Cole v. Loma Plastics Inc.

112 F. Supp. 138, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2730
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1953
DocketCiv. A. 2239
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 112 F. Supp. 138 (Cole v. Loma Plastics Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Loma Plastics Inc., 112 F. Supp. 138, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2730 (N.D. Tex. 1953).

Opinion

DOOLEY, District Judge.

An involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the partnership of Federal Identification Company, and the partners thereof, Robert O. Burbridge and Velma Jean Burbridge, individually, in the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma on August 25, 1949. They were adjudicated bankrupts on February 15, 1950. The plaintiff John M. Cole became the duly appointed and qualified trustee on March 16, 1950.

The bankrupts had become beset with financial difficulties trying ineffectively to produce and market first an automobile window cooler, next a spring assembly, and then just before bankruptcy they were in the preliminary stage of development work on a dispenser unit. Some negotiations begun in June 1949 between the partnership bankrupts and the defendant Loma Plastics, Inc. (Loma) resulted in a written contract, evidenced by the bankrupts’ purchase order and supplementary letter as modified by Loma’s acceptance letter, for the manufacture of some molds (also later certain plastic parts), the molds to be made by the defendant Crown Machine & Tool Company (Crown), at the contract price of $13,400, and the minds of the parties met in - the final terms of the contract on or about August 18, 1949. The bankrupts’ said letter contained a reservation of the right to cancel the contract. 1 The defendant’s acceptanee of the purchase order confirmed the understanding that the contract was subject to the buyers’ right of. cancellation. 2 The contract required the bankrupts to place an advance deposit of $6,700 with the two defendants as security available for use in defraying the costs of filling said order, and pursuant thereto the bankrupts delivered to Loma a cashier’s check for $6,000 and an ordinary check for $700 on August 23, 1949. Loma in turn passed said checks to Crown. The last named check was not paid when presented at the drawee bank. The deficiency was never covered by the bankrupts. Shortly after bankruptcy supervened, Crown, first deducting $2,028.80 as claimed damages, remitted $3,971.20, the balance of the actual $6,000 deposit, to Loma.

The bankrupts were all insolvent and indebted to a number of creditors at, before and after the time when the terms of the contract aforesaid were mutually settled as above stated. The defendant Loma, acting for itself and the other defendant, negotiated the said contract at arm’s length and in good faith, and at the time did not know the buyers were insolvent^ but did learn of the petition in bankruptcy by August 30, 1949. The defendants each incurred some expense for technical work and some incidental items designed to make ready for performance of the pending contract, but did not do any well identified and .segregated preparatory work under the contract, between the said contract date and the date the petition in bankruptcy was filed, nor any actual processing at any time, and said defendants did not incur any .loss on material for the job either beforé or after they knew- of the bankruptcy. In fact the defendants jointly wrote a letter dated September 3, 1949 to the Automotive Household Products Company (a newly organized corporation managed by the bankrupt Robert O. Burbridge and seeking to take oyer the contract of the *140 Federal Identification Company), reading ill part as quoted below. 3 Neither the molds nor. any of the parts specified in the contract were ever made by the defendants, and they still hold the $6,000 deposit money in question. The trustee brought this suit to recover that sum plus interest, on the alternative theories that such payment was a -fraudulent transfer under the bankruptcy law, or that defendants are liable as for money had and received or that said amount is repayable under the cancellation terms of the contract. The plaintiff trustee and the defendants, respectively, have presented a motion for summary judgment.

The pertinent provisions of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq., bearing on the fraudulent transfer contention are copied in the margin. 4 The statutory requirement of “fair consideration”, derived from the Uniform Fraudulent Co-nveyánce Act, has been infrequently construed in the context of the Bankruptcy Act. The meaning is to be .read from the language against the background of the general policy and purpose of the bankruptcy law. Of course the expeditious collection, liquidation and distribution of insolvents’ estates is the object of ordinary bankruptcy administration. Obviously the necessity of fair consideration is meant to serve as a.check against the improvident or culpable depletion of estates preceding bankruptcy. O.n that premise it becomes doubtful that the mere static obligation of the other party under an executory contract with the subsequent bankrupt could often if ever meet the test of fair consideration for money paid in advance by the bankrupt. The statutory language is consistent with that strict viewpoint. The definition in the law treats of only four types of “fair consideration” and it is definitive. The inquiry here is quickly narrowed to a single type. No antecedent debt of the partnership bankrupts was discharged in this transaction nor did said bankrupts give any security in obtaining a present advance nor did they give security on any antecedent debt and so 1 clearly there was no fair consideration present unless it be that the said bankrupts received a fairly equivalent transfer of “property” from the *141 defendants. It would, stretch this language to the verge to say that the defendants’ ex-ecutory contractual obligation in question constituted a transfer of “property” to the present bankrupts. 5 In fact, whatever may be true occasionally of executory considerations, it is apparent that in this particular instance the bankrupts, almost on the eve of bankruptcy, paid out $6,000, against only an inchoate quid pro quo, leaving the estate in all practical reality that much poorer in wherewithal for liquidation, and such a purported “fair consideration” without any impact is an anomaly, much too light for the scales of the bankruptcy law. The term “fair consideration” in its proper sense is no slight standard and actually has a stricter connotation than good or valuable consideration. 6 The promissory undertaking of the defendants dealt with a special order, not one for any staple or readily marketable product, and any potential value in the contract depended on the continuance of a going dispenser business but that untested prospect was dissipated by the immediate bankruptcy. It would be visionary to suppose there is here any contract value which can be translated into bankruptcy dividends or that when the money in question was paid over a fair consideration was received by the bankrupts. Common sense teaches that there is no workable way to recoup this depletion unless in a recovery against the defendants. The transaction was a fraudulent transfer within the meaning of the law.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F. Supp. 138, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-loma-plastics-inc-txnd-1953.