Diamond National Corporation v. Szerbik

282 A.2d 806, 129 Vt. 452, 1971 Vt. LEXIS 290
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 5, 1971
Docket23-71
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 282 A.2d 806 (Diamond National Corporation v. Szerbik) 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
Diamond National Corporation v. Szerbik, 282 A.2d 806, 129 Vt. 452, 1971 Vt. LEXIS 290 (Vt. 1971).

Opinion

Keyser, J.

This appeal presents the sole issue of whether the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Szerbik, are personally liable to the plaintiff for materials furnished by the plaintiff to several job sites where Tri-State Equities, Inc., was doing work. Tri *453 State Equities, Inc. (Tri-State), now financially defunct, was wholly owned by the defendants except for one qualifying share.

The plaintiff claims it sold and delivered the materials on the credit of the Szerbiks, at their instance and direction, and to no one else. The defendants, to the contrary, claim that the sales were made to Tri-State and that they have no personal liability. Tri-State was originally made a party defendant but before trial the plaintiff discontinued the action as to that defendant.

Trial was by court and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for the uncontested amount due for the materials. The issue before us is raised by defendants’ exceptions to certain findings of the court as not being supported by the evidence, failure of the court to find as requested and by an exception to the judgment as not being based on the pleadings and findings.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the prevailing party below, and excluding, as we must, the effect of modifying evidence, the factual situation appears as follows.

The defendants organized Tri-State around July 1967. They also wholly owned another company known as IVOW Corporation. These companies shared an office in Manchester, Vermont, and, together with the defendants, received mail from post office box No. 662. The defendants conducted operations as general construction contractors largely through these corporations and personally to some extent. The plaintiff operated a lumberyard in Rutland dealing in building supplies and materials.

The dealings between the plaintiff and defendants first began when the plaintiff furnished materials to the defendants for a laundry center in the Rutland Shopping Plaza in which the Szerbiks had a personal interest as owners.

The plaintiff’s manager testified that the account for the purchase of materials was set up by personal contact with defendants Szerbiks at the plaintiff’s plant in Rutland; that it was set up in their names and upon their credit; that all goods it delivered were under this account to their personal credit; and that plaintiff’s dealings were entirely and exclusively with the Szerbiks. The plaintiff continued to extend *454 credit to the Szerbiks until sometime in 1968 when the account became delinquent.

All of the materials delivered to the job sites were invoiced to the defendants Szerbiks personally. Some of the materials delivered were receipted for by William Szerbik personally but for the most part were signed for by some employee on the site, and on a few deliveries no one was present to sign for them. A copy of each invoice was delivered with the goods, and another copy together with copies of other accumulated invoices were sent weekly to the Szerbiks by mail. The plaintiff also sent monthly statements of the account to the defendants. These invoices and statements were all mailed to the defendants at Box 662, Manchester, the address given to the plaintiff by the defendants when they opened their account. In addition to the invoices, each monthly statement was in the individual names of the defendants except the last two. In those two the name was shortened to “Wm Szerbik” because of a change to data process billings,, but the supporting invoices were all in the joint names.

The defendants were fully aware of how the materials were being billed but never wrote plaintiff that it was incorrect. The plaintiff never had an account with Tri-State and Mr. Szerbik testified his corporation never made application for credit with the plaintiff. No suggestion was ever made by the defendants that plaintiff was billing the wrong party nor was this claim ever made by any personnel connected with Tri-state. No materials were ever refused or returned because they were billed to the defendants.

The defendants made payments on their account with the plaintiff by checks drawn by William Szerbik.upon the account of Tri-State Equities, Inc., but there is nothing in the record which establishes a business relationship between the plaintiff and Tri-State.

After the account became delinquent, plaintiff’s plant manager testified he called attention of the delinquency to the defendants and they promised to make payments on many occasions.

These facts are basically the findings of the court which establish the defendants’ liability to the plaintiff. The critical findings are as follows:

*455 “10. The parties dispute how the account was established, in particular in what name. The defendant William Szerbiek (sic) testified that it was set up, in a manner he does not explain, for Tri-State Equities, Inc. The defendant Virginia Szerbiek (sic), quite significantly, did not testify at all. Plaintiff’s manager testified that it was set up by personal contact with the two defendants, at the company yard, that it was set up in their names and upon their credit, and that all goods delivered were under this account, to their personal credit. He even identified the somewhat unusual auto the defendants were driving at the time.
“11. All of the goods delivered were invoiced to the defendants Szerbiek (sic) personally, a copy of the invoice being delivered with the goods and another forwarded weekly by mail. Each monthly statement was in their individual names, except the last two, in which the name was shortened to William alone because of a change to data process billing. The invoices accompanying these two statements were still in the names of the defendants individually.
“12. The weekly mailed invoices, the monthly statements, and credit slips were all mailed to the defendants individually at Box 662, Manchester, Vermont, the address given for that purpose by them. This appears to have been the box of Tri-State Equities, Inc., but they were all received by the defendants, who were fully aware how the materials were being billed.
“16. We are convinced from all the circumstances, and so find, that the account here in question was originally opened in the individual names of the defendants Szerbiek, (sic) at their specific instance; that the credit afforded by the plaintiff was afforded to them; that all deliveries made and here involved were made upon their individual credit and with their full knowledge and consent. We are aided in this conclusion by the fact that TriState Equities was newly formed about the time this account was opened, that it was wholly owned by defendants, and that admittedly no credit application was made by them on its behalf.”

*456 The defendants cite “examples” of findings made by the court which they say are not supported by the evidence, namely, Findings No. 10 and Nos. 13-19.

A finding must stand if supported by any credible evidence, although there may be inconsistencies or even substantial evidence to the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 A.2d 806, 129 Vt. 452, 1971 Vt. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-national-corporation-v-szerbik-vt-1971.