In re Jaeger

284 F. 130
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 27, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 284 F. 130 (In re Jaeger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Jaeger, 284 F. 130 (W.D. Wis. 1921).

Opinion

LUSE, District Judge.

On petition for review of an order of the referee, dated July 21, 1921, denying tire petition of the John Deere Plow Company for the surrender of certain property in the possession of the trustee.

The bankrupt, Jaeger, succeeded to the rights in the property, and under the contract hereinafter mentioned, of the partnership of Spiegelberg, Schmidt & Jaeger, who in turn succeeded to the rights of the partnership of Spiegelberg & Schmidt, who in turn succeeded to the rights of the partnership of Speigelberg & Daatsch. The last-named partnership entered into a contract with the John Deere Plow Company, under date of October 16, 1919, whereby said partnership agreed to purchase a large quantity of farm machinery, and whereby it was expressly provided that the title to and ownership of all goods which might be shipped under it should be and remain in the plow company until full payment for all goods was made. No price for the goods contracted was specified in the contract, which contained this provision:

“Goods specified in this contract are sold without prices, with the understanding that said goods shall be invoiced at the regular wholesale dealers’ prices established by the plow company for the 1920 spring trade.”

About November 1, 1919, the plow company established its regular wholesale dealers’ prices for the 1920 spring trade, and evidenced such prices by a price list, which was circulated generally among wholesale dealers, including the buyers under the contract in question, on or about said date. December 5, 1919, Messrs. Spiegelberg & Schmidt, having succeeded to the rights of Messrs. Spiegelberg & Daatsch, wrote the plow company as follows:

“We, the undersigned, hereby assume the contract, with all specifications, terms, and conditions as written under date of October 16, 1919, by your Hr. J, S. Hensel, with Spiegelberg & Laatsch, and agree to receive ali goods that may be shipped to us under said contract, and to settle 'for same under the terms and conditions as provided therein.”

A cdpy of the contract was filed in the office of the clerk of the proper village, but not until October 21, 1920, the plow company filing with it the letter of Spiegelberg & Schmidt above quoted; but the price list issued as above stated was never filed with the contract. The [132]*132filing occurred more than four months prior to the adjudication of the said Jaeger as a bankrupt.

The village clerk indexed the contract in question in an index to chattel mortgages, failing to index same in a separate book, as required by St. Wis. § 1684ul0; indexed the names of the buyers under the heading of mortgagor, and the seller under the heading of mortgagee; failed to note the hour of filing, or to describe the goods, the price named in the contract, the amount due, or the date of cancellation. The referee held that the failure of the village clerk to keep a separate book and make the proper entries under the section of the Statutes of Wisconsin above referred to did not affect the rights of the parties, but the failure to file a price list of the goods in controversy was fatal, in that such price list was a part of the contract, and without the same the contract was incomplete, and that the provisions of section 16S4u5 were applicable, making conditional sales contracts void unless filed as required by chapter 78u of the Wisconsin Statutes, as to any purchaser from or creditor of the buyer “who, without notice of such provision, purchases the goods or acquires by attachment or levy a lien upon them.”

[1] I agree with the conclusion of the referee that, if the plow company delivered to the village clerk a complete contract, entitled to be filed, the informalities or irregularities in the indexing or recording of the statutory information upon his books by the clerk will not affect the rights of the parties, and the trustee substantially concedes this to be the law, as well he may. Smith v. Waggoner, 50 Wis. 155, 6 N. W. 568; Phillips v. Hyland, 102 Wis. 253, 78 N. W. 431; Bailey v. Costello, 94 Wis. 87, 68 N. W. 663; Goodman v. Baerlocher, 88 Wis. 287, 60 N. W. 415, 43 Am. St. Rep. 893; Marlet v. Hinman, 77 Wis. 136, 45 N. W. 953, 20 Am. St. Rep. 102.

[2] In my judgment, however, the contract as filed was the complete contract between the parties, and operated as constructive notice from the time of its filing. It seems to me that the proper test to apply in the determination of whether the contract as filed complied with the Wisconsin law is to inquire whether the contract as entered into upon October 16, 1919, could have immediately thereafter been filed as a completed contract between the parties, and, if so, whether, had it been filed at such time, it would have fully met the conditions of the Wisconsin Statutes applying to conditional sales contracts and the filing thereof. If in law the contract was sufficiently complete to entitle it to filing immediately after its execution, the fact that something occurred later, or which, when applied to the contract, would definitely determine the prices of the goods, cannot, in my judgment, alter what was necessary to be filed, unless such subsequent occurrences served to create a new or different contract.

It is to be noted that, while the letter of Spiegelherg & Schmidt, dated December 5th, was subsequent to the establishment of the wholesale price to the spring trade, it makes no reference thereto, but by its very terms assumes the obligations of the contract “as written under date of October 16, 1919”; so that such letter, as well as the contract, treats the established wholesale price as a matter of evidence to be ap[133]*133plied to the contract, to determine the exact prices to he paid for the goods covered thereby. Furthermore, it is apparent that the “regular wholesale dealers’ prices established by the plow company for the 1920 spring trade,” referred to in the original contract, might or might not be reduced to writing, might or might not be set forth in printed or written price lists, and might or might not be so established as to be capable of filing.

The price lists issued by the plow company were merely evidence, conclusive perhaps against it, but only binding the buyers if, in fact, such lists accorded with its actual wholesale prices, and therefore merely evidence tending to establish what the plow company’s wholesale price was. The original contract nowhere provides that the buyers shall pay prices to be announced in any price list. The parties contracted with reference to “the regular wholesale dealers’ prices established by the plow company for the 1920 spring trade,” and the price lists issued were plainly the subject of inquiry by the buyers to determine whether such lists in fact conformed to “the regular wholesale dealers’ prices,” all of which merely goes to show that the price lists were not part of the contract, but were merely evidence tending to prove what the regular wholesale price was, which, in turn, when determined, could be applied to thé contract, and thus the price of the goods definitely fixed. Being merely evidence, and not a part of the contract, it follows that there was no necessity for filing such lists.

Again, if the price lists were an essential part of the contract, what was the status of the transaction during the period between the execution of the contract and the issuance of the price lists? Manifestly the plow company was hound to deliver the goods to the buyers, and the buyers were bound to accept them.

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Related

In Re Labb
42 F. Supp. 542 (W.D. New York, 1941)
Wisconsin Valley Trust Co. v. John Deere Plow Co.
284 F. 136 (Seventh Circuit, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
284 F. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jaeger-wiwd-1921.