Banco Comercial de Puerto Rico v. Boscana

100 F.2d 449, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 28, 1938
DocketNo. 3200
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 F.2d 449 (Banco Comercial de Puerto Rico v. Boscana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banco Comercial de Puerto Rico v. Boscana, 100 F.2d 449, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680 (1st Cir. 1938).

Opinion

WILSON, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree in equity by the Federal District Court of Puerto Rico on a complaint against the defendant brought by Vicente Boscana, Trustee in Bankruptcy in re Cintron & Martinez, S. en C., bankrupts.

[450]*450The complaint alleges that the partnership of Cintron & Martinez to secure an indebtedness of the firm to Banco Comercial de Puerto Rico, hereinafter referred to as Banco Comercial, in the amount of $26,500, entered into a contract of sale and resale with the Banco Comercial on May 5, 1927, which contract purported to convey to the Banco Comercial 800,000 feet of lumber stored in the firm’s warehouses at 20 Comercio Street in the city of Mayaguez in Puerto Rico as a pledge for the payment o.f said indebtedness.

The District Court held that the contract of sale and resale was not valid as against third parties, since it did not sufficiently describe and identify the lumber included in the deed or contract of conditional sale. There was no provision in the contract of conditional sale that the conditional vendees might sell the lumber and substitute other lumber therefor at their option, which should be subject to the lien, if any, thereby created. It was simply a bulk sale and a bulk description of 800,-000 feet of lumber.

. Up to August 18, 1927, the indebtedness of Cintron & Martinez to the Banco Comercial was only reduced to $25,000. On September 3, 1927, a fire destroyed the mercantile establishment of Cintron & Martinez and all their merchandise, except lumber. The Banco Comercial, realizing that the deed.of sale and resale of May 5, 1927, was defective in that it did not suf-' ficiently describe the lumber covered by the contract of conditional sale, on September 8, 1927, within five days after the fire, called in a notary public for the purpose of marking and identifying the 800,000 feet of lumber claimed to be included in the conditional sale deed. A notarial document was made setting forth the piles of lumber making up a total of 800,000 feet and identified as the lumber covered by the contract of sale and resale entered into between the partnership of Cintron & Martinez on May 5, 1927; but Cintron himself testified that: “as to which of that lumber (referring to the lumber in their yard on September 8, 1927), was the 800,-000 feet sold or pledged, that, of course, could not be specified.”

“The lumber that was localized and identified (on September 8) was not the same lumber we had in stock when we made the contract of sale and resale (May 5). It might have been possible that a part of it was the same. * * * I would be unable to estimate how much. We gave possession to the Banco * * * of the 800,000 feet of lumber on or about the 21st of September, 1927. They went there and took over the lumber.”

The purpose of these transactions on September 8 and September 21 was to render effective the contract of sale and resale of May 5, 1927; but they could not be retroactive as to a trustee in bankruptcy or as to creditors of Cintron & Martinez, since if the contract of May 5 was insufficient as to third parties, the notarial documents would only be effective on the dates they were entered into. In any event, the purported delivery to the Banco Comercial on September 21 by a notarial deed of lumber identified on September 8 as the lumber claimed to have been included in the contract of May 5, 1927, clearly could only take effect as of September 21, 1927, and must have resulted in a voidable preference under the Bankruptcy Act § 60, 11 U.S.C.A. § 96, since it occurred within four months of the filing of the involuntary petition in bankruptcy against Cintron & Martinez on October 18, 1927.

The plaintiff Boscana in February, 1928, was appointed receiver of the assets of the partnership before their adjudication in bankruptcy on March 7, 1928, and was afterwards appointed trustee in bankruptcy. On receiving his appointment as receiver he made a demand for the lumber of the Banco Comercial delivered to it on September 21, 1927, which was refused.

Afterwards by stipulation between the parties all the lumber on hand in the yards of Cintron & Martinez on July 6, 1929, was sold at public auction, and the sale price accounted for to the court., The Federal Judge then determined the amount of lumber to be accounted for by the Banco Comercial and found the fair value of the lumber unaccounted for and decreed that the trustee in bankruptcy should have a claim against the Banco Comercial, which was then in process of liquidation.

The defendant filed 102 exceptions to the findings and rulings of the District Judge. This court might well refuse to consider such a bill of exceptions, which would involve a full consideration of such a volume of testimony as is presented in the bill of exceptions. However, in brief and argument, counsel for the trustee in bankruptcy relies on three points covered by the exceptions and which were the only points argued by counsel for the [451]*451Banco Comercial before this court, viz.: (1) That there was a voidable preference given the Banco Comercial on September 21, 1928; (2) that there was 251,283 feet of lumber delivered to the Banco Comercial on September 21 that was unaccounted for by the Banco Comercial; (3) that the case should have been transferred to the law side, since a money damage only was recovered.

(1) There was evidence from which the District Judge could find that the Banco Comercial had reasonable grounds to believe that Cintron & Martinez were insolvent on September 21, 1927, when it took over all the lumber in the yard of Cintron & Martinez. Upon the loss of their mercantile establishment and all their merchandise except the lumber on September 3, and upon refusal to pay the notes to the Banco Comercial, and realizing that the contract of sale and resale of May 5 did not sufficiently describe the lumber included therein, the Banco Comercial at once attempted to render it a valid conditional sale, and by a notarial document identified 800,000 feet of lumber left in the yard of Cintron & Martinez as the 800,000 feet included in the contract of sale and resale of May 5; but Cintron testified that the 800,000 feet identified on September 8, 1927, was not all of it the same as that referred to in the contract off sale and resale of May 5. Atherton et al. v. Beaman, 1 Cir., 264 F. 878; Massachusetts Trust Co. v. McPherson, 1 Cir., 1 F.2d 769, 772. It amounted to a new contract as to the lumber contained in the contract of May 5, 1927. The haste to remedy the defects in the contract of May 5 shows clearly that the Banco Comercial was endeavoring to make its conditional sale good in preference to the other creditors of Cintron & Martinez.

In his “conclusions of law” as set forth in his opinion, the District Judge said:

“It will be observed that this contract does not describe or identify the lumber alleged to have been sold and re-sold on that day. It would be utterly impossible for anyone to identify the lumber covered by this contract. There is no provision in the contract by which lumber sold was to be replaced or substituted by other lumber thereafter acquired. It is impractical, if not impossible, to now determine the quantity of lumber delivered to Banco Comercial on September 21st which was on hand on May 5th. I am clearly of the opinion that this contract is not to be considered as a bona fide sale as that term is ordinarily understood.

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Bluebook (online)
100 F.2d 449, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banco-comercial-de-puerto-rico-v-boscana-ca1-1938.