Reversing.
The appeal presents an issue of the superiority of the rights of an attaching creditor or a conditional vendor.
In August, 1929, the appellee, Sauerman Bros., Inc., sold the Sweet Price Dredging Corporation a lot of levee building machinery for $37,850, a part of the purchase price being represented by promissory notes. The contract of sale contained express provisions that the title and right of possession of the property should remain in the seller until full payment had been made.
The appellant Paige Engineering Company, in May, 1930, sued the dredging corporation on an account for $19,811.76, and had an attachment levied on the machinery, and the sheriff took it into custody. Sauerman Bros. Inc., seasonably set up its title and asked for an order of delivery. By apt pleadings the issue was formed as to the priority of the respective rights, and, upon a trial, judgment was rendered sustaining the superiority of the seller's claim to the extent of $15,925 and interest, that being the unpaid purchase money, and the machinery was ordered to be sold. It is to be noted that, when the attachment suit was instituted, all of the unpaid purchase-money notes were long past due.
There is a contention as to whether the contract is to be regarded as having been executed in Illinois or in Tennessee. The importance of the point relates to the *Page 589 matter of the laws of the respective states regarding recordation of conditional sale contracts and the effect upon the rights of a subsequent attaching creditor. The sale contract was not recorded anywhere. There is also a disagreement as to the place of the delivery of the machinery. The contract calls for delivery f. o. b. Chicago, but the machinery was actually shipped and delivered to the purchaser in Tennessee, a short distance below the Kentucky line. However, it does not become necessary to determine either of these issues.
Proof was made that a conditional sale contract was not required to be recorded in Tennessee, but that it was required in Illinois, with the respective resulting effects upon the rights of a party innocent of its terms who obtains a lien on the property covered by it. In the opinion of Munz v. National Bond Investment Company,
Although, before the enactment of the Uniform Sales Law in Kentucky in 1928 (Ky. Stats., sec. 2651b-1 et seq.) a conditional sale was regarded as a sale with a mortgage back, yet under the doctrine of comity between states conditional sales made in states which sanctioned them were recognized as valid here. Such was the effect given them in the several cases cited herein, and it is so stated in Kelley v. Brack,
The machinery was built especially for a particular job of levee building on the Mississippi river which the purchaser had under contract. The plans and specifications were submitted to the seller in order that it might construct the machinery with full knowledge of the conditions under which it was to be used. Those plans disclosed that more than 96 per cent. of the work (27,918 feet) was to be done in Kentucky, and that less than 4 per cent. (1,046 feet) was to be done in Tennessee. The shipment was made to a point in Tennessee below the Kentucky line as a more convenient railroad station. The evidence, we think, shows that Sauerman Bros., well knew that the machinery would remain in Tennessee only a brief period of time, and that its permanent situs would be in Kentucky — at least for a period beyond when its purchase-money notes would become due. Actually it stayed in Tennessee about ten days and had been in Kentucky nine months when this litigation was instituted.
The sale contract was made in contemplation of that fact, and it must be considered that its removal into Kentucky was with the seller's consent. Such consideration removes the case from that class wherein it is held that constructive notice of the priority of a lien or reserved title, properly recorded at the place of the sale or original situs, will follow the property into whatever jurisdiction it may be carried, and will affect purchasers or creditors to the same extent as if their rights had been acquired at the place of record. Cable Piano Co. v. Lewis, supra; Tennessee Auto Corporation v. American National Bank,
We have a similiter in the case of Barney Smith Mfg. Co. v. Hart, 1 S.W. 414, 8 Ky. Law Rep. 223 (decided in 1886), where railroad construction cars were sold by the builder in Ohio under a conditional sale contract for the purpose of being used in Kentucky and which were accordingly brought into this state. It was held that the contract of sale was to be regarded as a mortgage, and that the lien retained was not good against attachment liens of creditors in this state because it was not recorded as required by our laws. As pointed out, the vendor had made its vendee the ostensible owner of the property; had received more than half the purchase money, and after the property had been transported into this State, with its consent, the seller, with the evidence of its lien in its pocket only, was claiming a prior equity against the claims of creditors who had no knowledge of the secret equities.
The statutes of this state make invalid or unenforceable the rights and equities of the seller arising from the transfer of property as against purchasers or creditors without actual notice thereof until such title or rights shall have been placed on public record and constructive notice thereof thereby given. Sections 496 and 523a-2, et seq., Kentucky Statutes; Smith v. Jackson,
The judgment is therefore reversed, with directions to enter a judgment in accordance with these conclusions.