Henderson Tire & Rubber Co. v. Reeves

14 F.2d 903, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2128
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 1926
Docket293, Original
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 903 (Henderson Tire & Rubber Co. v. Reeves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson Tire & Rubber Co. v. Reeves, 14 F.2d 903, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2128 (8th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

WALTER H. SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This is an original proceeding in this court for a writ of mandamus or prohibition to require the judges of the United States District Court below to try a ease in that court to a jury at law. Counsel for the petitioner, the Henderson Tire & Rubber Company, a corporation, state in their brief that their ground for the issue of the writ is that the judges have improperly transferred an action at law to the equity docket, and are about to proceed to its trial as an equity case, in violation of the petitioner’s constitutional right to a trial thereof by a jury at law. This court issued its alternative writ of mandamus on the petition of the Tire Company; the judges have answered the petition; the relevant facts are admitted and are these :■

On March 19, 1923, the Tire Company •made a written contract of conditional sale with the Associated Dollar Tire Stores Company to deliver to the Tire Company’s agent in the store or place of business of the Dollar Company automobile tires, tools and like merchandise of the value of about $30,000, that the Tire Company’s agent should keep accounts between the parties, that the Dollar Company should sell this merchandise, that it should pay to the Tire Company for the articles it sold out of this stock prices stated in the contract, and that at the end of the term of the contract, which was on September 30, 1923, it should pay cash for the part of the goods it had not sold. The contract expressly provided that all tires warehoused as therein specified should be and remain the property of the Tire Company. The judges of the District Court, the respondents, held that, because this contract was not recorded, it was void “as to all subsequent purchasers in good faith, and creditors,” under Rev. St. Mo., 1919, § 2284.

On June 22, 1923, the Tire Company entered the premises of the Dollar Company; took and carried -away all the tires and other property subject to this contract. On June 29, 1923, the Dollar Company was adjudicated a bankrupt. On September 21, 1923, the trustee in bankruptcy commenced an action at law against the Tire Company for the conversion of the property it had seized. The Tire Company.answered; the ease was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for the trustee for $15,000. On a motion for a new trial Judge Van Valkenburgh, who tried the ease, set aside the verdict.

The complaint on which this action was tried was the first amended complaint. It contained four counts. Neither of them alleged or referred to the interest or rights of subsequent creditors of the Dollar Company under the written contract and the recording statute of Missouri. The first count was for conversion. It alleged the ownership of the property by the Dollar Company, the unlawful taking and conversion of it by the Tire Company, and nothing more. The second count alleged that within four months prior to the adjudication the bankrupt suffered its stock to be taken over and that this constituted a fraudulent and void transfer under section 70e of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9654). The third and fourth counts alleged that this transfer was in violation of sections 67e and 60 of the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §§ 9651, 9644).

The memorandum of Judge Van Valkenburgh on his decision of the Tire Company’s motion for a new trial is a part of the record before us. In that memorandum he stated that: “The bankrupt made no transfer, nor did it knowingly suffer one to be made. The property was taken by the defendant in this case. As the Supreme Court said in Bailey v. Baker Ice Machine Co., 239 U. S. 268, 274, 36 S. Ct. 50, 60 L. Ed. 275: ‘The [preference] section leaves no doubt that to be within its terms the transfer must be one which a bankrupt makes of his own property apd which operates to prefer one creditor over others.’ ”

The memorandum leaves no doubt that he granted a new trial of the action because in his opinion none of the causes of action pleaded in the first amended complaint was proved by evidence sufficient to sustain a verdict against the Tire Company. The memorandum also shows that he was, however, probably of the opinion that it was possible that evidence might be produced of the rights of those who became creditors of the Dollar Company subsequent to the date of the conditional sale contract and that th,e trustee represented such creditors. He wrote in that memorandum: “The right of the trustee is *905 that of the subsequent creditors who acquired a lien in equity by virtue of the statute which made defendant’s title void as to subsequent creditors. In re Bothe, 173 F. 597, 97 C. C. A. 547. The suit, therefore, must assume the character of one to establish an equitable lien upon the property in the hands of the defendant. While that lien arises through statute, nevertheless, the procedure by which it must be established is distinctly equitable in its nature.”

In this state of the case the trustee prepared and filed his second amended complaint, in which he set forth the conditional sale contract word for word, alleged that it was not recorded as required by the statutes of Missouri, that subsequent to its date creditors of the Dollar Company, in reliance upon the fact that the Dollar Company was in -possession of and selling the merchandise described in the written contract, gave credit to the Dollar Company without a notice of this contract with the Tire Company, that these creditors had proved their claims in the bankruptcy ease of the Dollar Company, and that he, as trustee, represented them. He also alleged in this second amended complaint other facts which he claimed warranted the general creditors of the Dollar Company, and him as their representative, to disregard the claims of the Tire Company to the property under the written contract with the Dollar Company and under its contracts with its agents, and he prayed for judgment against the Tire Company for $30,000, and for such other relief as to the court might seem just and equitable. The Tire Company immediately made a motion to strike out this second amended complaint on the ground that it constituted a radical departure from the cause of action for conversion set forth by the trustee in his former pleadings. The court denied this motion; the trustee then made a motion to transfer the case from the law to the equity docket, and the court granted that motion. Counsel for the -Tire Company strenuously objected to this order, and when these orders were made and ever since have objected and ezcepted to each of them. They now seek through the petition of the Tire Company to this eouft for its writ of mandamus to require the judges of the court below to refuse to try this ease in equity, and to require them to try it at law to a jury, and they insist that, if this is not done, the Tire Company will be deprived of its constitutional right to a jury trial.

The District Judges undoubtedly denied the motion to strike out the second amended complaint and transferred this ease to the equity docket in reliance upon section 274a of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 1251a), which provides: “That 'in case any of said courts shall find that a suit at law should have been brought in equity or a suit in equity should have been brought at law, the court shall order any amendments to the pleadings which may be necessary to conform them to the proper practice.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 903, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-tire-rubber-co-v-reeves-ca8-1926.