Bush v. Harrison Granite Co.

71 A. 1042, 82 Vt. 85, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 249
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 16, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 71 A. 1042 (Bush v. Harrison Granite Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Harrison Granite Co., 71 A. 1042, 82 Vt. 85, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 249 (Vt. 1909).

Opinion

Haselton, J.

The Producers’ Granite Company was a Yermont corporation. In a chancery proceeding brought to the September Term, 1895, in Washington County, the plaintiff was on the 4th day of November, 1895, duly appointed its receiver. November 8, 1895, the receiver qualified and took possession of its property. By the order of appointment the receiver was authorized to employ labor and furnish material for the completion of unfinished work, and for the fulfillment of subsisting contracts. This suit was brought against the Harrison Granite [87]*87Company to recover for liabilities accruing to tbe plaintiff from tbe defendant from the time when tbe receiver took possession, and was specially authorized by tbe court of chancery. Tbe action is- general assumpsit. Tbe defendant pleaded tbe general issue, payment and offset. Tbe case was beard upon a referee’s substituted report and a supplemental report and tbe plaintiff’s exceptions to such reports. Judgment was rendered for tbe plaintiff for $1,797.23 with interest thereon from August 6, 1896, and costs of suit. Tbe defendant excepted.

Prior to November 5, 1895, tbe firm of J. E. Harrison & Sons of Michigan was a dealer in Barre granite and bad done business with tbe Producers’ Granite Company of which it was one of tbe principal stockholders. Tbe other principal stockholder was tbe Empire Granite Company, a Vermont corporation. On said 5th day of November, 1895, tbe Harrison Granite Company was incorporated under tbe laws of tbe State of Michigan, and two days thereafter was organized, became tbe owner of all tbe property of said firm of Harrison & Sons, and succeeded to its business. Tbe referee finds: “that both tbe plaintiff and tbe defendant understood that tbe defendant was tbe owner of tbe property, accounts, contracts, and assets of J. E. Harrison & Sons, and that tbe plaintiff accepted and treated tbe defendant as such owner and transacted all business with and in tbe name of tbe defendant whether such business pertained to tbe accounts and contracts prior or subsequent to tbe receivership or not.”

Tbe Producers’ Granite Company bad done business with J. E. Harison & Sons under a contract which was in substance that tbe former should manufacture such monuments as tbe latter should order on tbe terms that tbe latter should furnish tbe stock, and pay tbe former tbe amount of tbe stone cutters wages, and 35 percent thereof in addition, and a price named for polishing. Tbe 35 percent was treated as profit, although expenses of management and some incidental costs were to come out of it. All work was to be paid for upon completion and delivery. Damages for defective work were to fall upon tbe Producers’ Granite Company. Loss from defective stone was to be borne by Harrison & Sons. Tbe Producers’ Granite Company bad tbe same contract with tbe Empire Granite Company before mentioned.

[88]*88But the capital of the Producers ’ Company was in its plant. It was obliged to pay the wages of its workmen monthly, and it did not complete work fast enough to secure enough money from its customers, under the terms of its contracts, to enable it seasonably to pay the granite cutters; and so it came about that, without any change of contract, each of the purchasing concerns, from month to month advanced to the Producers’ Company such sum of money as the manager of the latter company estimated to be the cost of the work for the previous month done on jobs in process of completion under the contract with such purchasing company. In the summer of 1895, the Producers’ Company “voted to go into liquidation” but did nothing in pursuance of such vote. However, the Empire Granite Company brought a petition to the court of chancery at the September Term, 1895, praying for the appointment of a receiver for the Producers’ Company, and it was in this proceeding that the plaintiff was appointed as hereinbefore stated. In October, 1895, no work was done by the Producers’ Company for the Empire Company, the petitioner in the chancery case. Near the end of that month the manager of the Producers’ Company, Fred B. Mudgett, estimated the cost of work, for the month, on jobs for Harrison & Sons, at $2,800, and sent his estimate to that company. Harrison & Sons thereupon sent to Fred B. Mudgett, manager, a draft for $2,800, payable to his order, and therewith sent a letter dated October 28, 1895, which reads as follows:

“Dear Sir: — Answering yours of the 26th we enclose draft to the order of Producers’ Granite Company, $2,800. Before using this money for pay roll or any other purpose, please see a letter of today from H. C. Smith or Watts, Bean & Smith, to John W. Gordon, at Barre. You will notice that it is our wish that this money be paid over to the Producers’ Granite Company only on an order from the court, in order to protect ourselves under the present tangled condition of affairs.”

Under their contract nothing was due from Harrison & Sons to the Producers ’ Company at the time this draft was sent; and later, when the receiver was appointed, and, as the referee finds, a charge was made against Harrison & Sons, or the defendant, of $5,100.19 for unfinished and undelivered pieces of work, a sum not due, the balance then and thus shown against Harrison & Sons, or the defendant, was only $866.48. At the time the draft for $2,800 was sent, the chancery proceeding [89]*89brought by the Empire Company was pending, and Harrison & Sons anticipated the appointment of a receiver for the Producers’ Company. The facts make it clear what was meant by the notice, in the letter, that the money was to be paid over only on an order of court for the protection of the senders thereof. They did not wish to advance money and receive therefor simply a credit from a corporation about to go into the hands of a receiver. Mr. Mudgett, the referee finds, had no authority other than the letter to turn over the draft. He, in fact, kept the draft until November 8, 1895, the day on which the receiver qualified. On that day he sent the draft to the plaintiff together with the following letter: “Dear Sir: — I have been advised and know for a fact that you have been appointed and have qualified as receiver of the Producers’ Granite Company of Barre, Yt. Recognizing you as- receiver, I hereby relinquish my position as manager of the said company, also all books, papers, moneys, etc., meaning to turn over to you all the business of the company heretofore held and conducted by me as manager and to answer no further responsibilities. I enclose you herewith New York draft drawn by J. E. Harrison & Sons payable to Producers’ Granite Company for $2,800, to meet October, 1895, pay roll which was due to be paid Nov. 5th.” Mr. Mudgett had no authority to limit the use of the money as he attempted to do, but could pay it over only to effectuate the purpose expressed by Harrison & Sons in their letter to him. The referee finds that at the time Mr. Mudgett turned the draft over to the plaintiff the defendant, the Harrison Granite Company, had become its owner, and the referee further finds “that the $2,800, was paid to the receiver by the defendant and should be charged to him for work that he took over from the Producers’ Granite Company and completed and shipped to the defendant.”

If these findings involve conclusions of law the conclusions •stand, for they are conclusions of law which the court itself -draws from all the facts found by the referee.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 1042, 82 Vt. 85, 1909 Vt. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-harrison-granite-co-vt-1909.