Fox v. Lofland

98 F.2d 589, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3277
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 1938
DocketNos. 6483, 6497
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 98 F.2d 589 (Fox v. Lofland) 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
Fox v. Lofland, 98 F.2d 589, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3277 (3d Cir. 1938).

Opinion

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

These appeals are from a proceeding which arose out of a contest over the proceeds of two insurance policies issued to the Hartford Sterling Company by the Mechanics and Traders Insurance Company of New Orleans, Louisiana. Prior to March 4, 1931 the Hartford Sterling Company operated a silver plating establishment at Fifth Street and Baltimore Avenue, Fernwood, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. On March 4th and 8th, of that year fires occurred in the company’s plant, resulting in considerable damage .to the building, its machinery and equipment. The company had two policies of fire insurance with the Mechanics and Traders Insurance Company, totalling .$113,500. Shortly after the fire the dam.age to the building was estimated by the insurance appraisers at $12,498 and the damage to the machinery and equipment .at $14,734.

On April 15, 1931 Clayton Lofland, a contractor who had been one of the insurance company appraisers, entered into a written contract with the Hartford Sterling Company to repair the fire damage to the building for the sum of $12,498, the exact amount of the estimated loss. Previously on March 15th Lofland had made a written proposal to the company to repair the fire damage to the machinery and equipment for the sum of $14,734 the exact amount of the loss as estimated by the appraisers. This proposal was tacitly accepted by the company. Thereafter Lofland proceeded with the work. He did not complete the work under either contract, however, and the District Court found as a fact that the value of the work done in the repair of the building was only $6,-302.68 and in the repair of the machinery and equipment only $1,325.15.

On July 21, 1931 Lofland obtained from Harry I. Avrach, President and Treasurer of the Hartford Sterling Company, an assignment of the company’s interest in the insurance policies “to the extent of $27,232.00 of all moneys due or to become due from the Insurance Company.” Later on November 6, 1931, in substitution for this assignment the company, under authority of its board of directors, executed and delivered to Lofland a formal assignment of its claim against the insurance company as collateral security for the payment to Lofland of all sums due him for work upon the building, machinery and equipment, up to the total amount of $27,-232, with interest thereon.

There .were suspicious circumstances surrounding the fires and shortly after they took place Avrach, President of the Hartford Sterling Company, and one of its employees were arrested, charged with arson and conspiracy to defraud the insurance company, and were later tried in the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Delaware County. The first trial in October 1931 resulted in a mistriál; At the second trial in January, 1932 Avrach was convicted and the employee acquitted. Subsequently on appeal the conviction of Avrach was set aside by the Superior Court of Pennsylvania (Commonwealth v. Avrach, 110 Pa.Super. 428, 438, 168 A. 531), and upon a new trial the indictment against him was nolle prossed.

Following the arrest of Avrach the insurance company, declined to pay the loss. [592]*592After Avrach’s arrest, both he and the Hartford Sterling Company being without funds, Lofland at the request of the parties in interest advanced sums totalling $6,203.-35 to meet the expenses of his defense, including the successful appeal to the Superior Court. Prior to that time Lofland’s brother-in-law Kirby had loaned $3,180 to Lofland and the company, the latter having' given their note for the loan on April 24, 1931. Thereafter Kirby assigned his interest in the note to Lofland. This money the company used for its proper corporate purposes.

Two suits were brought by the Hartford Sterling Company and Lofland (the latter acting by virtue of his assignment) against the insurance company in a Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, and were later removed to the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. On March 4, 1932 a petition in bankruptcy was filed against the company by a creditor alleging that the assignment of the fire policies to Lofland was preferential. After hearing, the bankruptcy proceeding was dismissed by the District Court. Immediately upon the termination of the criminal proceedings efforts were made by the company and its creditors to effect a settlement with the insurance company. These efforts were, however, in the beginning unsuccessful because of the failure of the parties to come to an agreement as to the amount payable to Lofland out of the proceeds.

On June 6, 1934 Clarence H. Fox was appointed by the Court of Common Pleas of 'Delaware County, Pennsylvania, receiver of the Hartford Sterling Company upon a bill filed by a creditor. On July 27th of the same year the- receiver petitioned the Court of Common Pleas for leave to compromise for $35,000 the two suits pending in the District Court against the insurance company. Lofland and other creditors filed opposing answers and 'after hearing the court ordered the objecting creditors to file a bond guaranteeing that the creditors favoring the compromise would receive as great an amount as had. been offered in settlement. On December 26; 1934 Lofland appealed to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania from this order and that court on May 27, 1935 dismissed his appeal. Gordon, Secretary of Banking, v. Hartford Sterling Co. et al., 319 Pa. 174, 179 A. 734. Thereafter the claim against the insurance company represented by the two suits in the District Court was settled by an agreement that the insurance company should pay into the registry of the District Court the total sum of $36,000, $26,484.58 in one suit and $9,515.42 in the other, “for distribution according to law as the rights of each of the several parties may appear” and the clerk of the court was directed not to pay any part of the sum to the receiver of the Hartford Sterling Company “until the rights of the parties in these proceedings shall have been judicially determined and adjudicated and the amounts of their claims to the said fund legally and properly determined.”

On November 12, 1935, the District Court referred to a special master the matter of the distribution of the sum so deposited. After extensive hearings the special master reported that Lofland had performed work under the contract to repair the building of the value of $6,009.74, which amount the master subsequently increased by $292.94, making a total sum of $6,302.-68, on which he allowed interest from August 1, 1931. He also allowed Lofland on his claim for services in rehabilitation of the machinery and equipment the sum of $1,325.15, with interest from August 1, 1931. These sums he held were payable to Lofland out of the insurance proceeds by virtue of his assignment. The balance of the fund he awarded to the receiver of the Hartford Sterling Company. Exceptions to the special master’s report were filed by both Lofland and the receiver. After argument the District Court dismissed all the exceptions, confirmed the report and decreed distribution in accordance therewith. From its decree both Lofland and the receiver have appealed. " /

Upon his appeal Lofland contends that the court below erred in refusing to award to him the entire sum of $27,232 with interest. This sum represents the full amount of his two contracts and is the sum which was referred to in the assignments made to him. In this connection he relies upon the assignment of July 21st which was absolute in form.

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Bluebook (online)
98 F.2d 589, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-lofland-ca3-1938.