In Re Enterprise Foundry Co.

37 F. Supp. 745
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 2, 1941
Docket8030
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 F. Supp. 745 (In Re Enterprise Foundry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Enterprise Foundry Co., 37 F. Supp. 745 (illinoised 1941).

Opinion

WHAM, District Judge.

The evidence shows that in 1937 an agreement was entered into between Ward and the debtor whereby the debtor was to manufacture stoves for Ward and hold them pursuant to terms of said agreement pending orders from Ward for shipment to its various houses and customers. Said agreement was in full operation between Ward and the debtor up to and including September, 1940, and in a limited fashion thereafter.

By stipulation of the parties the procedure under which the said agreement was carried into effect was, in substance, as follows:

(a) Ward would send to the debtor paid stock orders for the manufacture of a specified number and kinds of stoves, with directions to segregate and to label and placard as property of Ward and to hold for shipping'instructions. The orders would contain among other provisions the words, “Title shall pass at the time of segregation.”

(b) Debtor would send Ward invoices listing number, kinds and prices of stoves manufactured, with statement thereon, “This merchandise has been placed in paid stock and placarded ‘This is the property of Montgomery Ward and Company.’ ” The invoices would be accompanied by bills of sale providing that debtor was to retain possession in accordance with terms of said agreement and by non-negotiable warehouse receipts with affidavit by an official of debtor that such stoves had been labelled “Property of Montgomery Ward and Company” and segregated and set aside in the premises of debtor under signs clearly indicating “Property of Montgomery Ward and Company.”

(c) Thereafter Ward would forward to debtor check covering the invoice or invoices.

(d) Ward from time to time would give debtor shipping instructions upon such, stoves and upon fulfilment debtor would forward to Ward full report of the shipment with bill of lading attached,

(e) Ward would receive confirmation of the shipment from consignee.

(f) At the end of each month Ward would receive from debtor reports of all shipments made by debtor for Ward during the current month and statements of merchandise supposed to be in paid stock still held by debtor for Ward.

“Paid stock” as used in said agreement is defined and method of handling same is set forth in the agreement as follows:

“For your information, paid stock is merchandise which has been bought and paid for by our Company but which is allowed to remain in the custody of the vendor subject to our withdrawal. Withdrawals from paid stock will be requisitioned on a regular purchase order. These orders are in all cases to be filled by you from this paid stock until it is exhausted.

“All paid stock must be segregated from the vendor’s merchandise under signs clearly stating ‘Property of Montgomery Ward & Co.’ Wherever the stock is stored in crates, boxes or cartons, each crate, box or carton should be labeled or stenciled ‘Property of Montgomery Ward & Co.’ ”

Ward discovered in August, 1940, that there was some shortage in the paid stock retained by debtor and later was informed by the president of the debtor that the shortage was very much larger than Ward had supposed and that the debtor could not continue to fill orders and make up the shortage without additional capital.

On November 7, 1940, representatives of Ward went to debtor’s plant in Belleville, Illinois, and the employees of the debtor pointed out two warehouses and told them that the Ward merchandise was in those warehouses. Ward made a rough inventory of the merchandise in the two warehouses which included both completed and *747 incompleted stoves. The stoves were in piles so that all could not be inspected but so far as could be determined without moving them all the stoves and parts of stoves were crated and bore marks and labels on both stoves and crates showing that they had been manufactured and crated for shipment for Ward. The marks and labels on the stoves and crates did not disclose that the merchandise was then owned by Ward or had been paid for or that the title thereto had been passed to Ward. Ward’s men found signs lying about on the floors and in the corners of the warehouses which were, in substance, “Property of Montgomery Ward and Company.” These signs they put up on or about the said merchandise.

Ward’s representatives found the said warehouses unlocked and open on November 7 but a watchman was on the premises. On November 9 Ward’s representatives boarded up the windows of the warehouses, placed locks on the doors and retained the keys. On the morning of November 12 they began loading the stoves on railroad cars for shipment but were notified at 11:30 A. M. on that day to stop and they did stop loading.

On November 12 the National Stock Yards National Bank obtained a judgment against debtor for $58,405.15 and an execution thereunder was placed in the hands of the sheriff at 7:30 P. M. on the same day which was immediately levied upon all the stoves in question. That evening an agreement was reached between Ward and said bank whereby Ward was permitted to take the stoves subject to a subsequent trial of rights of property.

On November 13 Ward resumed loading the completed stoves on cars for shipment and finished such loading on November 15 át 2:30 P. M. Within that time the stove parts which consisted of completed stove bodies but without warming closets or warming shelves which were necessary to make up the completed stoves were shipped by Ward by truck to another plant to be completed.

On November 15, 1940, a creditors’ bankruptcy petition was filed against debtor and that proceeding was later succeeded by the corporate reorganization proceeding in which this matter is now pending. A receiver in bankruptcy was appointed on November 15 who notified the railroad carrier to stop the shipments of stoves which was done until they were released under an order of this court whereby the rights of all claimants to the stoves and stove parts were, by the consent of the parties, to be determined upon a hearing in this court. The trustee in the reorganization proceeding who succeeded to the rights of the receiver in bankruptcy claimed and secured the right under the Bankruptcy Act to preserve the lien, of the judgment of the National Stock Yards National Bank for the benefit of the debt- or’s estate.

There are certain additional facts that should be noticed: Ward’s agreement with debtor was for the manufacture of completed stoves and all orders were for completed stoves. No uncompleted stoves were ever invoiced as such to Ward by debtor. Yet the evidence shows that there had been placed in the paid stock uncompleted stoves consisting of stove bodies without warming closets or warming shelves which were necessary to make up the completed stoves of a value of $9,996.90 which formed part of the merchandise taken by Ward. The evidence further shows that Ward paid for no invoices after October 3, 1940, but that completed stoves of a value of $3,-325.50 were added to the paid stock during the month of October.

The provisions of the Uniform Sales Act, as enacted in Illinois, which need to be noticed, are Rules' 1 and 2 of section 19 and section 26 of chapter 121% of Illinois Revised Statutes 1939, which read as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
37 F. Supp. 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-enterprise-foundry-co-illinoised-1941.