Carter Wood Specialty Co. v. Drug & Store Fixtures, Inc.

50 N.E.2d 188, 38 Ohio Law. Abs. 309, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 769
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1942
DocketNo. 18864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 N.E.2d 188 (Carter Wood Specialty Co. v. Drug & Store Fixtures, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter Wood Specialty Co. v. Drug & Store Fixtures, Inc., 50 N.E.2d 188, 38 Ohio Law. Abs. 309, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 769 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

[310]*310OPINION

By MORGAN, J.

In July, 1940, Ernest Gross, one of the defendants, entered into a contract with another defendant, Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., by which the latter agreed for a consideration of $1600.00 to manufacture and to furnish to the former certain fixtures for a new drug store to be owned and operated by Gross at 12631 Lorain Ave.,. Cleveland, Ohio.

Gross paid $400.00 in cash on the signing of the contract and. for the balance gave a note for $1344.00 dated July 24, 1940, and a chattel mortgage on the fixtures to defendant, The Metropolitan Finance Co., which agreed to finance the project. The amount of $144.00 was a charge of the Finance Company for its services. At the time the note and chattel mortgage were executed on July 24. 1940 the fixtures of course were not in existence. The chattel mortgage was not recorded until after the fixtures were manufactured and delivered to the purchaser.

The attorney and treasurer of Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., was also the attorney and president of Metropolitan Finance Co. The two companies had previously had about 15 inter-company transactions. Drug & Store Fixtures Inc. made purchases of lumber and paint for the fixtures and also made a contract with The Church & Home Equipment Company to manufacture the fixtures. Payments for the lumber and paint and also to the Church & Home Equipment Company were made by checks of the Metropolitan Finance Company.

Some time in October, 1940, the Finance Company found that it had paid out for these fixtures all of the amount it had agreed to furnish but the fixtures were not nearly completed. To secure the completion of the fixtures. Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., entered into an agreement with The Carter Wood Specialty Company the plaintiff herein, by which Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., agreed to deliver the uncompleted fixtures to the plaintiff for completion on agreed terms. Payment for the fixtures was to be cash on delivery.

The fixtures were completed by plaintiff in the early part of November, 1940. Some fixtures were delivered to the purchaser earlier but a substantial part of the fixtures had not been delivered when Carter, representing the plaintiff, met Rice, representing Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., and they agreed to settle for $600.00 plaintiff’s claim for completing the fixtures.

At this mee ling, Rice gave to Carter three Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., checks with plaintiff as payee, for $200.00 each. One was immediately payable and the other two were post-dated, one being dated November 22, 1940 and the other December 5, 1940. The first ■check for $200.00 was paid on presentation and the two post-dated checks were returned by the bank marked “no funds,” and nothing has since been paid on these checks.

[311]*311After receiving the three checks each for $200.00 the plaintiff delivered the balance of the fixtures to Gross.

At the time this action was filed. Gross, the purchaser of the fixtures, owed a balance of $509.00 on the consideration he had agreed to pay for- the fixtures which was represented by the note he had signed and delivered to the Finance Company. He has since paid $509.00 to the Clerk of Courts-to be held subject to the order of the Court in this case.

The question to be decided in this case is whether the plaintiff is first entitled to be paid out of this fund of $509.00 the balance still due it for completing the fixtures, or whether the Metropolitan Finance Company is entitled to all of the fund in payment of the balance due on its note and chattel mortgage.

It is conceded that the plaintiff, before surrendering possession, had a lien on the fixtures for the amount due it for labor and materials in completing the fixtures. The Finance Company contends that plaintiff’s lien was lost by the delivery of the fixtures to the purchaser and that its note and chattel mortgage therefore is a prior lien.

The plaintiff’s position is that inasmuch as it was induced to surrender possession of the fixtures by reason of the fraudulent representations and conduct of the defendants herein, it retains a lien for the amount owing it for the fixtures, either on the fixtures or on the fund paid into court by Gross, and that plaintiff’s lien is prior to the lien of the Metropolitan Finance Company.

The facts on which the plaintiff relies to establish its lien are set forth in its petition and inasmuch as Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., is in default of answer, the allegations of the petition as against it must be taken as true.

Plaintiff’s petition sets forth that it agreed with Drug & Store Fixtures Inc. to complete the fixtures with the understanding that plaintiff’s bill would be paid in full before the fixtures would be released. That the two post-dated checks for $200.00 each were signed by the president of Drug & Store Fixtures Inc. and also by its treasurer who was also the president of the Finance Company and that the plaintiff was induced to accept the said post-dated checks by the representation of defendants that they were as good as cash.

That relying upon these representations that the checks were as good as cash, the plaintiff delivered the fixtures to the purchaser; that both Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., and the Metropolitan Finance Company had full knowledge of the manner in which the fixtures were released by the plaintiff and of the representations made to induce the plaintiff to accept the post-dated checks and to release the fixtures; that thereby the plaintiff has a lien on the fund paid into court for its unpaid bill, prior to the lien of the Metropolitan Finance Company.

The above allegations in the petition are to be taken as true as against Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., as it is in default of answer. The Metropolitan Finance Company has filed its answer in which it [312]*312denies that it had any contractual relations with the plaintiff and' denies that it had anything to do with any agreement between plaintiff and Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., by which the plaintiff was induced to accept two post-dated checks in part payment for the-fixtures.

The trial judge found that the conduct of Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., in this case was fraudulent and that the plaintiff was. induced by the fraudulent representations of Rice, representing Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., to accept the two post-dated checks and to deliver possession of the fixtures to the purchaser. The evidence supports this conclusion of the trial judge.

If this were a controversy between the plaintiff and Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., or even one between the plaintiff and the creditors of Drug & Store Fixtures Inc., it is our opinion that plaintiff having been fraudulently induced to surrender possession of the-fixtures would have a lien for the balance due it on the fund paid into court by the purchaser. It is not necessary to decide whether or not plaintiff would retain a lien on the fixtures themselves inasmuch as the fund paid into court by the purchaser is more than, sufficient to pay plaintiff’s claim.

In the case of Reich v Triplet, 199 N. C. 678, where the controversy was between the claimant of a mechanic’s or artisan’s lien and the owner ot an automobile, the fraud practiced was very similar to that in the present case. The first paragraph of the syllabus-reads :

“Under the common law and the provisions of our statute, C. S.

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92 So. 2d 440 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.E.2d 188, 38 Ohio Law. Abs. 309, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-wood-specialty-co-v-drug-store-fixtures-inc-ohioctapp-1942.