Ryan v. Spaniol

Decision Date31 December 1951
Docket NumberNo. 4336.,4336.
Citation193 F.2d 551
PartiesRYAN v. SPANIOL et al.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Tenth Circuit

David H. Sanders, Tulsa, Okl. (E. D. Brewer, Tulsa, Okl., on the brief), for appellant.

Paul Washington, Oklahoma City, Okl. (Leo Thompson, Jr., Oklahoma City, Okl., on the brief), for appellees.

Before PHILLIPS, Chief Judge, and BRATTON and PICKETT, Circuit Judges.

PICKETT, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought by Charles Ryan,1 a licensed used car dealer of Kansas City, Missouri, againt P. D. Spaniol2 and H. B. Hallman, a co-partnership engaged in the same business at Tulsa and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The purpose of the action was to recover the amount received for the sale of seven automobiles which the plaintiff had delivered to M. J. Worthington, a registered used car dealer at Ottawa, Kansas. It developed during the trial of the case that the defendant, Hallman, had no interest in the transaction involved. This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the defendant.

Early in August, 1947, Worthington placed an order with Ryan for the purchase of twenty automobiles. Within a few days he delivered nineteen automobiles to Worthington and received four checks in payment therefor. The automobiles with bills of sale therefor were delivered to Worthington in Kansas City, Missouri, where he placed Kansas dealer's plates upon the same and drove them to Kansas. Ryan did not assign, transfer or deliver to Worthington the statutory certificates of title prescribed by the law of Missouri for the reason that such certificates with an assignment had not been delivered to him by the owners from whom he purchased the cars.

Worthington sold the seven cars in question here to Leroy Burkdoll, another registered used car dealer, at Ottawa, Kansas. Burkdoll in turn sold and delivered them to the defendant at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. There was no transfer and assignment of certificates of title from Worthington to Burkdoll or from Burkdoll to Spaniol. In these sales as in previous transactions between all the parties, when the statutory certificates of title were not immediately available, ordinary bills of sale were delivered with each purchase. All of the sales were completed within two or three days after the automobiles were delivered to Worthington in Kansas City, Missouri. Burkdoll paid Worthington for the automobiles and Spaniol paid Burkdoll. The four checks given by Worthington to Ryan were not paid. This became known to Spaniol some time after he had made the purchase in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Spaniol, by using the Burkdoll bills of sale, obtained certificates of title to the seven automobiles from the proper Oklahoma authorities. This was permissible under Oklahoma law.3 He then sold the same to individual purchasers and received a total of $17,350. This action for money had and received was filed on April 28, 1950, to recover the amount received by the defendant from those sales.

The transaction between plaintiff and Worthington took place in Missouri and is therefore governed by the law of that state. Under the law of Missouri it is necessary for the seller of an automobile to deliver to the purchaser with the delivery of the automobile, a certificate of title properly assigned to the purchaser. A failure to deliver such certificate duly assigned renders the transaction fraudulent and void and no title to the car passes.4

The sale of the automobiles by Worthington to Burkdoll took place in Kansas, and the validity of that sale must be determined by the law of Kansas. In a Kansas sale to an individual, the law appears to be substantially the same as that of Missouri.5 The question of whether a sale of automobiles between registered dealers may be perfected under the Kansas statute without the delivery of a certificate of title has not been decided by the Kansas courts. The trial court was of the view that the Kansas statute did not require the assignment and transfer of a certificate of title in sales between registered dealers. We find it unnecessary to determine this question.

Although an action for money had and received is one at law, it is in the nature of a suit in equity and is governed by equitable principles. It may be maintained when a person has in his possession money belonging to another which in equity and good conscience he ought to pay over to the claimant.6 The action is founded upon the principle that a person should not be unjustly enriched at the expense of another. It is a well recognized rule in equity jurisprudence that where one of two innocent persons must suffer as the result of an action of a third person, as between the two innocent persons the one who by his conduct and misplaced confidence created the circumstances which enabled the third person to do the wrong, must suffer the loss.7

Here Ryan obtained possession of the automobiles in Missouri without obtaining at the time of delivery the certificates of title as required by the law of Missouri. He transferred them by bill of sale to Worthington, an automobile dealer, before he had the necessary certificates of title, knowing that they were to be sold and delivered to others immediately. Similar transactions had been handled in the same manner over a long period of time. He knew that some of the cars previously sold to Worthington were resold to other dealers in Kansas and Oklahoma including the defendant. At the time of delivery he did everything possible to divest himself of title and by his own acts clothed Worthington with evidence of title and ownership, and made it possible for the automobiles to be sold for a valuable consideration to Burkdoll and then to the defendant in Oklahoma without certificates of title accompanying the sale. The plaintiff set in motion the chain of circumstances which resulted in the defendant's acquiring the automobiles in good faith. Treating the plaintiff and defendant as innocent persons, as between the two, the plaintiff must bear the loss. From what was said in Al's Auto Sales v. Moskowitz, supra, there seems to be little doubt but that the Oklahoma courts would apply the doctrine in this case. There, Al's Auto Sales of Saint Louis, Missouri, sold and delivered an automobile to a dealer in Oklahoma. The Missouri certificate of title was attached to a bank draft to be delivered to...

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    ..."This action is founded upon the principle that a person should not be unjustly enriched at the expense of another." Ryan v. Spaniol, 193 F.2d 551, 553 (10th Cir.1951). It "derives from the contract principles of implied contract and restitution, which require that a benefit have been confe......
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    ...The action is founded upon the principle that a person should not be unjustly enriched at the expense of another.” Ryan v. Spaniol, 193 F.2d 551 (10th Cir. 1951). See Cont'l Oil Co. v. Rapp, 301 P.2d 198, 202 (Okla. 1956)(relying on Ryan v. Spanoil). [6]The Bureau of Indian Affairs issues C......
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    ...Realization Corp. v. Geist, 316 U.S. 89, 62 S.Ct. 978, 86 L.Ed. 1293. Nor is it an action for money had and received as in Ryan v. Spaniol, 10 Cir., 193 F.2d 551. It is a suit upon a negotiable instrument, as to which the policy of the law requires strict adherence to the rules of the Law T......
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