In re Brown Co.

14 F. Supp. 251, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1296
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedApril 6, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 F. Supp. 251 (In re Brown Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Brown Co., 14 F. Supp. 251, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1296 (D. Me. 1936).

Opinion

PETERS, District Judge.

In each of these three petitions there is raised a question as to the right of a conditional vendor to repossess certain machinery or equipment installed in the mills of the Brown Company prior to the filing of the petition for reorganization.

Admittedly the laws of New Hampshire are applicable to the contracts of sale and rights thereunder.

There is no particular dispute about the facts. The Brown Company is a Maine corporation, organized in 1888, and located at Portland, Me., according to the certificate of incorporation, and having its principal offices at Portland. In 1919 it was registered as a foreign corporation in New Hampshire, where it has mills of substantial value, the greater part of which are in the city of Berlin, in addition to which it has certain mills in the adjoining town of Gorham, N. H. Its principal offices in New Hampshire are in the city of Berlin; the only offices in the town of Gorham being minor offices connected with the operation of the Gorham plant. The Brown Company also owns timberlands in various towns in New Hampshire.

The claimants are corporations organized under the laws of others states and are nonresidents of the state of New Hampshire.

Evidence has been introduced in description of the machinery and equipment desired to be recovered, and as to the nature and degree of its annexation to the realty, having particular reference to the claim of the trustee under a mortgage securing a large issue of bonds outstanding since 1926 and covering all the real estate of the debtor corporation, that the articles sold cannot be removed as against the mortgage. It is not necessary, however, to consider that feature of the case at the present time, for the reason that I hold that the property in question is not removable as against the trustees in possession under the appointment of the court, and to discuss the rights of the mortgagee at this stage of the proceedings would be premature.

The trustees have advanced one reason in all three cases in support of their position that the claimants are not entitled to repossession, and that reason I consider sound and conclusive. It is that the contracts of conditional sale were not recorded &s required by the laws of New Hampshire. The applicable statute of that state, passed in 1926 (Pub.Laws N.H.1926, c. 216, §§ 27-30), provides that no lien on personal property, sold conditionally and passing into the hands of. a conditional purchaser, shall be valid against attaching creditors unless the vendor takes a written memorandum, signed by the purchaser, covering the details of the -purchase, and records it in the clerk’s office of the town, either where the purchaser resides, if within the state, or where the vendor resides, if he resides within the state and the purchaser does not, or where the property is situated, if neither purchaser nor vendor resides in the state. It is further required that the memorandum to be recorded shall contain an affidavit to the effect that the lien is a just lien, etc. Twenty days are given within which to record the written memorandum referred to. If not recorded until after twenty days, it is only good against subsequent attaching creditors. The trustees here, by statute, have the rights of attaching creditors.

In the case of the sale made by the Babcock & Wilcox Company, the property sold was installed in the mill in Berlin. The contract witnessing the sale did not contain the affidavit required by the statute and was not recorded or attempted to be recorded anywhere.

In the case of the sale made by the Cameron Machine Company, the property [253]*253sold was installed in the mill in Gorham called the Cascade Mill. The contract was recorded in the office of the clerk of the city of Berlin, and was never recorded in the office of the clerk of the town of Gorham.

The contracts of the Dilts Machine Works, Inc., were recorded in Berlin and not in Gorham, where their machinery was also installed in the Cascade Mill.

The question is whether the statute was complied with in any of these cases. The necessity for strict compliance with the requirements of the statute is emphasized in General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Brackett & Shaw Co., 84 N.H. 348, 150 A. 739, 70 A.L.R. 591, where the court held that the vendor has the burden of ascertaining that the town clerk has recorded the affidavit required by the statute, and that, despite the proper execution of the entire contract, if the town clerk fails to record the affidavit, the property may be attached by the vendee’s creditors.

The suggestion of counsel for claimants that they made an effort in good faith to make a proper record and that the statute should be construed liberally in their favor on that account is met by the language of the court in Kendall v. Hastings, 81 N.H. 280, 125 A. 484, in which the court says: “The finding of the court ‘that the plaintiff did all that a reasonable man would do to record his mortgage,’ cannot affect the case. There is nothing in the statute, or in any case- decided under it, which warrants a ruling that, if a person exercises reasonable care in securing the record of a mortgage, it shall be treated as recorded, even though it has not actually been placed on record. The statute is definite and specific, and must be complied with.”

In behalf of the claimants it is urged that the recording in Berlin was in compliance with the statute because the purchaser, Brown Company, had its principal New Hampshire place of business at Berlin, and that the word “resides” in the statute is not to be construed as importing an absolute legal domicile, but simply a habitual presence which, in the case of a corporation, would be satisfied by the fact that it had its principal place of business in New Hampshire in that city; and some cases in New Hampshire are referred to as supporting that contention. I do not, however, consider them applicable to the situation of the corporations here involved. The purchaser here, Brown Company, was , a Maine corporation located and having its principal place of business in Maine. It was a nonresident of New Hampshire, and had filed a certificate to that effect in New Hampshire. The fact that it did a large part of its manufacturing business in New Hampshire is not controlling.

“The residence of a corporation must be in the State which incorporated it, so that in any other State it is a non-resident, and the statute, requiring mortgages by non-residents to be recorded in the town where the property is, applies and must be enforced.” Jones on Chattel Mortgages and Conditional Sales, § 253.

The court in Massachusetts, in Whitney v. Browne, 180 Mass. 597, 62 N.E. 979, 980, says: “That a corporation is a resident of the state by which it is created is too well settled to require a citation of authorities.” Words and Phrases, Fourth Series, vol. 3, page 391; State v. Zangerle, 117 Ohio St. 436, 159 N.E. 823.

The case of Whitney v. Browne, supra, is very much in point.

I consider that the New Hampshire statute, in using the words “where the purchaser * * * or * * * vendor resides,” in the case of a corporation, refers to a New Hampshire corporation, and that a corporation foreign to New Hampshire must be regarded as having a foreign residence, and cannot have the residence within the state that is referred to by the statute.

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In re Queen City Shoe Mfg. Corp.
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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Supp. 251, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brown-co-med-1936.