Baruch Inv. Co. v. Huntoon

257 Cal. App. 2d 485, 65 Cal. Rptr. 131, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1805
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1967
DocketCiv. 24192
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 257 Cal. App. 2d 485 (Baruch Inv. Co. v. Huntoon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baruch Inv. Co. v. Huntoon, 257 Cal. App. 2d 485, 65 Cal. Rptr. 131, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1805 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

CHRISTIAN, J.

—Plaintiff Baruch Investment Company appeals from a judgment which denied it recovery for breach of an agreement under which respondent Huntoon Engineering (hereinafter Engineering) used its accounts receivable in order to obtain working capital. The court also awarded Engineering $42,951.02 damages on its cross-complaint for usury.

Donald Huntoon and La Verne Huntoon, husband and wife, were president and secretary respectively of Engineering. In April 1961, the firm was profitably engaged in subcontracting work on a number of government projects but, due to internal litigation, it was unable to obtain money from banks to finance its operations. Cash in the amount of $150,000 was needed to meet immediate obligations, and Mr. Huntoon therefore approached Jack Baruch, president of appellant Baruch Investment Company, with a request to raise the money. Engineering had accounts receivable of greater value than the amount of cash needed. Huntoon testified that Baruch offered to advance 40 percent of the value of the accounts for a period of 45 days if Huntoon would assign the accounts so that Baruch could collect them. Huntoon rejected this idea as he did not want his customers to be contacted by any third party. Later in the discussion Baruch offered to *488 advance 65 percent of the value of the accounts upon the understandings that no notice of any assignment would be given to the customers and that Huntoon would collect the accounts and remit the proceeds to Baruch from time to time. The accounts were to be subject to a further discount of 1% percent of their face value for each 45 days of delinquency. This general plan was agreed to orally.

Baruch then presented a printed form of “factoring agreement,” stating, “this is only a formality,” and Huntoon signed it. A personal guaranty was signed by Mr. and Mrs. Huntoon. Upon that guaranty, appellant originally brought this action. Baruch also made up a schedule listing the affected invoices and gave Huntoon a printed form letter, signed by Baruch, granting Engineering the option to repurchase all accounts which had not been paid in full by the purchasers within 90 days from the date of purchase. That letter continued:

“You will pay to us, upon the exercise of said option, the full amount of each invoice which we shall have purchased from you and which you are repurchasing. This option is granted to you so that you may prevent our undertaking legal action or other action to enforce collection of said accounts which shall not be paid within sixty days from the date of our purchase of said invoices. ’ ’

The word “sixty” was crossed out and “ninety” substituted only the first time the figure appears. The change was made because Huntoon told Baruch that the 45-day period previously mentioned and the 60-day period were both too short, as the accounts might be paid more slowly.

Baruch kept neither the invoices nor the contracts between Engineering and its debtors, but he did keep copies of the invoices. Huntoon received an advance of $149,423.20 in this first transaction. On November 30, 1961, Huntoon informed Baruch that he needed more money but had no more invoices. Baruch repiled that he could “adjust” the accounts to enable him to make a further advance. Further advances were in fact made. Substantial payments were thereafter made by respondent, but a running balance of obligation continued.

On June 29, 1961, Mrs. Huntoon went to Baruch and requested more money. At that time Baruch had been paid only $5,000 on the first schedule and that was paid out of Engineering’s own funds. Baruch then prepared a second schedule from which he discounted $8,914.17, or 3 percent of the gross face value of accounts receivable ($297,139.11). But an additional $6,565.59 discount was taken, which represented *489 1% percent interest every 45 days on the unpaid balance of the accounts listed on the first schedule.

Huntoon met with Baruch again on July 12, 1963, when Baruch summoned Huntoon into his office and demanded faster payment. Baruch announced that Engineering owed $84,407.53 and that the amount would increase at the rate of $56.27 per day. Baruch offered to settle for $50,000 or for $40,000 in cash that day. When Huntoon replied he did not have that much money, Baruch threatened to sue. Huntoon pleaded that he could not afford to pay such a high rate of interest, but Baruch replied that he could not grant any relief.

Between April 1961 and July 1963 11 different schedules readjusting the transaction had been prepared by Baruch and signed by one or the other of the Huntoons. On at least five occasions LaVerne Huntoon signed letters authorizing appellant to discount the gross amount of invoices listed on certain schedules by specific sums and to withhold a reserve of 30 percent. This was done both to induce appellant to make further advances and to obtain its forbearance from taking action to collect the accounts already assigned. Each of these letters recites that the authority granted is at variance with the ‘ ‘ factoring agreement. ’ ’

Baruch explained that in each instance he calculated the discount on the basis of the past performance of the debtors in making payments. He admitted that he deviated from the factoring agreement by taking larger discounts than it called for. He also admitted that he discounted from the same unpaid balance on several successive schedules at 3 percent each time and that the amounts which Mrs. Huntoon authorized Baruch to discount were derived from his computations. He denied taking the unpaid balance of accounts receivable from former schedules and rediscounting for every 45-day period during which the accounts remained unpaid.

The contrary was demonstrated in the ease of one $7,523.54 discount, authorized in a letter of September 12, 1961, which agreed to that amount of discount from “schedule four.” Schedule four gives $7,523.54 as “Our Disc[ount].’’ The gross amount of that schedule was $84,947.56. Three percent of that figure is only $2,548.13. But taking the unpaid balance from schedule three and rediscounting it 3 percent the exact amount, $7,523.54, may be derived. There was evidence that other amounts discounted were calculated in that manner by Baruch and specifically that the discount on schedule four *490 contained rediscounts carried forward from unpaid balances on the invoices listed on schedules two and three.

Baruch testified that the “reserve account,” referred to above, was to be withheld by him until the full amount of the accounts receivable had been paid to appellant. Then the balance in the reserve account was to be paid over to Engineering.

The trial court found that the transaction was an open loan account masquerading as a sale of accounts, which enabled appellant to procure compensation in excess of the lawful 10 percent per annum for the use and forbearance of money. The assignment of the invoices and evidences of debt was found to constitute a pledge for security; thus the court concluded that appellant’s rights terminated when Engineering repaid all sums advanced with the lawful amount of interest.

The total amount advanced by appellant to Engineering, $615,810.06, was paid. Interest at the rate of 10 percent on all balances while they remained unpaid amounted to $11,887.55.

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Bluebook (online)
257 Cal. App. 2d 485, 65 Cal. Rptr. 131, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baruch-inv-co-v-huntoon-calctapp-1967.