Fisher v. Flickinger Wheel Co.

18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 501, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 533
CourtCrawford Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 501 (Fisher v. Flickinger Wheel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Crawford Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Flickinger Wheel Co., 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 501, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 533 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

HURIN, J.

The original action out of which both of these proceedings in error [Carl D. Fisher et al. v. Flickinger Wheel Co. et al. and Carl D. Fisher et al. v. Adam Semones et al.] grew was brought by Adam Semones to secure an accounting from the Flickinger Wheel Company, defendant; the plaintiff alleging in his petition that defendant company was insolvent and indebted to creditors in various sums aggregating $200,000, of which more than $69,000 were due plaintiff. He asked an .accounting and the appointment of receivers to take charge of defendant’s property for the benefit of creditors.

This petition was filed April 15, 1904, and on the same day Edward Flickinger, the president of the company, and.Daniel Bachelder. were appointed as receivers, and gave bond and qualified. A. M. Snyder was afterwards substituted for Daniel Bachelder as receiver.

These receivers caused the property of defendant company to be appraised and inventoried, and on June 17, 1904, they filed their report <of 'the appraisement.

[503]*503Afterwards, on June 21, an intervening petition was,, by leave of ■court, filed by Carl D. Fisher,. Charles Minshall, C. F. Ferguson, 0. B. Banister and W. C. Durant, as trustees of a large number of wheel ■companies named in said intervening petition.

In that petition, it is alleged that these trustees were duly appointed by the companies named, about August 17, 1903, for the express purpose of purchasing the personal property therein described and of taking title thereto and holding, controlling and disposing of said title and property for the use and benefit of the companies appointing them, and that they had ever since been acting as such trustees and were the owners of said property and in possession thereof until interfered with by the receivers previously referred to. The property so claimed and described consisted of certain machinery, tools, and appliances located in the buildings previously occupied by defendant, the Flickinger Wheel Company, and formerly used by said company in its business of manufacturing wheels.

Said intervening petition alleges that neither the Flickinger Wheel Company nor the receivers have any right, title, or interest in said property, but that, notwithstanding these facts, said receivers have wrongfully taken possession of said property and caused the same to be appraised as part of the assets of said receivership and have ever since wrongfully detained from said trustees the possession thereof and are threatening to, and will, unless restrained by the court, cause said property to be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of the debts of the Flickinger Wheel Company. Wherefore these trustees pray that “the receivers may be restrained from proceeding with the sale of said property and ordered to surrender the same to the trustees.

An answer to this intervening petition, filed by the receivers, alleges that the wheel companies named by the intervening petitioners as those for whom they were acting as trustees, had, together with defendant, the Flickinger Wheel Company, entered into an illegal -combination and conspiracy and had formed a trust, which trust was commonly known at the “Vehicle Wheel Club;” that said trust was formed in violation of the act of the general assembly known as the Valentine antitrust law and was created to carry out a restriction in trade and commerce in all kinds of vehicle wheels, to increase the price of such wheels and to prevent competition in their manufacture and .sale.

It is further alleged that the contract of sale referred to in the intervening petition was entered into in order to carry out the purpose of said conspiracy, combination and trust, and especially to remove [504]*504the Flickinger Wheel Company as a competitor of the organizations composing the Vehicle Wheel Club; that no part of said machinery has ever been delivered to said interveners, or to said trust or to their trustees,, but that the same has ever since remained, in the possession of the Flickinger Wheel Company and of its receivers, and the answer avers-that the whole of said contract so made is null and void under the provisions of the Valentine law and is not enforceable in law or equity.

Wherefore, the receivers pray that said contract may be declared by the court to be absolutely null and in violation of said Valentine law and that said machinery be decreed to be the property of' the Flickinger Wheel Company, and ordered sold by the receivers for the benefit of the creditors of said company.

By reply the trustees deny these allegations of fraud and illegality of contract and deny that they have entered into any conspiracy or-trust, and allege facts tending to explain and justify the transactions; relating to the property here in dispute; and they further allege that-the sum of $66,000 paid by these defendants for said machinery was all applied upon the indebtedness of said Flickinger Wheel Company, for the benefit of the creditors of said company.

Notwithstanding the filing of the interveners’ petition and the subsequent pleadings relating thereto, the common pleas court proceeded to order a sale of the property in question and, over the protest of these-interveners, confirmed the sale.

To this action of the court the intervening trustees prosecuted error to this court; but this court, 'at a former term, postponed a decision of the case as thus presented and, while’said action was pending in this court, the case was heard on its merits in the court of common pleas on the issues raised by the interveners’ petition and that court on a full hearing, finding against the claims of the interveners, and that the companies represented by them had combined for an illegal purpose in contravention of the antitrust laws of the state, that said combination was unlawful, and that there was no sale and delivery of the machinery of the Flickinger Wheel Company to the Vehicle CluS, and-that the possession thereof had remained in the Flickinger Wheel Company and its receivers, said interveners again prosecute error to this court, and both bills of. exceptions and the proceedings connected there^ with are now before us for review and will be considered together. |

In their oral argument of this case- counsel for the interveners contend :

First. That, on the evidence presented, the title and possession of" [505]*505the disputed machinery was in the trustees at the time the said suit was brought.

Second. That though that title and possession were disputed, the common pleas court had no right to order a sale of said property until that title and possession were judicially settled.

Third. That to deny them the right to their property and to relegate them to the proceeds of the sale thereof, should the title of said property be finally determined to be in them, would be a denial of justice.

Fourth. That there was no illegality about the organization of the so-called Vehicle Wheel Club; that it was not a trust, nor a combination in restraint of trade and hence that its acts and particularly the purchase of the machinery in question were wholly legal and should be upheld.

Fifth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 501, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-flickinger-wheel-co-ohcirctcrawford-1906.