Plaintiff was the owner of a used automobile. He purchased a used car of defendant for $400 and received a credit thereon of $125 for his car, and $9 in cash, leaving a balance due of $266. This plaintiff agreed to pay in installments at the rate of $33.25, evidenced by promissory notes. He defaulted in making a payment, and defendant seized the car after due notice to plaintiff. Defendant sold the car for $75 and credited it on plaintiff's account. Thereafter plaintiff continued to pay $10 a month, and has paid in all $253.34, and defendant refuses to turn over the car unless plaintiff pays the balance, which is substantially $75. Plaintiff files his bill and tenders the balance due and prays for a specific performance of the contract, or, in the event that the car is sold, a decree for the value of it. Defendant proceeded in accordance with its view of the contract and gave plaintiff notice of its intention to resell the car. Plaintiff made no effort to redeem it, but waited nearly a year and then filed this bill.
Plaintiff discusses the question of fraud in his brief. We are unable to see any evidence of fraud in the case as he states it. The most that can be said is that the defendant failed to do what it promised to do. The only legal question of consequence is whether the contract was a conditional sales contract or a chattel mortgage.
It has not been the practice of this court to enforce specifically contracts for the purchase of personal property except when there was some sentimental value to it, or where like property could not be easily purchased in the market, or for other particular reasons which are not material here. 25 R. C. L. p. 293; Cole v. Cole Realty Co., 169 Mich. 347.
In the last case cited it was said:
"Though the law of specific performance primarily relates to realty contracts, and, as a general rule, is not applicable where the subject-matter is personal *Page 197 property, yet specific performance will be decreed and a contract enforced where the thing, in the nature of personal property, has a sentimental value, is rare, and cannot be obtained elsewhere, or has no market value, or the true value is difficult of ascertainment, or requires an accounting, or other peculiar circumstances of the contract involve conditions where the measure of damage in a court of law will not give full and adequate compensation."
The chancellor refused plaintiff relief and dismissed his bill. We think he was right. Outside of the question of specific performance, he can as easily settle the questions upon the law side of the court. Plaintiff will be given permission to transfer his case to the law side of the court if he so elects.
The decree will be affirmed. Defendant will recover its costs of this court.
SHARPE, SNOW, STEERE, FELLOWS, WIEST, CLARK, and McDONALD, JJ., concurred.