General Electric Credit Corp. v. Contrucci

332 F. Supp. 827, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11348
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 6, 1971
DocketCiv. A. No. 65-357
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 332 F. Supp. 827 (General Electric Credit Corp. v. Contrucci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Credit Corp. v. Contrucci, 332 F. Supp. 827, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11348 (W.D. Pa. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION and ORDER

McCUNE, District Judge.

This is an action to recover from defendants the rental allegedly due on a lease of bowling equipment. The law of Massachusetts applies.

The complaint and amended complaint alleged that on August 17, 1962, the defendants, who then owned a bowling alley in Allegheny County, entered into a lease with a manufacturer of bowling equipment by the name of Bowl-Mor Company, a Delaware Corporation with headquarters in Massachusetts. The lease covered sixteen automatic rubber-duck pin setting machines which were rented for a period of ten years at a rental of $144,000.00 payable in equal weekly installments following an initial payment of $1200.00.

[828]*828A few days later (August 20, 1962) Bowl-Mor assigned the lease to General Electric Credit Corporation (herein called G.E.) and very shortly the defendants defaulted. It was alleged that by October 8, 1962, they were in default although between October 8, 1962, and June 19, 1964, a total of $5297.00 was paid of the total due, alleged to be $25,835.20.

On June 19, 1964, the machines were repossessed and on July 17, 1964, they were sold at public sale (after notice and advertisement of the sale) for $19,200.00 to G.E.

The complaint demanded $119,652.62 which was the total rental less the $19,-200.00 received at public sale together with the $5297.00 received in rental payments (minor expenses were also claimed which prevents an exact balancing of the aforesaid sums).

The Answer averred that the machines were not satisfactory, failed to operate properly, were not put in operable condition in spite of complaints to Bowl-Mor and that the defendants had instructed G.E. to remove the machines.

Pursuant to the request the machines were removed by Bowl-Mor (not G.E.) and that Bowl-Mor was acting as an agent of G.E. It was alleged that the defects vitiated the lease and the rental had been paid for the months during which the machines had been used, that G.E. through Bowl-Mor had acted pursuant to the request to remove the machines and had consented to a cancellation of the lease by removing the equipment.

A counterclaim was included for $5900.00 which had been expended, it was alleged, to repair and maintain the equipment while it was in use.

The reply to the counterclaim asserted that G.E. had not duty to remedy defects in the machinery because the lease permitted assignment by Bowl-Mor, while providing that the assignee would not be liable for any of the Lessor’s obligations. Further, G.E. took the equipment only because defendants had threatened to put it in storage at G.E.’s expense if it were not taken back and G.E. had notified defendants before they took it that they would sell it and hold defendants for any deficiency.

. The defendants of course denied that they ever acquiesced in the plan of G.E. to sell the machines or that they would be liable for any deficiency.

An amended answer set forth an additional defense, i. e., that G.E. in an agreement dated July 23,1964, permitted BowlMor to repurchase the equipment and took a demand note from Bowl-Mor for the amount due G.E. and the demand note held by G.E. had been paid in full by Bowl-Mor and therefore G.E. had no cause of action against the defendants. The contention was that G.E. had renegotiated the transaction with BowlMor after the default occurred and had delivered the equipment to Bowl-Mor and had taken a new note from Bowl-Mor and had been paid in full.

We tried the case non jury and in our opinion the last contention was supported by the evidence. If an assignee of a contract fails to collect from the obligor, but thereafter receives satisfaction from the assignor, is he barred from asserting the claim against the obligor? This is the basic issue in the case.

The facts presented at trial were as follows:

When Bowl-Mor (which was then selling a great deal of bowling equipment during the popularity of that sport some ten years ago) assigned its lease to G.E. on August 20, 1962, it received $97,924.-00. The assignment contained this clause:

“We warrant and guarantee the payment promptly when due of the amount of each and every sum payable under said lease, without defense, set-off or counterclaim, and the payment of the entire unpaid balance in the event of non-payment by lessee of any such sum at its due date or of any other default by the lessee without first requiring assignee to proceed against the said lessee.”

It is apparent that Bowl-Mor (lessor in the lease and assignor in the assignment) [829]*829sold its lease to G.E. with recourse. Bowl-Mor guaranteed payment to G.E. not only in the assignment but in a basic security agreement between the two corporations.

At this time G.E. was buying all or almost all of Bowl-Mor’s “paper” pursuant to an agreement between Bowl-Mor and G.E. dated December 29, 1961, (Defendant’s Exhibit “E”). This agreement generally provided that if any lessees (obligors) defaulted G.E. could demand cash equal to the deficiency due. From the $97,924.00 which G.E. paid for the Contrucci lease, G.E. deducted $8946.40 for a reserve fund set up under said agreement and $6177.00 for an insurance premium leaving a net payable to BowlMor of $82,800.00.

After G.E. had repossessed the bowling equipment, G.E. sold the equipment at public sale and bought it in for a net price of $19,050.38.1 G.E. then made a demand on Bowl-Mor that it repurchase the machinery for cash pursuant to the basic agreement between the companies of December 29,1961, already referred to, and the provisions of the assignment.

Bowl-Mor was unable to purchase the machinery from G.E. for cash. On July 23, 1964, the two companies entered into a new security agreement under which G.E. transferred the equipment to BowlMor for $95,734.06 and Bowl-Mor gave G.E. a demand note for the same amount designated note No. 11 attached to the new security agreement (testimony of plaintiff’s witness Herman Gerte).

The Contrucci account card (Defendants’ Exhibit “A”) in the possession of G.E. stated that the machinery was repurchased by Bowl-Mor on July 28, 1964, for $95,734.06.

Following the delivery of the demand note to G.E. (Bowl-Mor apparently was in no position to pay cash because of reverses) Bowl-Mor reconditioned the equipment and sold it. Eight of the machines were sold October 9, 1964, for $18,374.93 and the remaining eight machines were sold March 16, 1965, for $20,296.22, leaving a balance due on the demand note of $57,062.91 because the cash proceeds of the two sales were given to G.E.

The $57,062.91 remained due and unpaid until April 29, 1966. At that time Bowl-Mor and G.E. entered into another agreement (Defendants’ Exhibit “D”) under which G.E. charged to Bowl-Mor’s reserve account the balance of note No. 11 (the Contrucci note). (Every time G.E. bought a lease from Bowl-Mor G.E. deducted a small amount of the price and set up a reserve for Bowl-Mor (see basic agreement of December 29,1961, Defendants’ Exhibit “E”). Bowl-Mor owed money on several accounts set forth in paragraph 3 of the agreement of April 29, 1966, which provided that these amounts would be charged against the reserve and considered paid). According to G.E.’s witness Herman Gerte the [830]*830Contrucci note was in fact marked “satisfied and paid in full.” 2

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332 F. Supp. 827, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-credit-corp-v-contrucci-pawd-1971.