General Electric Co. v. Transit Equipment Co.

42 A. 101, 57 N.J. Eq. 460, 12 Dickinson 460, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 3
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 19, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 A. 101 (General Electric Co. v. Transit Equipment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Co. v. Transit Equipment Co., 42 A. 101, 57 N.J. Eq. 460, 12 Dickinson 460, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 3 (N.J. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The several claims of the General Electric Company and the Crocker-Wheeler Company are quite distinct — depend upon different facts — and so must be considered separately.

I will first take that of the General Electric Company, premising that the lien of the Metropolitan Trust Company, as trustee for the bondholders, is prior in point of time to that of either of the other parties.

The Union Traction Company was organized on the 2d of November, 1894, and shortly afterwards and in the same month the mortgage in question was made and executed, which also covered future-acquired property, the language used being “ all property now possessed, or which may be hereafter acquired, by the” Union Traction Company.

The same persons who organized the traction company also organized the Transit Equipment Company, and by arrangement or contract between the two companies the Transit Equipment Company undertook to equip the railway. Later on, in executing that contract, it applied to the General Electric Company for certain car equipments, with the result that on or about the 9th [463]*463of November, 1896, a contract in writing was entered into between the General Electric Company and the Transit Equipment Company for the furnishing of certain car equipments. That contract was in the shape of a proposal and acceptance. The proposal was made by the General Electric Company at its Philadelphia office, and submitted on the 9th of November to the Transit Equipment Company, to furnish certain equipments mentioned in the part of the proposal called “specifications.” The greater part of the proposal is in a printed blank containing printed descriptions of the articles to be furnished, in which, however, there are interpolated in typewriting some extras and also some erasures and written interlineations. It is signed by Mr. Mullen, the authorized agent and manager of the General Electric Company. At the foot of it is a printed acceptance in these words: “ To the General Electric Company. The proposal as above hereby accepted this twenty-fourth day of November, 1896. Transit Equipment Company, by J. W. Gilmore, President.” In addition to that there is a special acceptance on a separate piece of paper, which was, however, attached to the original proposal, addressed to the General Electric Company, in these words :

“Your proposal as contained in the foregoing instrument is hereby accepted this twenty-fourth day of November, 1896. In witness whereof, the Transit Equipment Company has caused its corporate seal to be hereunto affixed, and its president to execute these presents for and in behalf of the corporation, this twenty-fourth day of November, 1896. Transit Equipment Company, by J. W. Gilmore, President. Witness — Gilbert T. Gale, Secretary,”

and the seal of the corporation. On the same day — November 24th — Mr. Gale, as secretary, made affidavit before a master of this court, in the ordinary form, proving the signature of the president and the affixing of the seal, and that it was so affixed by the order of the transit company. This document was recorded in the clerk’s office of Bergen county, on the 19th of April, 1897, and in the office of the secretary of state, on the 7th day of May, 1897.

The proposal which forms the body of the contract contains this clause:

[464]*464“The title to the apparatus herein sold shall not pass from the company until all payments hereunder, including deferred payments, if any, shall have been fully made in cash. The purchaser agrees to do all acts necessary to perfect and maintain such retention of title in the company.”

In the first part of the proposal it is provided that the General Electric Company is thereinafter to be called the “ company.”

The contract provides for the delivery of the articles as required by order. The equipment company did not order all the articles at once or at all, but the first of the deliveries was made in the latter part of the month of April, 1897. The first bill of lading from the factory of the company was dated the 22d of April, 1897, and reached the premises of the Union Traction Company on one of the last days of April, and on one of the first days of May the agent of the electric company attended at the premises of the Union Traction Company and applied the articles to the trucks and cars of the latter company.

The apparatus consists mainly of the “motors” attached to each of the trucks or running-gears of. the cars, and the “ controller” attached at each end of the car, and a “pole” upon the top of the car. There were two motors and two controllers to each car. To each one of these articles the name of the General Electric Company was fastened on a brass plate, in strict accordance with the terms of the third subdivision of the act of March 8th, 1883 (P. L. of 1883 p. 87), as amended by the act of March 5th, 1895 (P. L. of 1895 p. 158; Gen. Stat. p. 2706). The act of 1883 is entitled “An act relating to certain contracts for the lease or conditional sale of railroad equipment and rolling stock and providing for the record thereof,” and provides, first, that contracts for the leasing or conditional sale of railroad equipment and rolling stock shall not be valid as against

“ any subsequent judgment creditor or any subsequent purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice unless the same shall he evidenced by writing, duly acknowledged before some person authorized by law to take acknowledgments of deeds;”

'second, that it shall be recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds of the county in which is located the principal office or place of business of such vendee.

[465]*465Third., Bach locomotive or oar so sold, leased or loaned shall have the name of the vendor, lessor or bailor, or the assignee of such vendor, lessor or bailor, plainly marked upon both sides thereof, followed by the word owner, lessor, bailor or assignee, as the case may be.”

By the amendatory act of 1895 the act is extended to street railway equipments, and the contract is to be recorded in the office of the secretary of state whenever the railroad company is operating in more than one county.

The third condition above recited remains unchanged.

By a new section, provision is made that the provisions of the act entitled “An act requiring contracts for the conditional sale of personal property to be'recorded,” approved May 9th, 1889, shall not be construed to apply to railroad and street railway equipment and rolling stock which shall be the subject of contracts of the kind specified in the first section of the act relating to railroad equipment.

Two objections are made to the enforcement of the claim of the General Electric Company. Eirst, that the articles sold are so mingled with other property of the Union Traction Company that they cannot be separated from such other property.

I think the evidence does not sustain this objection. The trucks and bodies of the railway ears were originally made and designed to be propelled by electricity, and by apparatus of the kind here provided by the electric company. No particular alteration or cutting was required in order to attach the apparatus provided by the electric company to. those cars, and the articles so furnished are each still distinct and may be removed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 A. 101, 57 N.J. Eq. 460, 12 Dickinson 460, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-transit-equipment-co-njch-1898.