In The Matter of John H. German, Bankrupt. Joseph Van Hooreweghe, Trustee v. First National Bank of Moline, Illinois, 285 F.2d 740, 1st Cir. (1961)
In The Matter of John H. German, Bankrupt. Joseph Van Hooreweghe, Trustee v. First National Bank of Moline, Illinois, 285 F.2d 740, 1st Cir. (1961)
2d 740
The First National Bank of Moline, Illinois, sought to establish a lien on the
proceeds of the sale of an automobile which was an asset of the Bankrupt's
estate. The Trustee in Bankruptcy and the Bank filed a stipulation of facts. The
Referee in Bankruptcy held that on these stipulated facts the Bank did not have
a valid lien against the Trustee on the proceeds of the sale because the Bank
had not perfected its lien in accordance with Ch. 95, 3-201 et seq., Illinois
Revised Statutes, 1959, the Illinois Motor Vehicle Act. Section 3-202 deals
with perfection of security interests. Section 3-202(b) reads:
"A security interest is perfected by the delivery to the Secretary of State of the
existing certificate of title, if any, an application for a certificate of title
containing the name and address of the lienholder and the date of his security
agreement and the required fee. It is perfected as of the time of its creation if
the delivery is completed within ten (10) days thereafter, otherwise, as of the
time of the delivery."
The stipulation reads:
"It is stipulated that on June 23, 1958, John H. German purchased a 1958
Plymouth convertible automobile from Horst-Zimmerman Motors in
Davenport, Iowa. On the same date, Mr. German executed a promissory note
and chattel mortgage to First National Bank of Moline, Illinois, as a financing
arrangement for the purchase of said automobile. The chattel mortgage was not
filed or recorded. The automobile dealer made out the application for certificate
of title and mailed it directly to the Illinois Secretary of State, a copy of which
application was admitted into evidence as Petitioner's Exhibit No. 1. This
application was received by the office of the Illinois Secretary of State on July
31, 1958, and the certificate of title was issued August 1, 1958.
"On September 23, 1959, the said automobile was sold by the Trustee in
Bankruptcy herein, pursuant to petition and order authorizing the same, for the
price of $1,800.00, which is now held by the Trustee. The lien claimed by First
National Bank of Moline against said proceeds of sale amounts to $1,604.97."
6 "Date
The Trustee contended, and the Referee agreed, that failure to write the date of
the security agreement in the particular space provided on the application form
(where the dealer had written "Chattel") was fatal. The application also stated
that the automobile had been acquired on June 23, 1958. The receipt and issue
dates, July 31, and August 1, 1958, were stamped on the form by the Secretary
of State office. As the date of the acquisition and the date of the security
agreement were identical, the date of the security agreement was "contained" in
the application.
On petition to review the Referee's decision, the District Court held that to
place so strict a construction on the statute, under the facts of this case, was to
overlook the evident intent of the Legislature. The Courts of Illinois had not yet
interpreted this section of the Motor Code, but the District Court was
convinced, as we are, that this section, like other Illinois recording Acts, should
be construed as primarily a constructive notice statute, to protect a lienor who
has substantially complied with its provisions in his attempt to perfect his lien.
Here the application form showed that the Bank claimed a lien against the
Bankrupt's automobile, the amount secured by the lien, and the date of
purchase, prior to which no lien could have attached. The precise date was
provable by parole evidence. Here it was the subject of stipulation.
In numerous cases, chattel mortgages have been held valid despite such
omissions as parts of the mandatory statutory form for acknowledgment, or
such errors as misstating the date from which the requisite 10-day recording
period runs. It was held that the object of the Chattel Mortgage Act is to afford
notice, to such persons as might desire to give the mortgagor credit or to buy his
property, that he had in fact mortgaged it. Greenwald v. Lee, 1929, 252 Ill.App.
184, 193; Durfee v. Grinnell, 1873, 69 Ill. 371, 374.
10
The Trustee points to Ch. 95, 4, Illinois Revised Statutes, 1959, which limits
the duration of a chattel mortgage, as adding importance to precise compliance
with the Motor Vehicle statute. If this limitation is applicable to the Motor
Vehicle Act, however, the mortgage instrument would still have to be
examined, as the Motor Vehicle Act application form does not call for the
maturity date of the security interest.
11
12
The Trustee also contends that this is a statute in derogation of the common law
and hence must be strictly construed as the Referee construed it. On this
subject, the Illinois Supreme Court, dealing with a statutory notice, stated:
13
14
and quoted with approval from McDonald v. City of Spring Valley, 1918, 285
Ill. 52, 54, 120 N.E. 476, 2 A.L.R. 1359:
15
16
It, therefore, seems proper to us to consider the cases which have arisen under
the Chattel Mortgage provisions and to decline to construe the Motor Vehicle
Act more strictly than the Chattel Mortgage Act. We must agree with the
District Judge that there was substantial compliance with the statute, and that
the application form was sufficient to put any subsequent purchaser, creditor, or
lien claimant of the Bankrupt on notice of the fact of the lien and upon inquiry
as to all salient facts.
17
All other points urged by the Trustee have been considered and found to lack
merit. The Order of the District Court is
18
Affirmed.