In re Builders' Lumber Co.

148 F. 244, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedOctober 10, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 F. 244 (In re Builders' Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Builders' Lumber Co., 148 F. 244, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76 (E.D.N.C. 1906).

Opinion

PURNELL, District Judge.

The Builders’ Lumber Company was adjudged bankrupt on a petition filed on April 19, 3905, by the S. M. Price Machinery Company and Omohundro Bros. The officers of the Builders' Lumber Company were P. W. Johnson, president, W. J. Edwards, vice president and manager, H. P. Edwards, treasurer, and T. C. McNeely, secretary. It was organized under a charter granted by the state of North Carolina. The adjudication was made May 1, 1905. On petition of the duly appointed trustee, the American Wood Working Machinery Company, W. H. Saunders, and R. H. Lynn, alleging they claimed preferred liens and were necessary parties to the proceeding, were made parties and filed answer. The American .Wood Working Machinery Company claimed to be the owner of certain machinery in the possession of the bankrupt corporation by virtue of a conditional sale, title reserved, signed by W. J. Edwards as receiver of the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company, and by him transferred to the bankrupt, and by virtue of certain claim and delivery proceedings instituted about the time or shortly before, within a few days, of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy and within four months of the adjudication.' The parties thus brought in answered and the proceeding was referred- to a master pro hac vice, to take testimony, find the facts, and report his conclusions of law thereon.

As to this claim the master finds the following facts: W. J. Edwards^ as receiver of the Carolina Northern Railroad, on June 23, 1903, ordered from the American Wood Working Machinery Company certain machinery. The agreed price was $6,000, payable, one-half in 30 days, balancé in 60 days. The terms of the order were as follows:

[246]*246“It is agreed that title to the property mentioned above shall remain in the consignor until fully paid for in cash, and that this contract is not modified or added to by any agreement not expressly stated herein, and that a retention of the property forwarded, after thirty days from date of shipment, shall constitute a trial and acceptance, be conclusive admission of the truth of all representations made by or for the consignor and void all its contracts or warranty express or implied. It is further agreed that the purchaser shall keep the property fully insured for the' benefit of the American Wood Working Machinery Company.”

On July 21, 1903, the said company notified said Edwards, as receiver of the Carolina Northern Railroad Company, that goods were ready for shipment, and inclosed contracts to be signed. This contract was signed by Edwards as receiver of the Carolina Northern Railroad Company, and returned to said company August 11, 1903. On August 15, 1903, said Edwards wrote said company, asking it to erase the name of the Carolina Northern Railroad, as the material was ordered for the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company, and thereupon, August 18, 1903, said company sent Edwards a new contract to be executed by him as receiver of the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company. On September 1, 1903, said Edwards returned the new contract, signed by him as receiver of the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company, saying, “This company -is strong and good, and doing a profitable business.” The said company on receipt of this contract, signed by Edwards as receiver of the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company, returned the former contract.

The new contract, which is in the form of an order and acceptance, was dated as of June 23, 1903, and contains the same terms as herein-before set out. The execution of the said order by W. J. Edwards, as receiver, was proven by the witness H. P. Edwards. The execution of the paper by said company was acknowledged before a notary public on February 17, 1905. It was admitted to probate by 'the clerk of the superior court of Robeson county, February 21, 1905, and recorded” in the register of deeds office of said county on February 22, 1905. The machinery was shipped on August 9 and 10, 1903, to Kemper, S. C., to the Builders’ Lumber Company. It was received at Marietta in due course of transportation, was delivered to the Builders’ Lumber Company, and is now and has been- a part of the said Builders’ Lumber Company. Said machinery was a part of said plant at the time this-court sold the plant to Sanders, Lynn, and Harper. W. J. Edwards had no authority from the court to purchase said machinery and to make said agreement as receiver of the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company. Edwards represented to said company that he bought said machinery for the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company. From the inception of the agreement the said company dealt with the transaction as a debt due to said company by the receiver of the Southern Sawmills & Lumber Company. Said company did not contract with the Builders’ Lumber Company and did not extend it credit on this machinery. It. refused on November 9, 1904, to accept a new agreement and security to be executed by the Builders’ Lumber Company in lieu of the agreement above set out. Said company acknowledged on October 9, 1903, the payment of $1,000. It then called to the [247]*247attention oí W. J. Edwards that $2,000 more was due, and the balance of the $6,000 more would be due in three weeks. It acknowledged the raeeipt of $1,000 on account of said machinery on October 28, 190.1, urging at the same time that the remainder of the money was overdue. From November, 1903, the said company by various and sundry letters, in some of which further payments are acknowledged, frequently called attention to the nonpayment of the amount due it on this contract. This correspondence extends from the date of said contract to November 1, 1901. The said company knew by the terms of the order or agreement accepted by it that the machinery was to be delivered to the Builders’ Number Company, at Kemper, S. C. After September, 1903, the said company had knowledge that the said machinery was located at Marietta, in the possession of the Builders’ Number Company. By reasonable inquiry they could have known that the Builders’ Number Company was a separate and distinct corporation, not connected with the receivership of W. J. Edwards. The said agreement was in the possession of the said company from its delivery to the date of its record on February 22, 190». At the time of the recording of said agreement the unpaid balance due by W. J. Edwards, as receiver of the Southern Sawmills & Number Company, upon said agreement, was overdue for a year or more. Petitioning creditors and other creditors of the Builders’ Number Company had no legal notice of the said agreement, or that the purchase price of the said machines had not been paid. The reason assigned by said company for not recording said mortgage is because it was not us custom to record mortgages the law did not require to be recorded within a stated time, except where it deems it necessary for its interest, and it had no reason to believe at the start, or for a good while thereafter, that its interests in this agreement would not be protected by Edwards without the necessity of recording the instrument. Tí relied previous to the record of the said agreement on the confidence it had in W. J. Edwards as receiver that its debt would be paid, and it. had a contract which could be recorded at any time in addition. All the orders taken by said company for machinery are on the form used in this agreement, and it is the custom of the company not to record these papers until it deems it necessary for its protection, unless the law of the state in which the machinen7 is sold requires the papers to be recorded within a certain time.

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Related

Hanson v. W. L. Blake & Co.
155 F. 342 (D. Maine, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
148 F. 244, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-builders-lumber-co-nced-1906.