STATEMENT OF FACTS.
This is an action in replevin by appellee against appellants to recover a five-passenger Hudson brougham automobile. Appellants denied title in appellee and claimed title in themselves.
On April 24, 1926, Clyde Byrd traded a Studebaker roadster to W. A. McKenzie and Hugh McKenzie for a Hudson brougham automobile which had been driven about nineteen hundred miles. They wanted $1,775 for their car, and allowed Byrd $1,325 for his roadster. At the time Byrd signed a contract and note for the $450 difference. In the contract title was retained in the seller until all the installments of the purchase price were paid. The note for $450 was dated April 26, 1926, and was payable in eight equal monthly installments of $56.25 each. On the back of the note was indorsed the following:
"For value received, pay to Commercial Investment Trust, or order, without recourse on us. By Hugh McKenzie, dealer."
The conditional sales contract was also signed and transferred to said Commercial Investment Trust of Chicago, Illinois. Byrd was unable to pay the first two installments on the note, and in June made what he thought was a binding contract with the bookkeeper of Hugh McKenzie to carry the note until the first of September, 1926.
On the 9th of July, 1926, E. I. Rothbart, an attorney of Chicago, Illinois, wrote to Mr. Clyde E. Byrd, Smackover, Arkansas, the following:
"File 222798-26R
"Dear sir: The Commercial Investment Trust has turned over to me the above note, bearing your signature, on which there is a balance of $450. Of this amount $112.50 is past due, representing installments for the months of May and June. My clients have requested me to take immediate action on the matter, stating they have received no response from you. The account will be held in abeyance in my office for the next seven days, *Page 1116 and if, at the end of that time, my clients have not received your check for $112.50 to bring the account to date, it will be necessary for me to follow their instructions.
"Please give the matter your immediate attention, so that it will not be necessary for me to take any further action.
"Yours very truly."
At the time this letter was written, Rothbart had in his possession the note and conditional sales contract signed by Clyde E. Byrd for $450, for the balance due on the purchase price of a Hudson brougham automobile, and which had been assigned or transferred by Hugh McKenzie, dealer, to the Commercial Investment Trust. Rothbart kept the note and contract in his possession until about the end of July, 1926, when he returned it to the Commercial Investment Trust because it had been paid.
The letter of Rothbart was duly received by Byrd. Along about the twelfth of July, 1926, Byrd carried his car to McKenzie's garage to have it greased and oiled. He went for the car on July 15, 1926. McKenzie told him that he had sold the car. Byrd offered McKenzie his father's check for $450, and demanded the car. Hugh McKenzie refused to let him have the car, because he had already sold it. Byrd then wired the Commercial Investment Trust $450, the balance due on the car. F. D. Laird purchased the car and drove it to Oklahoma before Byrd could file a suit in replevin for it.
On August 2, 1926, Byrd wrote to Mr. Edward I. Rothbart, Chicago, Illinois, the following:
"Dear sir: Referring to your letter of July 9, in re notes held by the Commercial Investment Trust Company, I beg to state that on July 15 I wired this company the full amount of all the notes held by it against my car, $450; as yet I have not received my notes. You will please send or have them sent to me here at Smackover, together with a bill of sale of the car, as soon as the same can be conveniently done in the course of *Page 1117 business. Thanking you in advance for your prompt attention to the matter, I am yours truly."
According to the testimony of the defendants, an agent of the Commercial Investment Trust came to the garage of Hugh McKenzie about the thirteenth of July, 1926, and demanded the car. The car was turned over to the representative of the Commercial Investment Trust, and said representative then sold the car to Hugh McKenzie for $450. Hugh McKenzie then sold the car to F. D. Laird. F. D. Laird drove the car to Oklahoma, where it was wrecked, and, as a consequence thereof, was almost valueless. Clyde Byrd did not come for the car until after the agent of the Commercial Investment Trust had taken possession of it and sold it to Hugh McKenzie and the latter had sold it to F. D. Laird.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee, plaintiff in the court below; and from the judgment rendered appellants, defendants in the court below, have duly prosecuted an appeal to this court. (after stating the facts). It is well settled in this State that one who sells personal property with reservation of title, upon the purchaser's default may either treat the sale as canceled and bring an action of replevin, or treat the sale as absolute and sue for the purchase money. It is equally well settled that the purchaser has the right to pay the balance of the purchase price, so as to prevent the seller from retaking the property. Culberson v. Lakella Iron Works,170 Ark. 813, 281 S.W. 373.
The Commercial Investment Trust, by transfer and assignment from Hugh McKenzie, became the owner of the $450 note of Clyde E. Byrd, payable in installments, and also of the conditional sales contract. Byrd made default in the payment of the first two installments of the note, and the Commercial Investment Trust turned the note and contract over to Edward I. Rothbart, an attorney of Chicago, for collection, or for the recovery *Page 1118 of the automobile in default of the payment of the balance due on it. Rothbart, on the ninth day of July, 1926, wrote to Clyde E. Byrd a letter in which he told him that his clients had requested him to take immediate action in the matter, and that the matter would be held in abeyance in his office for the next seven days. This letter was duly received by Byrd, and, before the end of the seven days, he went to the garage of Hugh McKenzie, where he had left the car to be greased and oiled, and demanded his car. He was told by McKenzie that the Commercial Investment Trust had taken possession of the car because of his default in the payment of the two installments of the notes. Byrd tendered to Hugh McKenzie his father's check for $450 for the balance of the purchase price. The check was refused, but was refused by McKenzie because he had already sold the car to F. D. Laird. Byrd then wired the $450 to the Commercial Investment Trust.
The court submitted to the jury the question of whether or not the Commercial Investment Trust had waived its right to retake the car during the seven days' time for extension given by its attorney, Rothbart, and the action of the court in this respect is assigned as error by counsel for appellants. They cite and rely on the principle of law decided in Cullen-McCurdy Construction Co. v. Vulcan Iron Works, 93 Ark. 342,124 S.W. 1023, where it was held that it was not within the implied authority of an attorney to compromise his client's cause of action, or to release the defendant from liability, or to shift that liability by accepting the liability of another for that of the defendant. In this connection it may be said that there is no implied power, under a general retainer to an attorney, to grant additional time to a client's debtor. 6 C.J. 659, and cases cited. These cases are based upon the principle that the law of principal and gent applies to the relation of attorney and client where the attorney is acting merely in the capacity of a collector, and that there is no implied power to grant additional time to his client's debtor. Our own case cited *Page 1119 above and those cited in Corpus Juris proceed upon the principle that an attorney cannot give a release or compromise a case without sufficient authority, because that affects his client's right and not merely his remedy. So too, when an extension of time has been granted by an attorney who has merely authority to collect, this might have the effect of discharging a surety of the debtor or of otherwise impairing the rights of his client.
Here greater authority than a mere collection attorney may be implied. As we have already seen, there was a conditional sales contract, and the seller or his assignee had the right to treat the sale as absolute and recover the balance of the purchase price, or to retake the property and claim it as his own, upon default by the purchaser in making the installment payments as provided in the conditional sales contract. It is inferable from the letter written by Rothbart and from his testimony in the case that he had authority to collect the balance of the purchase price or to institute suit for the property itself, in case of default of the payment of the purchase price. Hence we are of the opinion that the court was justified in submitting to the jury whether or not Rothbart did have authority to extend the time of payment for a short period in order to collect the balance of the purchase price. Such action on his part in no sense deprived his client of any material right, and related merely to his control of the remedy given his client under the conditional sales contract. Hence we do not think that the court committed reversible error in submitting this question to the jury, under the circumstances adduced in evidence.
It is next contended that, even though Rothbart had the authority to give the seven days' extension of time for payment, this did not have the effect of waiving the foreclosure, and that the seller still had a right to retake the property because the two installment notes had not been paid when due. This is contrary to the plainest principles of justice. The seller was given the election to treat the sale as absolute and sue for the balance *Page 1120 of the purchase price, or to retake the property upon the default being made by the purchaser in the payment of the past due installment notes and demand for the property. The jury was justified in finding that Byrd had relied upon the seven days' extension of time given him by Rothbart for the Commercial Investment Trust, the holder of the note and the conditional sales contract, and, under the circumstances, it could not treat the nonperformance of the contract within the original time as a breach of it. Johnson v. Keaser, 196 Cal. 686,239 P. 324; Reinkey v. Findley Electric Co., 47 Minn. 161,180 N.W. 236; and McCaron v. Commercial Credit Trust,167 Minn. 322, 209 N.W. 15.
It is also insisted that the judgment should be reversed because the tender made by Byrd for the payment of the purchase price was not in cash. This did not make any difference. The tender was not refused because of the check, but because McKenzie claimed that he had already sold the car to Laird. McKenzie waived his right to demand money by objecting to receiving the tender on other grounds. It would have been a vain and idle thing for Byrd to have procured the $450 in money and tendered it to McKenzie when McKenzie was refusing to accept the tender on other grounds. Harriman v. Meyer, 45 Ark. 40; and Duffy v. O'Donovan,46 N.Y. 223.
Finally, it is insisted that Byrd could not maintain the suit against McKenzie because he had already sold and delivered the car to Laird at the time the suit in replevin was brought. The suit of Byrd was predicated upon the wrongdoing of the defendants, and they were all liable in damages for the condition of the car, under the facts found by the jury in the application of the principles of law given by the court. If the Commercial Investment Trust wrongfully converted the car to its own use when Byrd had the right to pay the balance of the purchase price, neither the Commercial Investment Trust nor its agents in the premises can escape liability for its wrongdoing. In the very nature of things *Page 1121 neither McKenzie nor Laird could obtain any better rights than the Commercial Investment Trust. They were in no sense innocent purchasers.
Therefore the judgment will be affirmed.