Hemphill Co. v. Davis Knitting Co.

173 A. 704, 114 Pa. Super. 94, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 235
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 1934
DocketAppeal 28
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 A. 704 (Hemphill Co. v. Davis Knitting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hemphill Co. v. Davis Knitting Co., 173 A. 704, 114 Pa. Super. 94, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 235 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtfeld, J.,

This was a replevin action by Hemphill Company against H. B. Davis, trading as the Davis Knitting Company, in which Market Street Trust Company intervened claiming it had purchased the eight machines, sought to be replevied, at a constable’s sale under a distraint for rent. A counter bond having been filed, the action was for the value of the machines. The Hemphill Company, in its statement of claim, claimed title to eight knitting machines, alleging these had been leased to Davis. The trust company denied the title of the Hemphill Company, claiming an alleged reconveyance of the machines by Davis to the company was void and averred that the trust company had title to the machines by reason of having purchased them at the constable’s sale for rent under a landlord’s warrant from the Commonwealth' Trust Company, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, landlord of Davis. The case was tried before Fox, J., of the Dauphin County Court, and a verdict rendered against the intervening defendant in the sum of $2,240. A motion for judgment n. o. v. was denied.

*96 The evidence showed Davis leased space in the Vernon Industrial Building in Harrisburg, wherein to knit hosiery, from the Commonwealth Trust Company, apparently under an original oral agreement, effective in December of 1927, and reduced to a written lease on February 25, 1928. Previously he had ordered from Hemphill Company (plaintiff) eighteen machines at a price of $175 each, on terms of “2% — 10 days, Net 30 days.” Hemphill Company did not accept the order until December 16, 1927, on which day it received a telegram from H. A. Dent, of Seattle, Washington, whereby he undertook to guarantee the account of Davis up to $5,000. Davis having received the machines made payments totalling $1,750, the cost price of ten machines. On April 28, 1928, Hemphill Company wrote Davis about the balance due, saying if he could not comply with the terms of sale it would be “necessary to arrange for a lease or take back the machines.” A bailment lease was thereafter drawn, purporting to cover eight of the machines then in the possession of Davis, bearing date of April 30,1928, but not actually executed for from eight to ten days thereafter. There was no bill of sale reconveying the machines to Hemphill Company and the latter never took any physical possession of them, nor caused them to be in any way marked as its property. When the lease was executed Davis owed some money to creditors, which was subsequently paid off in the ordinary course of business. The Market Street Trust Company, (intervening defendant and appellant here) was not at that time a creditor.

On August 3, 1928, Davis requested a line of credit from Market Street Trust Company, submitting a financial statement which made no reference to the bailment lease, nor to any note executed simultaneously therewith, or subsequently, in favor of the Hemphill Company. Market Street Trust Company extended *97 credit and thereafter Davis was continuously indebted to it.

On May 7, 1930, Davis owed five months rent and a landlord’s warrant was issued distraining for this rent. On May 15,1930, Market Street Trust Company charged off $336.61, then in the deposit account of Davis, and credited this amount upon an overdue note upon which judgment had been entered, leaving the debt still owing $1,093.39. This made worthless a check on Market Street Trust Company which, on May 13, 1930, Davis tendered his landlord for three months rent. Davis testified when he did this he was told the distress proceedings would be discontinued. The landlord’s witness said it would be discontinued if the check proved good. After May 15th the constable put up sale bills and on May 24th sold all of the machinery and equipment of Davis at public sale. Market Street Trust Company, as high bidder, became the .purchaser for $563.

In December of 1930 Hemphill Company issued a writ of replevin for the eight machines covered by the bailment lease. Market Street Trust Company was permitted to intervene, file a counter bond and retain the machines. At the trial there was some evidence of irregularities in the constable’s sale. The court left it to the jury to decide, (1), whether or not the attempted reconveyance by Davis to Hemphill Company and the bailment lease under which plaintiff claimed title were fraudulent, and (2), whether or not the constable’s sale was regular. A verdict was rendered for Hemphill Company in the sum of $2,240. The motion of Market Street Trust Company for judgment n. o. v. was overruled and judgment entered on the verdict in an opinion by Fox, J. From that judgment this appeal was taken by Market Street Trust Company, intervening defendant.

(1) As to the bailment lease: Appellant contends *98 that the trial judge should have held as a matter of law that the plaintiff did not have the title or right of possession necessary to maintain replevin, on the theory that the bailment contract was a fraud upon the creditors.

The agreement to execute a bailment lease, even if the machines were delivered pursuant to a contract of sale, was clearly lawful as between the. parties, and not fraudulent unless creditors were prejudiced. The intervening defendant first became a creditor of Davis three months after the execution of the bailment lease, viz., August 3, 1928, and appears in this case, not as a creditor, but claiming title as owner of the property replevied. As stated in Buckley v. Duff, 114 Pa. 596, 603: “The rule in Pennsylvania is, that a transfer void as to existing creditors is not necessarily void as to subsequent creditors; it is bad only as to those it was intended to defraud: Byrod’s Appeal, 7 Casey 241; Monroe v. Smith, 79 P. F. S. 459. If the transaction is not fraudulent as to existing creditors, and in this case, as we have said, there were none, subsequent creditors can avoid the sale only under special circumstances, as for instance, by showing that it was made with a view to incurring liability, or to provide against the contingencies of a hazardous business, which gave rise to their debts; and cases of this character are ordinarily under proper instructions for the determination of a jury. Such is the doctrine of Snyder v. Christ, 3 Wright 499; Monroe v. Smith, 29 P. F. S. 459; Harlan v. McLaughlin, 9 Norris 293. Although the cases cited relate to transfer of real estate, the rule is alike applicable on questions affecting the sales of personal property.”

As stated by Mr. Justice Sadler in Schmidt v. Bader, 284 Pa. 41, at page 46: “Even if he had intended to sell originally when the machinery was forwarded on June 5th......there would have been no *99 reason why he, as the purchaser and owner, could not have made some other arrangement, prior to the intervention of the rights of others.”

Appellant contends that plaintiff has no right to maintain replevin because the eight machines were not physically returned to plaintiff and redelivered by plaintiff when the bailment contract was entered into. The trial judge held that there could be a constructive delivery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 A. 704, 114 Pa. Super. 94, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemphill-co-v-davis-knitting-co-pasuperct-1934.