In re Hawley Down Draft Furnace Co.

256 F. 555, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 898
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 8, 1919
DocketNo. 4521
StatusPublished

This text of 256 F. 555 (In re Hawley Down Draft Furnace Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Hawley Down Draft Furnace Co., 256 F. 555, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 898 (E.D. Pa. 1919).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

The points presented by the questions involved in this petition for review are best presented through an outline statement of the facts. ^The more broadly the substantial facts are stated, the more clearly are these points presented. We therefore ignore the mere details and give the substantial facts, rather than a strictly accurate statement of what they are. The case had one of its beginnings in the purpose of the Easton Board of Trade to promote the industrial growth and development of the Easton district by bringing to that locality manufacturing plants which would [556]*556give employment to labor and bring other benefits to the town. To enable the Board of Trade to extend financial aid, if needed, and thereby to attract new enterprises, an arrangement was made with the different financial institutions by which they were to supply the required moneys by the purchase or discount of notes indorsed by a number of financially responsible members of the Board of Trade. This was done through duly constituted attorneys' in fact of the members who thus pledged their credit. The ultimate payment of the notes was planned to be met through the sale of bonds secured by a mortgage on the plant of the company or other party to whom the aid was extended.

Another of the beginnings of this cause was in the bringing of the Furnace Company into this Board of Trade plan. The company was established in Chicago. It was proposed to_ bring their entire plant to Faston. A site for an Easton plant was to be selected, buildings were to be erected thereon and equipped ready for operation, and a mortgage be executed for $50,000 to secure an issue of bonds. The proceeds of this mortgage were apportioned and appropriated to the expense of removal, to cost of the land and the erection of the huild-ings, to the cost of machinery and other equipment, etc. Definite sums were stated to be applied to several of these purposes, including the land and the erection of the buildings. It was, of course, part of the plan that the mortgage referred to was to be a first lien, and to assure the carrying out of the plan in its integrity (as well as to protect the purchasers of the bonds) estimates were to be made from time to time of what was due those who were entitled to payment, and a numher of bonds corresponding to the aggregate sum thus called for were released for sale. The Easton Trust Company was made the trustee in the mortgage, and was to be the disbursing agent, thus further assuring that the bonds issued would be limited to the value of the work actually done, and that the persons entitled to the money thus raised receive it.

To enable the planned disbursement to be made, it was, of course, necessary that the moneys coming from the sale or discount of the notes be turned over to the disbursing agent. The agreement between the Furnace Company and the Board of Trade embodied the essentials of this plan. Before the plan could be put in operation, however, it developed that the Furnace Company had, by its precipitate action, blocked it. This they did by not only entering into a contract with the McClintic Marshall Company (the present petitioner) for the construction of the building, but by having the actual work of construction begun without any provision against the filing of mechanics’ liens. In consequence, the mortgage would not be a first lien.

The difficulties thus created were taken to the McClintic Marshall Company, who finally agreed to the plan which tire Board of Trade had devised for removing the difficulty. This took the form of an abrogation of the building contract, an agreed obliteration of all which had been done, the recording of the $50,000 mortgage, and the making of a subsequent new contract with a stipulation against the filing of [557]*557liens. The McClintic Marshall Company exacted terms, however, as the consideration for this agreement. These terms took the form of an order or direction by the Furnace Company to the Easton Trust-Company to pay to the McClintic Marshall Company all moneys becoming due under the agreement between the Furnace Company and the Board of Trade, the payment to be made “out of the funds to be provided in accordance with” that agreement. This order the Trust Company accepted, qualifying its acceptance, however, by defining the fund out of which payment Evas to be made, by making it clear to what fund the order related. This was done by adding to their acceptance the phrase “as the funds are furnished us by the banks of the city.” There was also quite a little correspondence by letters between the McClintic Marshall Company and the different persons interested in and concerned with the transaction, from which the fair inference arises that the McClintic Marshall Company felt that every one concerned, including the agents of the Board of Trade, would do all which could be reasonably expected to be done toward the moneys raised through the efforts of the Board of Trade being applied to the intended purposes.

Being satisfied with these assurances, and resting upon the protection of this order and its acceptance, the McClintic Marshall Company waived its right of lien and permitted the mortgage to become a first lien. If it was in the contemplation of the plan (as it doubtless was) that all moneys raised through what we will call the Board of Trade notes or (for it really comes to that), in other words, the mortgage moneys, should be turned over to and disbursed by the Easton Trust Company, there was a departure from the plan. The plan was followed in respect to the raising of the money, but instead of paying it to the Trust Company, the financial institutions which bought or discounted the notes treated them as belonging to the Furnace Company, to whom the moneys were paid directly, or by placing the moneys to its credit. The result was that all the moneys went into the bank account of the Furnace Company and were checked out by it as its moneys. This practice continued throughout the whole time of the transactions, until the trouble arose in consequence of which the Furnace Company went into bankruptcy.

The referee finds as a fact that the McClintic Marshall Company knew of this departure from the plan (if it was a departure), that checks following this changed plan of procedure were drawn to and accepted by them, and that they acquiesced in and consented to this method of disbursement • of the Board of Trade moneys. Without going into the causes of what resulted, the result is that there is a balance of about $2,600 (including interest) due the McClintic Marshall Company remaining unpaid. The latter company then filed in the court of common pleas of Northampton county its bill of complaint, directed principally against the Easton Trust Company, but to which everybody concerned (including the trustee in bankruptcy) was made a party defendant. The cause of action set forth was based upon a statement of the facts above roughly outlined.

The bill was dismissed by the court, and this decree affirmed by the [558]*558Supreme Court of the state on appeal. 248 Pa. 584, 94 Atl. 246. We have not been referred to the report of this case, and do not know the precise grounds of the ruling, but it was thus ruled that the plaintiff had no cause of action. The plaintiff in that bill (the present petitioner for a review) then filed with the referee what was in effect a petition in reclamation proceedings, to the end that it might receive preferential payment over the other creditors of the estate, all of whose claims are on a parity with its own, except in the respect of the order given. ♦

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Bluebook (online)
256 F. 555, 1919 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hawley-down-draft-furnace-co-paed-1919.