Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

January 30, 1952 Hon. D. C. Greer Opinion No. V-1400. State Highway Engineer Texas Highway Deoartment Re: Evidence necessarv to is- Austin, Texas - sue a Texas Certificate of Title on an unregistered house trailer where a manu- facturer's certificateis Dear Mr. Greer: not available. Your request for an opinion deals with the pro- visions of Article 1436-1, Vernon's Penal Code, as amended by House Bill 409, Acts 52nd Leg., R;S. 1951, ch. 301, p. 482, governing the issuance of certificatesof title on motor vehicles. You have presented a factual sltua- tion in connectionwith your request, the substance of which is as follows: A house trailer was purchased in the State of Michigan by owner 'A' in 1947. Owner 'A' was Issued a certificateof title in Mlchlgan, but the trailer was not registered there because It was not permitted by Michigan law. Subsequentlyowner 'A' moved to Louisiana where he sold the trailer by executing an assignment of the tl le to owner 'B'. Neither owner 'A' nor 'B' obtained a c1'rtlf- icate of title or registrationin Louisiana because such was not authorleed under Louisiana law. Later owner 'B' moved the trailer Into Texas, where it was used for dwell- ing purposes, and, because It was not used on the public highways, was not registered. Owner 'B' now desires to sell the trailer, but before doing so must under Texas law obtain a certificateof title if it is to be regis- tered and used on the highways. Under the Texas Highway Department interpretationof the provisions of Article 1436-1, as amended, you have ruled that inasmuch as owner 'B' cannot furnish a manufacturer'scertificateon the trailer he must have a current registrationreceipt on the trailer from some o-ate or Country than Texas before you can issue to him a certii’lcate of title. You ask if the Texas Highway Department Is cor- rect in the above rulings. Hon. D. C. Greer, page 2 (V-1400) In connectionwith your request you have stated that your departmenthas also InterpretedHouse Bill 409, to mean that no new vehicle may be titled in the ta e of Texas unless amanufacturer's certificate is i=F presented as evidence of ownership. This interpretation is In accordance with Attorney General's Opinion V-1211 (19511, which dealt with new motor vehicles. Your prea- ent request, however, pre=ts an entirely different quea- tion from that answered in Opinion V-1211. The following definitionaare found in Article 1436-1, Vernon's Penal code, the "Certificateof Title Act": "The term 'First Sale' means the bargain, sale, transfer, or delivery with intent to pass an interest therein, other than a lien, of a motor vehicle which has not been previouslyreg- istered or licensed in this State or elsewhere; and such a bargain, sale, transfer or delivery, accompaniedby registrationor licensing of said vehicle in this State or elsewhere, shall con- stltute the first sale of said vehicle, irrespec- tive of where such bargain, sale, transfer, OF delivery occurred." (Sec. 7, Art. 1436-1, V.P.C., as amended b H.B. 409, Acts 52nd Leg., R.S. 1951, ch. 301, p. t82.) "The term 'SubsequentSale' means the bar- gain, sale, transfer, or delivery, with intent to pass an interest therein, other than a lien, of a motor vehicle which has been registered or licensed within this State or elsewhere, save and except when such vehicle is not required un- der law to be registered or licensed in this State; and any such bargain, sale, transfer, or delivery of a motor vehicle after same has been registered or licensed shall constitutea sub- sequent sale, irrespectiveof where such bargain, sale, transfer, or delivery occurred." (Sec. 8, Art. 1436-1, V.P.C., as amended by H.B. 409, a.) "The term 'Rew Car' meana a motor vehicle which has never been the subject of a first sale within this State or elsewhere." (Sec. 9, Art. 1436-1, V.P.C., as amended by H.B. 409, a.) Hon. D. C. Greer, page 3 (v-1400) "The term 'Used Car' .,means^a motor -. vehi- cle that has been the sunJect OS a rirst sale whether within this State or elsetihere." (Sec. 10, Art. 1436-1, V.P.C., as amended by B.B. 409, eupra.) Section 28 of Article 1436-1, V.P.C., requires a manufacturer'scertlfieate'asthe basis for a certif- icate of title to "any new motor vehicle the subject, matter of the first sale." The term "new car" as de- Pieed intSeetleeg~of.the.Actis obvlbusly epnonymous with the temft!'treu-.motar. ,vehicle'! as used In Section 28~. As to.%~h- "new., car!'. or.,"newmotor vehicle", a laanufacturer~'a certificatelntistbe furnished a&a pre- requisite to the issuance of a certificateof title. Att'g Gen. Op. V-1211 (1951). The question now presented is with reference to the Issuance of a certificateof title on a vehicle which ha% never been registered and to this extent literally falls within the definition of a new car un- der Section 9 of Article 1436-1, V.P.C. However, in your specific fact situation the vehlole was not per- mitted to be registered under the laws of the State or Country where it was sold. It otherwise met all of the requirementsof a "first sale" as defined in Section 7, and is in our opinion a "used" vehicle coming within the provisions of Section 10 of the act for the reasons hereinafter discuseed. It la well establishedthat courts will look to the contemporaryhistory of a statute, and to the historical background of the statute, to obtain aid In Interpretingthe statute. Couaias v. Sovereign Camp w.0 .w. , 120 Tex. 107, 35 S.W.2d 696 (mr) h it m determined the circumstancesUnder ;hiIh?he statute was passed,~the mischief at which It was aimed, and the object sought to be accomplished,Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Commissionerof Cor oratioiis h Taxatloa, 273 I4 212 419 116 et1 v. nited States, aesl4 ILid'; (&.A. 3@&i$+ Prior to the enactment of House Bill 409, Sec- tions 7 and 9 provided as follows~: "Sec. 7. The term ‘First Sale' means the bargain, sale, transfer, or delivery within this State with intent to pass an Interest Hon. D. C. Greer, page 4 (V-1400) therein, other than a lien of a motor vehi- cle which has not been previously regis- tered or licensed in this State. “Sec. 9. The term 'Rev Car' means a motor vehicle which has never been the sub- ject of a first sale." In construing the above sections, the court In v. Texas AutomotiveDealers error ref. the aub- ject of sale, but unregistered,in another State vas a "used car" within the meaning of the Certificateof Title Act and could be brought into Texas and a certificateof title obtained thereon without the necessity of a manu- facturer"s certificate. The fact that House Bill 409, in amending Sections 7, 8, and 9 of the Certif- i?F ca e of Title Act/was designed to modify the holding in State Highway Department v. Texas AutomotiveDealers t su ra;'is made clear by‘th f th ti %?tI&?expressly provided inet~?%e~genc~ tiaus? that "The fact that hundreds of new motor vehicles are now being brought into the StaterTexascars, o thereby endangeringthe title of such vehicle-he Certificate of Title Act . . . creates an emergency . . ." This emergency clause may be looked to in arriving at the legisiati+eintent. -HuntsvilleInd. School Dist. v. MIcAdams,148 Tex. 120, 221 S.W.2d 54b (1949). We think It clear from the above that all the Legislature sought or Intended to do in enacting House Bill 409 was to require nev cara that were brought into Texas, but which had been the subject of sale elsewhere, to be titled under the provisions of Section 28 (Manu- facturer's Certificate),and not otherwise. It would be unreasonableto conclude that the Legislature Intended, under the provisions of House Bill 409, to require a manu- facturer's certificateas a prerequisiteto obtaining a certificateof title in the factual situationpresented by you. Such a holding would in many Instancespreclude the Issuance of a certificateof title, and we cannot at- tribute any such intention to the Legislature. Even though the literal wording of Sections 7, 8, and 9, as amended by House Bill 409, might require the treatment of the vehi- cle described by you as a “new vehicle," such a result would not be in accord with leglslatlveintent. This vehi- cle met all the requirementsof a "first sale" with the ex- ception of registration. Registrationwas not permitted Hon. D. C. Greer, page 5 (V-1400) in the State OF Country where purchased. If registration had been permitted It would have become a "used' vehicle under the terms of the act itself. Situations such as this have caused the courts to declare: 11 . . .'It is the intention of a law which Is the law, and once truly ascer- tained, It should prevail, even against the strict letter of the law.' And an eml- nent text writer has said that if a literal interpretationof a statute 'leads to ab- surd results, the words of the statute will be modified by the Intention of the legisla- ture. The modern cases also Indicate that courts today rather than beginning their in- quiry with the formal words of the act con- sider from the start the legislativepurpose and intention. This tendency is to be com- mended for it Is more consonantwith the proper judicial use of statutory materials.' Sutherland Statutory Construction (3rd Ed. by Horack) Vol. 2, Sec. 4701, p. 333. . . .” Huntsville Ind. School Diet. v. McAdams, supra. It is therefore our opinion that the vehicle described by you is a "used" vehicle and the Texas High- way Department is not authorleed under the provisions of Sections 7, 8, and 9 of Article 1436-1, V.P.C., as amended by House Bill 409, su ra, to require a manufacturer'scer- tificate on the vehTc -#- e as a prerequisiteto the Issuance of a certificateof title thereon. This brings us to a considerationof your re- quirement that where a manufacturer'scertificatecannot be furnished on a vehicle such as described In your re- quest the owner must furnish a current registrationre- celpt on the vehicle from some othertate or Country than $xa;~;i a prerequisiteto the Issuance of a certificate . You have advised us orally that you are also requiring a current registrationreceipt as a prerequislte~ to the issuance of a certificateof title on used cars pur- chased In another State prior to the effective date of House Bill 409, and which are now standing on dealers' lots in Texas. It Is our understandlng,thatthese used cars were registered In another State at some time In the past but such out-of-stateregistrationis not current as of the time an applicationfor certificateof title is filed with you. Hon. D. C. Greer, page 6 (V-1400) The definition of "First Sale" which is quoted above states only that it applies to a vehicle "which has not been previoualg registered or licensed in this State or elsewhere;" The vord A’current” does not ap- pear anywhere in the statute. It seems apparent that the legislative Intent wasnot to require a current reg- istration or it voufd haveaeprevided. Certainly there was ample reason far the Legisl~ature not to require a "current"registration. It undoubtedlyknew that there were many "used cars" in Texas vhlch were located on dealers' lots or otherwise not operated over the high- ways which dfd not and would not have ourrent reglstra- tion on them from the State where ori.gMallyregistered. The Texas Hghvay Department is authorleedby Sections 27, 30, and 55 of the Certificateof Title Act (Art. 1436-1, V.P.C.) to make appropriateprovisions for the issuance of a certificateof title under all the cir- cumstancesreflected by your request. Section 27 author- izes the department to prescribe forms of application for such certificates. Section 30 makes provision for applicationson vehicles brought into the State by others than manufacturersand importers,and contemplatestender by the applicant of such evidence as satisfactorilyshows proper title. Section 55 authoriees the department to prescribe rules to carry out the orderly operation of the act. Under this authority, the department can provide for the acceptance of such evidence of title as is neces- sary for the protection of the public. Certainly we can see no reason for requiring a "current'registrationfrom the State or Country where the used car was purchased aa a prerequisiteto the issuance of title. Such a require- ment Is, as pointed out by you, forcing the nvners of such vehicles to spend large sums of money in securing registrationplates "which have served no useful purpose." You are therefore advised that the Certificate of Title Act does nrO0authorize you to require a "current" registrationfrom t&e State or Country where a "used" vehicle was originallypurchased as a prerequisiteto the issuance of a certificateof title on such "used" vehicle in Texas vhea the vehicle involved was not used in Texas In such a manner as to require a current registration. .., ” Hon. D. C. Greer, page 7 (v-1400) SUMMARY A vehicle originallypurchased and titled in Michigan in 1947, but which was not per- mitted to be registered under the laws of that State, that is later sold and transferred to an owner in Texas, but not used here in such a manner as to require its registration in Texas prior to the effectivedate of House Bill 409, Acts 52nd Leg., R.S. 1951, ch. 301, p. 482, is a "used" vehicle within the meaning of the "Certificateof Title Act" (Art. 1436-1, V.P.C.). Such vehicle may be lawfully titled in Texas upon presentationof proper evidence of ownership,other than a manufacturer'scer- tificate. A current registrationreceipt as a pre- requisite to the issuance of a certificateof title is not required for motor vehicles vhfch have been registered or licensed in this State or elsewherefor some prior year or y~earsbut have not been used in Texas In such a manner as to require a current registration. Yours very truly, APPROVED: PRICE DANIEL Attorney General E. Jacobson Reviewing Assistant Charles D. Mathews First Assistant VFT:jmc