In re Cherokee Asphalt Paving Co.

192 F. Supp. 656, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3860
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 3, 1961
DocketNo. 18399
StatusPublished

This text of 192 F. Supp. 656 (In re Cherokee Asphalt Paving Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cherokee Asphalt Paving Co., 192 F. Supp. 656, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3860 (E.D. Tenn. 1961).

Opinion

ROBERT L. TAYLOR,

District Judge.

This proceeding is before the Court on the petition of Story Brothers, Inc., for [657]*657review and reversal of the Referee’s Order dated October 20, 1960, sustaining the objections of the Trustee to the allowance of petitioner’s claims Nos. 65 and 66 as secured claims.

The controversy stems from two conditional sales contracts executed by Cherokee Asphalt Paving Company, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Bankrupt, and Story Brothers, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Story, dated March 5, 1958 and December 22, 1958, together with two notes executed by the Bankrupt on those dates payable to Story.

The first conditional sales contract dated March 5, 1958 was given to secure a note in the principal amount of $12,366.59 payable at the rate of $515.38 per month and representing the balance due by the Bankrupt to Story on a white asphalt plant that was conditionally sold to Bankrupt on that date. A cash payment for the plant was made by the Bankrupt in the amount of $2,760.40.

A second conditional sales contract dated December 22, 1958 secured the balance due on a note in the principal amount of $13,440 payable in monthly installments of $560 each, representing the balance due on a 75 AG Michigan tractor shovel conditionally sold by Story to the Bankrupt on that date. A cash payment of $2,111 was made by the Bankrupt on the shovel.

The notes and conditional sales contracts were sold by Story to the Fountain City Bank of Knox County, hereinafter referred to as Bank, with recourse on Story.

In November, 1959, the Bankrupt was unable to meet the payments on the notes to the Bank, and the Bank demanded payment.

On November 27, 1959, Story and the Bankrupt executed a purported conditional sales contract covering the aforementioned asphalt plant together with note of the same date for $5,315 payable to Story in seventeen monthly installments of $295.27. On the same date of November 27, 1959, another purported sales contract was executed by the same 192 F.Supp. — 42 parties covering the abovementioned Michigan tractor shovel together with a note of the same date for $9,746.06 payable to the order of Story in seventeen equal monthly installments of $541.55.

The foregoing purported conditional sales contracts and notes were assigned by Story to Associates Discount Corporation, hereinafter referred to as Discount, on November 27, 1959, with recourse against Story, and, on the same date, Discount issued its two checks to Story for $8,588.60 and $4,682.82, for a total of $13,271.42.

On November 30, 1959, or three days after the purported conditional sales contracts were assigned by Story to Discount, Story issued its check to the Bank in the amount of $13,271.42, the exact amount received by Story from Discount.

The Story cheek was cashed by the Bank on December 1, 1959 and on December 17, 1959 the Bank mailed the notes and the two 1958 conditional sales contracts to the Bankrupt.

No additional funds were advanced to the Bankrupt by either Story or Discount and any additional amounts shown in the notes to Story which were endorsed to Discount represent finance charges and interest.

The foregoing facts were stipulated. The parties also stipulated that Ray Harris, Secretary-Treasurer of Story, R. L. Hatmaker, Vice President and Manager of the Bankrupt, and W. D. Hunt, President of the Bankrupt, if called upon to testify as witnesses would testify, and the stipulation may be treated as if they had been called and testified, as follows:

That when the Bankrupt became unable to meet its payments to the Bank, Hunt and Hatmaker requested Story to work out a plan whereby the Bankrupt’s payments on said equipment could be reduced and the time for payment extended; that Harris agreed to attempt to work out the matter for the Bankrupt and did so by means of the execution of the aforementioned purported conditional sales contracts and notes dated November 27, 1959; that it was never under[658]*658stood by any of them that the.execution of these documents and the payment of the sum of $13,271.42 to the Bank constituted a payment of the obligation of the Bankrupt; that none of them intended by these transactions to deprive Story of its retained title as security for payment of its indebtedness; that Story did not intend to give up its security but intended to retain the title to the equipment until all of the purchase price was paid in full; that said transactions were intended merely as a method of reducing the monthly payments of the Bankrupt on the equipment and extending the time for the payment of the purchase price on said equipment; that the said Hunt and Hatmaker have no recollection of having received the conditional sales contracts and the notes which the conditional sales contracts secured from the Bank after they were mailed on December 17, 1959 and do not remember having seen them since; and, that they did not understand that the retained title on said equipment had been given up by Story.

It was further stipulated that after Discount filed its claims on the contracts and notes which are filed as Exhibits “C” and “D” to the stipulation, and after objections to the claims were filed by the Trustee, Discount called upon Story to repurchase said contracts and notes and thereafter Story repurchased the same by paying Discount the sum of $4,968.54 for the note and contract relating to the white asphalt plant and the sum of $8,-995.70 for the note and contract relating to the Michigan tractor shovel; that Discount executed to Story an assignment of both of said claims, the assignment having been filed in the bankruptcy proceeding. That portion of each claim which sought attorney’s fees was abandoned.

It was also stipulated that subsequent to December 22, 1958 — this being the date of the second conditional sales contract executed by the Bankrupt to Story — and prior to November 27,1959— this being the date that the two purported conditional sales contracts and notes were executed — the Bankrupt incurred debts which were still owing and unpaid at the time it was adjudged a bankrupt, to-wit, on December 21, 1959.

The Referee held, in a thorough and carefully prepared memorandum opinion, that the 1959 purported conditional sales contracts executed by Story and the Bankrupt, each of which was designated as a “Retail Installment Contract”, were invalid under Tennessee law as conditional sales contracts since they were not executed at the time the equipment was sold and the notes which said contracts purported to secure were not renewals of the original notes and contracts.

The Referee reasoned that when Discount filed its claims it never asserted security based upon the 1958 documents; that Discount assigned to Story its rights, title and interest to said claims on June 21, 1960 and Story took the claims subject to the same burdens of the original creditor, Discount; and, that since Discount was not permitted to assert that the 1959 documents were renewals, Story should not be permitted to do so.

The effect of the holding of the Referee was that the claims of Story could rise no higher than Discount and that the rights of both parties were fixed at the time the bankruptcy petition was filed, and since Discount, in filing its claim, did not rely upon the 1958 documents as security, Story could not do so.

Certain principles governing conditional sales contracts in Tennessee were stated by the Referee with which this Court is in accord.

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Related

International Harvester Co. v. Farmer
123 S.W.2d 1089 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1939)
Williamson Bros. v. Daniel
110 S.W.2d 1028 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1937)
Sanders v. Farmers Union Co.
5 Tenn. App. 560 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1927)
Taylor v. Ressler Leather Co.
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Bluebook (online)
192 F. Supp. 656, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cherokee-asphalt-paving-co-tned-1961.