Imperial Carpet Mills, Inc. v. Hawley

497 P.2d 658, 262 Or. 277, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 478
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 497 P.2d 658 (Imperial Carpet Mills, Inc. v. Hawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imperial Carpet Mills, Inc. v. Hawley, 497 P.2d 658, 262 Or. 277, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 478 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, C.J.

This is an action to recover the value of carpeting delivered to defendants by the plaintiff. Defendants appeal from a judgment for plaintiff.

Defendants entered into a contract with Portland Home Center for the installation of carpets and drapes in an apartment complex which defendants were then constructing. Mr. George Danner represented Portland Home Center in this transaction. Defendants paid $6,000 in advance to Danner, $1,000 to be applied on the drapery contract and $5,000 which was the price of the carpeting.

Portland Home Center ordered the carpeting from the plaintiff, a Georgia corporation engaged in the manufacture of carpeting. The carpeting was consigned to Portland Home Center and was shipped C.O.D. because plaintiff did not regard the consignee as a good credit risk.

In late January, 1969, defendants requested Mr. Danner to deliver the carpeting for which they had contracted, but no delivery was made. Thereafter, [279]*279from February to late March, defendants continued to make efforts to obtain the carpeting until finally in late March Mr. Danner informed defendants that he had sold their carpeting but volunteered to supply carpeting to complete one building. The carpeting selected by Danner was rejected by defendants on the ground that it was not suitable for their purpose.

By this time defendants were in urgent need of the carpeting because the delay in completing the apartment complex resulted in lost rent. Mr. Danner then got in touch with Mr. Abernathy, plaintiff’s representative, and made a proposal which Mr, Abernathy described as follows: “Mr. Danner called me from the Portland Home Center and told me he could not handle the picking up of the carpet financially and that the carpet was needed for a job that had to go in, job was for a Boyd N. Hawley, and that he was going to send me a certain piece of paper that Mr. Hawley would sign, saying that he would guarantee X amount of dollars to us. And also, I asked for a credit reference for that and told them that once I got the piece of paper and were able to cheek the credit, the credit were good enough, that we would release the carpet to the Hawleys and re-bill them and credit Portland Home Center.”

Mr. Danner then met with defendants, bringing with him a prepared assignment purporting to assign to plaintiff, in exchange for the release of the carpeting which plaintiff was holding, the amount due Portland Home Center from defendants. The assignment read as follows (for convenience, substituting “plaintiff” for Imperial Carpet Mills, “Portland Home Center” for assignor, and “defendants” for customer):

“In consideration of plaintiff * * * supplying [280]*280the merchandise identified below for sale by Portland Home Center to defendants, Portland Home Center hereby assigns to plaintiff all of Portland Home Center’s right, title and interest in or to all moneys or payments which are payable or which become payable from defendants. Plaintiff is authorized to do all appropriate acts to effect the collection of the sums assigned hereunder in the event payment is not received by plaintiff when due. Upon receipt of the funds hereby assigned to plaintiff, plaintiff shall apply the same first upon Portland Home Center’s indebtedness to plaintiff for the merchandise described below; second to plaintiff costs of collection, if any, (including attorney’s fees, if any); and third, at plaintiff’s discretion, either upon any other indebtedness of Portland Home Center to plaintiff or to Portland Home Center. To the extent that the funds hereby assigned remain after the foregoing applications, such remaining funds shall be paid over and delivered by plaintiff to Portland Home Center.
“Delivery of a copy of this assignment to defendants shall constitute Portland Home Center’s instructions to defendants to pay the sums herein described to plaintiff. This instrument is expressly understood and agreed to constitute an assignment only and does not constitute an undertaking by plaintiff to deliver the described merchandise or to perform any obligations of Portland Home Center to defendants or otherwise.
“[Inserted in pen and ink and initialed B.N.H. and G-.D.] Assigned the sum of $3,651.32 Three Thousand six Hundred Fifty one and 32/100.
“In witness whereof, the undersigned Portland Home Center has executed this assignment this 1 day of April 1969.”

The assignment was then delivered to Mr. Abernathy who testified that he would accept it as additional security but insisted upon a credit reference [281]*281for the defendants since he expected them to pay for the carpeting if it was released. When Mr. Abernathy received the credit reference and assignment he called a Portland bank and secured a credit rating for defendants. He testified that he then called defendant Hazel Hawley and obtained from her verification that she wanted the carpet and that the assignment had been executed by defendant Boyd Hawley. Mrs. Hawley testified that she had no recollection of this telephone call.

Having taken these precautions, plaintiff consigned the carpeting directly to defendants. The carpeting was delivered, signed for by defendants, and placed in their apartment complex. Plaintiff billed defendants for the carpeting and upon defendants’ refusal to pay this action was commenced.

The trial court held that the “[r]elease of the C. O. D. and delivery of the carpet to defendants gave rise to a contract implied in fact, and defendants’ retention of the carpet gave rise to a contract implied in law.”

We reverse. Even if we accept plaintiff’s version of the facts, we do not think that the circumstances gave rise to a contract implied in fact. The assignment standing alone, even though signed by defendants, does not give rise to an implied contract that defendants would pay plaintiff for the carpet. The assignment runs between Portland Home Center as assignor and plaintiff as assignee. The consideration for the assignment was expressed to be plaintiff’s “supplying the merchandise described below for sale, by Portland Home Center to defendants.” (Emphasis added.) The assignment goes on to provide that plaintiff shall apply the funds received from defendants to Portland Home Center’s indebtedness to plaintiff.

[282]*282In effect, plaintiff would transpose this assignment between Portland Home Center and plaintiff as a novation obligating defendants to pay plaintiff instead of the Portland Home Center. The assignment clearly does not bear that interpretation. At most, it obligated defendants to pay over to plaintiff the amount they owed Portland Home Center. Since defendants had paid Portland Home Center for the carpet, there was no obligation which it could assign to plaintiff.

If, then, a contract is to be implied, the implication must arise out of facts apart from defendants* signing of the assignment. Plaintiff points to Mr. Abernathy’s conversation with Mr. Danner in which it was understood that plaintiff was to re-bill defendants for the carpet and credit Portland Home Center for it. Assuming that this was the agreement, defendants were not parties to it. The only contact defendants had with plaintiff was at the time Mr. Abernathy called Mrs. Hawley. The substance of the conversation was that Mr. Abernathy wanted to establish that Mr. Boyd Hawley’s signature on the assignment was authentic. In the course of the conversation, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
497 P.2d 658, 262 Or. 277, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imperial-carpet-mills-inc-v-hawley-or-1972.