

In Kirkwood v. Hickman, 1955, 223 Miss. 359, 78 So.2d 351, 356, the retaking was from the home in the absence of the husband and wife but in the presence of a daughter-in-law, and there it was said:

"Where the repossession occurs in a...

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6 cases
  • General Elec. Credit Corp. v. Timbrook
    • United States
    • West Virginia Supreme Court
    • May 14, 1982
    ...232 Ark. 976, 341 S.W.2d 765 (1961); Henderson v. Security National Bank, 72 Cal.App.3d 764, 140 Cal.Rptr. 388 (1977); Renaire Corp. v. Vaughn, 142 A.2d 148 (D.C.Cir.1958); Quest v. Barnett Bank, 397 So.2d 1020, 1023 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1981); Raffa v. Dania Bank, 321 So.2d 83, 85 (Fla.Dist.Ct......
  • Stutsman v. Kaiser Found. Health Plan
    • United States
    • D.C. Court of Appeals
    • July 14, 1988
    ...also Arnold's Hofbrau, Inc. v. George Hyman Constr. Co., Inc., 156 U.S.App.D.C. 253, 258, 480 F.2d 1145, 1150 (1973); Renaire Corp. v. Vaughn, 142 A.2d 148, 150 (D.C. 1958) (party who failed to file cross-appeal could not allege error in favorable judgment on adversary's appeal from that ju......
  • Albertorio-Santiago v. Reliable Financial Services
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — District of Puerto Rico
    • May 4, 2009
    ...and the repossessor should desist from taking possession without recourse to the courts. Id. at *3 (citing, inter alia, Renaire Corp. v. Vaughn, 142 A.2d 148 (D.C. 1958)); cf. Wallace v. Chrysler Credit Corp., 743 F.Supp. 1228, 1232 (W.D.Va. 1990) (creditors may enter the debtor's land and ......
  • Marine Midland Bank-Central v. Cote
    • United States
    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • November 9, 1977
    ...503 S.W.2d 853 (Tex.Civ.App.1974).4 E. g., Evers-Jordan Furniture Co. v. Hartzog, 237 Ala. 407, 187 So. 491 (1939); Renaire Corp. v. Vaughn, 142 A.2d 148 (D.C.Mun.App.1958); Girard v. Anderson, 219 Iowa 142, 257 N.W. 400 (1934); Hileman v. Harter Bank & Trust Co., 174 Ohio St. 95, 186 N.E.2......
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