Kenneth West agreed to sell his car, a 1975 Corvette, to a man representing himself as Robert

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Kenneth West agreed to sell his car, a 1975 Corvette, to a man representing himself as Robert Wilson. In exchange for a cashier’s check, West signed over the Corvette’s title to Wilson and gave him the car. Ten days later, when West learned that the cashier’s check was a forgery, he filed a stolen vehicle report with the police. The police could not immediately locate Wilson or the Corvette, however, and the case grew cold. Nearly two and a half years later, the police found the Corvette in the possession of Tammy Roberts, who also had the certificate of title. She said that she had bought the car from her brother, who had obtained it through an ad in the newspaper. West filed a suit in a Colorado state court against Roberts to reclaim the car.

The court applied Colorado Revised Statutes Section 4-2- 403 (Colorado’s version of UCC 2–403) to determine the vehicle’s rightful owner 

(a) Under UCC 2–403, what title, if any, to the Corvette did “Wilson” acquire? What was the status of Roberts’s title, if any, assuming that she bought the car without knowledge of circumstances that would make a person of ordinary prudence inquire about the validity of the seller’s title? In whose favor should the court rule? Explain.

(b) If the original owner of a vehicle relinquishes it due to fraud, should he or she be allowed to recover the vehicle from a good faith purchaser? If not, which party or parties might the original owner sue for recovery? What is the ethical principle underlying your answer to these questions? Discuss.


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Business Law Text and Cases

ISBN: 978-0324655223

11th Edition

Authors: Kenneth W. Clarkson, Roger LeRoy Miller, Gaylord A. Jentz, F

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