Hawes v. Wm. R. Trigg Co.

65 S.E. 538, 110 Va. 165, 1909 Va. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 65 S.E. 538 (Hawes v. Wm. R. Trigg Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawes v. Wm. R. Trigg Co., 65 S.E. 538, 110 Va. 165, 1909 Va. LEXIS 130 (Va. 1909).

Opinions

Keith, P:

The William E. Trigg Company, a manufacturing corporation organized under the laws of this State, and engaged in the construction, building and equipment of ships, boats and vessels, on June 1, 1901, executed a deed of trust to the Commercial Trust Company of Philadelphia, as trustee, covering its plant and including all its machinery, fixtures and tools, together with all corporate rights, privileges and franchises, and on June 11, 1902, another deed of trust to the Eichmond Trust and Safe Deposit Company to secure large issues of its bonds. It contracted also large debts to its employees and for supplies and material; and, having become greatly embarrassed, S. H. Hawes & Co., in December, 1902, filed their bill, setting forth its default in the payment of interest upon the bonds secured by the deeds of trust, averring its heavy indebtedness to banks and individuals upon promissory notes and open accounts, its total insolvency, and praying for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of its assets and to finish certain uncompleted contracts theretofore entered into by it.

Under this bill such proceedings were had that a receiver was appointed, and the cause was referred to a commissioner to state an account showing the property of the company and its value, the debts due by it, the liens and their priorities. Bank v. Trigg Co., 106 Va. 327, 56 S. E. 158.

The question now to be disposed of grows out of the following iacts: The Trigg Company, appellee, on the 20th of April, 1900, contracted with the United States government for the construction of revenue cutters Uos. 7 and 8, known as the Tus•carora and the Mohawk. Certain payments were to be made as the work progressed, but not less than twenty-five per cent, of the contract price was to be reserved by the government until the completion and final acceptance of the vessels. The payments so reserved are known in the record as the “Eeserved [170]*170Claims.” There was no provision in the contract itself prohibiting its assignment.

The Trigg Company applied to the First National Bank of Richmond, Va., for loans to enable it to execute this contract, and received $25,000 on April 26, 1900, filing its contract with the bank, but making at that time no written assignment. On May 11, 1900, the board of directors of the company passed a resolution authorizing the execution of a power of attorney to the bank to collect all payments under its contracts with the government for the construction of the revenue cutters. This power of attorney was duly executed on that day, and was sent by mail to the secretary of the treasury on May 12, 1900.

Other loans from the bank were negotiated by the Trigg Company upon the faith of the contracts with the United States government for the construction of the two cutters; so that the debt due to the bank was in the end represented by three notes, one of April 29, 1900, for $5,070, subject to a credit of $3,034 as of the 30th day of September, 1902; a note of October 16, 1900, for $25,000, and a second note of October 16, 1900, for a like amount.

The Tuscarora was completed, accepted and paid for by the government, and makes no figure in this case. The Mohawk was completed after the appointment of the receiver; and on May 16, 1904, the sum of $26,705.35 was paid by the government into court to the credit of this cause in full settlement of the amount due to the Trigg Company for the construction of that vessel.

In obedience to the decree of the chancery court the commissioner returned his report, from which it appears that many liens for supplies, material and labor were perfected and filed against the Mohawk. None of them are of an earlier date than December, 1902, while the First National Bank of Richmond claims under assignments none of which are later than October, 1900.

[171]*171The commissioner reported in favor of the supply and labor liens, and to that report the bank excepted, as follows:

“First. Because said commissioner finds that the assignment by said W. R. Trigg Company to said bank of its, the said Trigg Company’s, claim against the United States, arising out of its contract to build for said United States the revenue cutter “Mohawk,” and the power of attorney to said bank to collect the reserve held to await the completion of said cutter, are void under section 3477, Revised Statutes of the United States; and even if not so void, the general claim of said bank, as well as said assignment and power of attorney are subordinate to all liens duly acquired for labor and supplies furnished the said W. R. Trigg Company under the terms of the Virginia statute, Code of Virginia, section 2485.
“Second. Because the findings of said commissioner sustain the constitutionality of the labor and supply lien law of Virginia, whereas said law is in conflict with section 1 of Article Fourteen of the Constitution of the United States, and with the Constitution of Virginia.
“Third. Because said commissioner finds that the said W. R. Trigg Company is a ‘manufacturing company’ within the meaning and operation of said Virginia labor and supply lien statute, whereas he should have found that said statute did not apply to such a company.”

The second and third exceptions are disposed of by the opinion of this court in Bank v. Trigg Co., supra, where the constitutionality of section 2485 was maintained; the Trigg Company was held to be a manufacturing company, within the meaning of that section; and the liens for labor and supplies were sustained; but the decree appealed from, in that case, reserved for future consideration “all questions as to the validity or priority of any claim or lien of any party to the cause, so far as such claim or lien exists in relation to any property of the defendant corporation other than the real estate conveyed in said two mortgages and the rights appurtenant thereto, and the [172]*172personal property forming a part of its plant . . . and all questions as to the fund or funds upon or against which the .amounts herein ordered to he paid on account of labor liens or mechanics’ liens established in this cause shall be eventually ■charged.”

The precise question, therefore, now to be decided is as to ■the priority of right between the First National Bank, claiming under the assignments above referred to, and the subsequent liens for labor and supplies.

As we have observed, the validity of the liens was established in Bank v. Trigg Co., supra, and must prevail, unless the bank, ■claiming under the assignments, shall he found to have the ■older and the better right.

We are of opinion that the transaction between the bank and the Trigg Company by which the contracts with the United ■States government were filed with the hank and a power of attorney was executed by the Trigg Company, authorizing the bank to collect all payments under its contracts with the government for the construction of the revenue cutters, on the faith •of which the bank made loans to the Trigg Company, constituted, under the laws of this State, valid assignments or hypothecations of those contracts. Didier v. Patterson, 93 Va. 534, 25 S. E. 661; Building Association v. Coleman, 94 Va. 433, 26 S. E. 843; Hicks v. Roanoke Brick Co., 94 Va. 741, 27 S. E. 596; Switzer v. Noffsinger, 82 Va. 518; Mack Mfg. Co. v. Smoot, 102 Va. 724, 47 S. E. 859.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.E. 538, 110 Va. 165, 1909 Va. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawes-v-wm-r-trigg-co-va-1909.