C. A. Chapman v. John O. England, Trustee of the Estate of Wilson Dore, Bankrupt

231 F.2d 606, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4641
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 1956
Docket14776_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 F.2d 606 (C. A. Chapman v. John O. England, Trustee of the Estate of Wilson Dore, Bankrupt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. A. Chapman v. John O. England, Trustee of the Estate of Wilson Dore, Bankrupt, 231 F.2d 606, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4641 (9th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

MATHEWS, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment affirming an order of a referee in bankruptcy.

On August 16, 1948, Wilson Dore was indebted to appellant, C. A. Chapman, in the sum of $4,000 — an indebtedness evidenced by a note of Dore and Dore’s wife dated August 16, 1948, due August 16, 1949, and bearing 6% interest from August 16, 1948. To secure that indebtedness and any subsequent indebtedness of Dore to appellant, Dore and Dore’s wife, both of whom were at that time residents of Lewis County, Washington, executed in Lewis County on August 16, 1948, a chattel mortgage, hereafter called the mortgage, on personal property, hereafter called the mortgaged property, all of which was at that time located in Lewis County. Thereafter, on or before April 21, 1950, the mortgaged property was removed to Humboldt County, California, where it remained until October 6, 1951.

Apart from the mortgage, appellant had no right, title or interest in or to the mortgaged property at any time after August 16, 1948. From August 16, 1948, to October 6, 1951, the mortgaged property was owned by and in possession of Dore or Dore Lumber Company, a partnership consisting of Dore and Le-Grand Anderson.

On April 21, 1950, in Humboldt County, the partnership obtained possession of a device called a log boss from Schurman Machine Works, hereafter called Schurman, under a conditional sales contract between the partnership as buyer and Schurman as seller. 1 The log boss remained in the partnership’s possession in Humboldt County from April 21, 1950, to October 6, 1951.

By the terms of the conditional sales contract, title to the log boss did not pass to the partnership until the purchase price thereof was fully paid. The total purchase price of the log boss was $3,-884.50, all of which was due and payable on or before July 21, 1950. However, $1,830.84 of the purchase price remained unpaid until November 13,1950. On November 13, 1950, the $1,830.84 was paid to Schurman by appellant. Thereupon, on November 13, 1950, title to the log boss passed to the partnership.

Despite this fact, Schurman, on November 13, 1950, executed and delivered (1) to Dore a notice addressed to Dore “and/or” the partnership, stating that Schurman had repossessed the log boss, 2 and (2) to appellant a bill of sale whereby Schurman pretended to sell the log boss to appellant. 3 Actually, there was no such sale. The log boss was never repossessed by Schurman, was never delivered to appellant and was never in appellant’s possession.

*608 Between August 16, 1948, and May 11, 1951, Dore’s indebtedness to appellant was increased from $4,000 to $7,942.70. 4 Therefore, in lieu of the note of August 16, 1948, Dore and Dore’s wife executed and delivered to appellant on May 11, 1951, a note for $7,942.70, due November 11, 1951, and bearing 5% interest from May 11,1951. The note of May 11,1951, was never paid in whole or in part.

On May 16, 1951, in California, six policies of fire insurance, hereafter called the policies, covering the mortgaged property and the log boss, were issued to the partnership by six insurance companies in amounts aggregating $15,000, as follows: Providence Washington Insurance Company, policy No. CF913588, $1,500; Camden Fire Insurance Association, policy No. 875573, $1,500; United States Fire Insurance Company, policy No. CL77656, $1,500; Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Company, policy No. CS43522, $1,500; St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, policy No. 2C33744, $1,500; Sayre & Toso, Inc., policy No. LC6755, $7,500.

The loss payable clause of the Sayre & Toso policy named as loss payees the partnership and appellant, as their respective interests might appear. The loss payable clauses of the other five policies named appellant and no one else as loss payee. 5 All the policies, however, were issued to the partnership and named the partnership as the “insured” or the “assured.”

On October 6,1951, in Humboldt County, the mortgaged property and the log boss were destroyed by fire. Dore, on behalf of the partnership, submitted proofs of loss to the insurance companies. The insurance companies admitted liability in the aggregate amount of $15,000, but withheld payment thereof, being in doubt as to whether such payment should be made to the partnership or to appellant.

On March 19, 1952, Dore filed a petition in bankruptcy. Thereafter, prior to August 6, 1952, Dore was adjudged a bankrupt; the case was referred to a referee; appellee, John O. England, was appointed trustee of the bankrupt’s (Dore’s) estate; and, pursuant to 11 U.S.C.A. § 23, sub. i, 6 Dore’s partner (Anderson) consented to the administration of the partnership’s property in bankruptcy. Thus the partnership’s property — including all of its right, title and interest in and to the policies and the proceeds thereof — became part of the estate.

On August 6, 1952, appellant filed with the referee a “proof of claim” wherein he made two claims against the estate— (1) a claim, hereafter called the note claim, for $7,942.70, with 5% interest from May 11, 1951, evidenced by the note of May 11, 1951, and (2) a claim, hereafter called the log boss claim, for $4,000. In his “proof of claim,” appellant alleged, in substance, that the note claim was secured by the mortgage; that he was the owner of the log boss at the time of its destruction; and that its reasonable value at that time was $4,000.

On January 19, 1953, appellee filed objections 7 to appellant’s “proof of claim” and obtained from the referee an order which, in effect, required appellant and the insurance companies to appear and show cause, on February 17, 1953, why the insurance companies should not be *609 required to pay the proceeds of the policies, aggregating $15,000, to appellee, and why appellee’s objections to appellant’s “proof of claim” should not be sustained.

Appellant and the insurance companies appeared in response to that order, and the referee, on February 17, 1953, conducted a hearing in which appellant, appellee and the insurance companies participated. Evidence was received by the referee on February 17, 1953, March 9, 1953, 8 and August 25, 1953 9 On February 11, 1954, the referee made an order which, in effect, required the insurance companies to pay the proceeds of the policies to appellee, allowed the note claim as an unsecured claim, disallowed it as a secured claim and — impliedly, if not expressly — disallowed the log boss claim.

On petition of appellant, the District Court reviewed the referee’s order of February 11, 1954, 10 and, on March 18, 1955, entered a judgment affirming it. This appeal followed.

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Bluebook (online)
231 F.2d 606, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-a-chapman-v-john-o-england-trustee-of-the-estate-of-wilson-dore-ca9-1956.