Ohio Finance Co. v. McReynolds
Ohio Finance Co. v. McReynolds
Opinion of the Court
“The final questions here are: .
1. Is a bona fide purchaser of an automobile under a legal chain of title to take notice of a chattel mortgage given by the owner and placed on file before such owner acquires the legal title of record?
2. Is an adjudication in a former action, in favor of such chattel mortgagee, conclusive upon the parties in this action?
In the case of the Ohio Farmers Insurance Co. v. Todinia, 111 OS. 274, the court had before it a case involving the scope and effect of the automobile registration law wherein it was held that no title to a purchaser of an automobile vested until a bill of sale, duly executed and delivered, is filed for record.
Whatever equitable rights or inchoate-title vested in Oswald at the time of the verbal contract to purchase and delivery of possession, we need not decide. The full legal title vested only when the bill of sale to Oswald was executed, delivered and filed of record. The mortgage of Oswald, taken and filed nrior to the vesting of the legal title in Oswald, was, at most, an equitable mortgage. It was not a conveyance in the chain of title. It is claimed that when Os.wald completed his title by obtaining and filing the bill of sale, the equitable mortgage of the Finance Company ripened into a vested legal mortgage by operation of law. ín a limited sense this would be true hut we cannot escape the conclusion that the rights of the mortgagee would attach only as against the mortgagor and others having no supérior equity.
*266 The purchasers from Oswald were bona fide purchasers for full value and without actual notice of the rights of said chattel mortgagee. The final question is, therefore, are such purchasers chargeable with notice of the chattel mortgage executed by Oswald prior to his obtaining the legal title. We are unable to find an adjudication upon this exact question m our own state. The case of Sternberger v. Ragland, 57 OS. 148, contains a discussion on the subject of constructive notice as applied to conveyances not in the chain of title.
This case shows a disposition to confine constructive notice to conveyances in the chain of title. Upon the identical question here the decisions in other states are in conflict. We, however, adopt this statement of the law from 28 Ruling Case Law, page 209.
Accepting this view we hold that the purchasers from Oswald, in the line of title, hold a superior title to that taken by the Ohio Finance Company under its chattel mortgage.
This leaves for consideration the effect of the former adjudication. The burden of proof is upon the Ohio Finance Company upon this issue. The agreed statement of facts shows that the replevin action was filed on or about Jan. 15, 1925, but no showing is made as to when the summons was issued or served upon the actual defendants nor does it appear in the record that the property was actually taken from the custody of its owner until about April 15, 1925. In the meantime Thomas Mc-Reynolds acquired title to and possession of the automobile as a bona fide purchaser for full value and without notice. The bill of sale was filed Jan. 16, 1925. McReynolds’ title was therefore complete on Jan. 16, 1925, and it would- be incumbent upon the Ohio Finance Company, in order to sustain its claim of adjudication, to prove that its action in replevin was not only filed but that summons was issued and served and the property taken before McReynolds acquired his title. This, we think, the record fails to show and the claim of adjudication must be rejected as McReynolds, at least, was a necessary party to the replevin action. It follows, therefore, that the judgments of the Municipal Court and the Court of Common Pleas should be affirmed.”
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