Commonwealth Trust Co. of Pittsburgh v. Reconstruction Finance Corp.

120 F.2d 254, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 1941
Docket7541
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 120 F.2d 254 (Commonwealth Trust Co. of Pittsburgh v. Reconstruction Finance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Trust Co. of Pittsburgh v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., 120 F.2d 254, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466 (3d Cir. 1941).

Opinion

JONES, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, Commonwealth Trust Company, trustee in bankruptcy of Colonial Iron Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, seeks to recover from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (hereinafter designated as R. F. C.) certain pig iron, or the value thereof, which had been pledged by the Iron Company, prior to its bankruptcy, as security for the payment of loans from the R. F. C. The court below entered judgment for the defendant from which the plaintiff took the present appeal. It is the appellant's contention that the pledge was void either (1) as having been made by the Iron Company with an intent to hinder, delay or defraud its creditors, or (2) as a fraud upon third persons because of an absence of delivery of the pledge at the time it was made.

A jury trial having been waived, the trial court expressly adopted as its findings (Nos. 1 to 36 inclusive) the facts as stipulated by the parties. Naturally, these findings the appellant does not attack. On the basis of the findings thus made and from oral testimony adduced at trial, the court below made three additional findings to the effect, respectively, that the pledge was not made with the intent, on the part of either the Iron Company or R. F. C., to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor of the Iron Company, present or future (Finding No. 37) ; that R. F. C. gave the Iron Company “fair consideration” for the pledge in an amount not disproportionately small compared with the value of the pig iron pledged (Finding No. 38) ; and the Iron Company was solvent when the pledge agreement was entered into (Finding No. 39). The evidence fully supports these findings. No error— not to speak of clear error — appearing therein, they are to be given full effect upon appeal. Rule 52(a), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c; Reinstine v. Rosenfield et al., 7 Cir., 111 F.2d 892, 895. The facts material to a consideration of the questions involved may be summarized from the findings as follows:

From 1899 to 1929 Colonial Iron Company operated a blast furnace, coke ovens and coal mines at Riddlesburg, Pennsylvania. For business reasons, the blast furnace was closed down in 1929. It remained closed thereafter until 1937, when it was reopened through the aid of the R. F. C. loans which figure in the present controversy.

With a view to reopening the blast furnace, the Iron Company on January 18, 1935, applied to the First National Bank of Everett, Pennsylvania, for a loan of $110,000, wherein the R. F. C. was to participate as a lender to the extent of $100,000. The Iron Company in its application for the loan certified that it was solvent and had fixed assets of a value of $1,371,000. The loan was intended to enable the Iron Company to make repairs to the blast furnace and to provide working capital for its future operation. The loan was granted and the Iron Company evidenced the indebtedness with its note secured by a first mortgage of its fixed assets. Both the note and the mortgage securing it, which were drawn in favor of the First National Bank of Everett, were duly assigned to the R. F. C. at the time of the first disbursement to the Iron Company on account of the loan, the mortgage having theretofore been recorded.

Subsequently, the Iron Company found that the money already borrowed was insufficient for the intended purposes and applied to the R. F. C. on January 12, 1937, for a further loan of $125,000, of which $10,000 was to be used to complete the repairs to the furnace and the remainder for operating expenses. The security offered by the Iron Company for this loan was a second mortgage of its fixed assets, a pledge of all pig iron produced or to be produced by the 1 ron Company, the placing of the accounts receivable by the Iron Company from the sale of pig iron in a trust account in favor of R. F. C., and the deposit of $75,000 of the second loan in a separate trust account which was to be subject to check by R. F. C. and the Iron Company jointly. This loan was also *256 granted and the Iron Company executed and delivered therefor its note to R. F. C. on March 31, 1937. A pledge agreement to effectuate the preferred security for this note was executed on April 6, 1937.

The pledge agreement provided that pig iron as produced by the Iron Company should be placed on nearby land which was leased by the Iron Company to the R. F. C. The leased land was enclosed by a wire fence and plainly marked by signs denoting R. F. C.’s possessory right. The lease was duly recorded and the premises were in the control of a custodian for R. F. C. who had direction over the removal of iron therefrom.

It-was also provided by the pledge agreement that the Iron Company could draw upon the $75,000 trust account if pig iron, or accounts receivable from the sale thereof, of a value equal to the withdrawal was delivered to R. F. C. But there was no absolute right in the Iron Company to make withdrawals from the trust account (subject to joint check) and no pig iron deposited on the leased premises, even if the value thereof exceeded $75,000, was to be released except in the discretion of R. F. C.

The Iron Company resumed blast furnace operations on May 24, 1937. By June 23, 1937, the $75,000 trust account had been entirely withdrawn by the Iron Company which, in pursuance of the pledge agreement, had transferred to R. F. C.’s control on the leased premises pig iron of a value in excess of $75,000. On June 28, 1937, the Iron Company made application for a further loan of $75,000 to enable it to buy ore necessary for its operations, which R. F. C. granted. The security given for the note evidencing this loan was the ore purchased, as represented by warehouse receipts, and all other property of the Iron Company on the premises of R. F. C. whether pledged as collateral for this or any other loan. On November 26, 1937, the Iron Company requested the R. F. C. to release 1,400 tons of pig iron which would still have left iron of a value in excess of $75,000 in the R. F. C. yard. The request was refused. At the time, all notes were in default and the balance due the R. F. C. thereon aggregated in excess of $285,000. Thereupon the Iron Company closed its plant, went into receivership and later into bankruptcy. Since then, the R. F, C. has sold some of the pig iron in the yard for $56,522.14 which the appellant concedes represents fair value. The R. F. C. still has on hand in the yard iron of the admittedly fair value of $28,887.96. The trustee claims the proceeds of the iron sold by the R. F. C. and the iron which it still has on hand.

The questions which the appellant raises respecting the pledge in this case are to be determined by the law of Pennsylvania. Taplinger v. Northwestern National Bank in Philadelphia, 3 Cir., 101 F.2d 274, 275. Either under the common law of that state or the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyances Act, there in force, 1 in the absence of an actual intent to defraud, it is essential that the allegedly fraudulent transfer shall have been made “without fair consideration”. See Sec6. 4, 5 and 6 of the Pennsylvania Fraudulent Conveyances Act, 39 P.S. §§ 354, 355 and 356; also Statute of Elizabeth, ch. 5, Sec. 3, Roberts Digest 295, 39 P.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 F.2d 254, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-trust-co-of-pittsburgh-v-reconstruction-finance-corp-ca3-1941.