Supreme Court of Canada
C. C. Motor Sales Ltd. v. Chan,
[1926] S.C.R. 485
Date: 1926-05-31
C. C. Motor
Sales Ltd. (Defendant) Appellant;
and
Solomon Chan
(Plaintiff) Respondent
1926: May 5; 1926: May 31
Present: Anglin C.J.C. and
Idington, Duff, Newcombe and Rinfret JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA
Conditional sale—Default in
payment—Repossession and resale—Seller realizing an excess on resale—Buyer's
right to excess—B.C. Conditional Sales Act, R.S.B.C., 1924, c. 44
On the buyer's default under a
conditional sale agreement the seller re-possessed and resold the chattel,
realizing a sum in excess of the unpaid instalments.
[Page 486]
Held that, in view of the terms of the agreement and the
wording of its clauses, the relationship of the parties did not differ
essentially from that of mortgagor and mortgagee, with an obligation for
payment by the former, and therefore the surplus proceeds of the resale
belonged to the buyer; that there was nothing in the B.C. Conditional Sales
Act, R.S.B.C., 1924, c. 44, which had the effect of depriving the buyer of
his right thereto. Sawyer v. Pringle (18 Ont. A.R. 218)
distinguished.
Judgment of the Court of
Appeal for British Columbia ([1926] 1 W.W.R. 508) aff.
APPEAL, by special leave of
the Court of Appeal, from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for British
Columbia,
affirming, by a majority, a judgment of the County Court of Vancouver,
adjudging that the plaintiff do recover against the defendant the sum of
$532.78 and costs.
The defendant sold an automobile
to the plaintiff under a conditional sale agreement dated April 1, 1924, the
material parts of which are set out or described in the judgment. The plaintiff
made default in payment of some of the instalments of the purchase money and the
defendant took possession of the automobile and resold it. The proceeds of the
resale exceeded the balance unpaid by the plaintiff and the action was to
recover the excess from the defendant
C.W. Craig K.C. for the
appellant.
D.Donaghy for the
respondent.
The judgment of the court was
delivered by
NEWCOMBE J.—The plaintiff agreed
for the purchase of an automobile from the defendant upon terms of cash and
credit, as set out in a written agreement between the parties. He made default
in payment of some of the instalments of the purchase money, and the defendant
took possession of the vehicle and sold it under provisions of the agreement,
realizing a sum in excess of the unpaid instalments. The plaintiff thereupon
brought this action in the County Court to recover the excess. The County Court
judge gave judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant company appealed to
the Court of Appeal, contending that the excess belonged to it, and not to the
plaintiff. The amount, $532.78, is not in dispute. The appeal was dis-
[Page 487]
missed, but Martin J. A. and M.
A. MacDonald J. A. dissented. The case comes before this court by special leave
of the Court of Appeal.
The question depends upon the
interpretation and effect of the agreement of sale between the parties. It is
dated 1st April, 1924. The vendor (the appellant) agrees to sell, and the
purchaser (the respondent) agrees to purchase, the automobile upon the terms
and conditions therein set forth, and the purchaser acknowledges receipt of the
automobile in good order and condition. The price is $3,103.60, of which $950
was paid at the time of executing the agreement, and it was stipulated that the
balance should be paid in twelve monthly instalments of varying amounts. The
instalments were to bear interest at 8 per cent, and the purchaser gave to the
vendor his promissory note for each of the instalments. Then "the terms
and conditions of this contract of conditional sale" are enumerated and
set out; there is a description of the automobile "together with the conditions
surrounding the purchase of the same". By these it is provided that the
vendor has and shall continue to have the absolute property "until after
full and complete payment of the purchase price therefor"; that "on
full payment of said promissory notes (or renewals), principal and interest,
according to their terms, the titles of said property shall vest in said
purchaser"; it is declared that the automobile is to be used as a taxicab,
and that, while it is in possession of the purchaser, he shall have the right
to use it for that purpose; that he shall take proper care of it, and that, if
it be injured or require repairs, the purchaser shall immediately have it
repaired at his own expense, and that the purchaser shall not sell or dispose
of it, or remove it from British Columbia, except upon the written permission
of the vendor. I quote in full the 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th enumerations:—
9. The purchaser covenants
that the automobile covered by this agreement will not be used for the
transportation of liquor or drugs or any unlawful purpose during the life of
this agreement, and in case of any such contingency, the entire debt hereby
secured shall, at the vendor's option, become immediately due and payable, and
the vendor shall have the same right of seizure and sale as if default had been
made in payment of principal or interest.
10.If by reason of failure
of the purchaser to pay an instalment of principal or interest or any part of
the same or to observe any of the covenants, provisos or conditions herein
contained, the vendor shall deem
[Page 488]
it advisable to take any
proceedings either judicial or extra judicial to protect itself or enforce the
security, all costs and expenses incurred by the vendor of or incidental to
such proceedings shall be payable by the purchaser and shall be deemed to be a
payment of principal due and in arrears hereunder, and shall bear interest at
the rate herein above set forth.
11. That time shall be
material and of the essence hereof, and that if default be made in the payment
of said principal sum or interest, or any part thereof, at the time the same
shall become due, or if default be made by said purchaser in any other respect
hereunder, or if said purchaser fails to make payment for any labour, repairs,
improvement or equipment placed upon said automobile by authority of said
purchaser (in which case said vendor may, at its option, make such payment),
then the said principal sum and all accrued interest, including expenses (if
any) and including such payment (if any) made by said vendor thereon, shall
thereupon immediately become wholly due and payable at the option of said
vendor (notice of said option being hereby waived), the said vendor may at once
take possession of said automobile and said parts, devices, tools, and
equipment wherever the same may be, and sell said automobile and said parts,
devices, tools and equipment and the whole thereof, as provided by law.
12. The purchaser agrees to
pay any deficiency that may remain after the application of the proceeds of any
sale hereunder to the payment of said indebtedness or any judgment obtained
thereon.
There remains a clause by which
the purchaser agrees to keep the automobile insured for an amount equal to or
exceeding the principal sum payable under the agreement,
loss, if any, payable to
vendor or assigns as interest may appear, and deliver the policy therefor to
said vendor,
or that the vendor may procure
insurance,
and all sums expended in so
doing, with interest thereon at the rate of 8% per annum, shall be added to the
purchase price, and shall be secured hereby.
It will be observed that, by the
express provisions of three of the clauses to which I have referred, it is a
term or condition of or " surrounding the purchase of" the automobile
that the agreement shall operate as a security to the vendor for the principal
and interest of the debt, and that, if and when any of the payments provided
for shall become overdue, the vendor may take possession of the automobile and
sell it, applying the proceeds of the sale to the payment of the indebtedness,
from which it would seem to follow that the agreement is intended to operate as
a legal mortgage, incident to which, of course, is the purchaser's right to
redeem.
While the transaction may
constitute a conditional sale within the definition of the Conditional Sales
Act, R.S.B.C.
[Page 489]
1924, c. 44, I do not find any
provision in that Act which denies the respondent's right to the surplus
proceeds of the sale.
It is enacted by section 10 that
when the seller retakes possession of the goods pursuant to a condition in the
contract, he shall retain them for twenty days, and that the buyer may redeem
them within that period by paying the balance of the contract price with the
actual costs and expenses of taking and keeping possession; that, if the price
of the goods exceed $30, and the seller intend to look to the buyer for any
deficiency upon resale, the goods shall not be resold until after notice in
writing of the intended sale shall have been given to the buyer, which notice
is to contain a description of the goods; a statement of the balance due and
the actual costs and expenses; a demand of payment on or before the day
mentioned, and a statement that, unless the amount be paid within the time
mentioned, the goods will be sold. It is further provided that, when the goods
are not redeemed within the twenty days, and subject to the giving of the
notice of sale prescribed, the seller may sell the goods, either by private
sale or at public auction, at any time after the expiration of that period.
There is nothing in these provisions however to suggest an intention to
diminish or to prejudice the rights which the purchaser has under the terms of
the instrument, or which are by law incidental to the transaction; they are
intended rather for the protection of the purchaser; the disposition of the
proceeds of the sale is not expressly regulated by the statute, and remains
subject to the provisions expressly or impliedly contracted.
The dissenting judges in the
Court of Appeal relied principally upon the case of Sawyer v. Pringle.
But it is to be observed that the provisions of the agreement in that case
differed from those now under consideration, and the question involved was also
different. There was a contract which is described as
[Page 490]
an executory agreement of
future sale on performance of certain named conditions by the defendant.
There are two clauses from the
agreement extracted in the report, and from one of these it appears that the
property in the machine which was the subject of the agreement was not to pass
to the proposed purchaser until full payment of the price and any obligations
given therefor, although he was to have the possession and right of use in the
interval; but, upon any default in payment, the whole price or obligation was
to become due and payable, and it was provided that the vendor might then
resume possession. There was no provision for resale; but, upon default, the
vendor did resume possession and resell for less than the price stipulated by the
agreement, and it was held that the balance was not recoverable from the
purchaser, because the vendor, by reselling the machine to another, had
disabled himself from completing the sale for which he had previously agreed,
and that the consideration for the payment of the price therefore failed. Such
a question could not arise in this case because by the twelfth clause of the
contract the purchaser explicitly agrees to pay any amount by which the
proceeds of sale are deficient to meet the indebtedness.
Burton J. A., who was one of the
majority of the court, said:—
If I could bring myself to
the conclusion arrived at by one of my learned brothers (MacLennan J.A.) that
the relationship of mortgagor and mortgagee existed between these parties, I
should probably have no difficulty in arriving at the same result as he has,
but that, as it appears to me, is what they have studiously avoided. They have
on the contrary refrained from making any absolute contract of sale, reserving
possession merely till payment, but have entered into a peculiar contract under
which no sale is to be considered as made until full payment of the price.
Osler, J. A. considered that the
case must be looked at as if the possession had always remained with the
vendor, and he said it
is one where there is an
express contract which governs the right of the parties, and in which the
plaintiffs have been careful to exclude the possibility of the goods being
treated for any purpose as the goods of the defendant, until the price shall
have been paid.
On the other hand, Maclennan J.
A. found that the relationship of mortgagor and mortgagee existed between the
parties, and that their legal and equitable rights must be determined by the
principles applicable to that relation.
[Page 491]
While in the present case the
contract does not amount to a bargain and sale of the automobile, and is
executory in the sense that the property is not to pass to the purchaser until
payment of the price, it is nevertheless a concluded agreement for sale by
which the possession passes to the purchaser, and the property is also to pass
upon compliance with the stipulated conditions, the vendor in the meantime, by
the express provisions, retaining the property as security. The debt is secured
upon the property, the legal ownership remaining with the creditor, but the
equitable ownership being that of the debtor, subject to the security afforded
to the creditor for the debt; the vendor is given the right to take possession
and sell, if the purchaser fail to make payment; the proceeds of the sale are
to be applied to the payment of the indebtedness, and the purchaser is to pay
any deficiency which may remain; therefore the relationship between the parties
does not differessentially from that of mortgagor and mortgagee with an
obligation for payment by the former; and if, as I conclude, that be the
meaning and effect of the instrument, there can be no doubt that the surplus
proceeds of the sale belong to the purchaser. It is true that the property was
not transferred to the purchaser and reconveyed to the vendor in order to
effect the security for the indebtedness which, by the stipulations of the
agreement, the latter was to have; but equity looks to the intent of the
transaction rather than to the form, and the intent is made clear by the terms
of the instrument.
The appeal should be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed with
costs.
Solicitors for the
appellant: McLellan & White.
Solicitor for the
respondent: F. A. Jackson.