In re Robinson

40 F. Supp. 320, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2922
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 5, 1941
DocketNo. 20895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 F. Supp. 320 (In re Robinson) 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 Robinson, 40 F. Supp. 320, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2922 (E.D. Pa. 1941).

Opinion

GANEY, District Judge.

This is a review of the order of the Referee dismissing the claim of the petitioner in a reclamation proceeding. The petitioner asks to have awarded to it, the proceeds of certain machinery used in the manufacturing of furniture, of which it alleges it was owner, and merely gave to the bankrupts, the possession and right of user. The petitioner asserts its right under a certain written agreement with the bankrupts dated June 18, 1938, which it maintains is a bailment lease and that all the machinery comes within the scope of this written agreement and should accordingly be returned to it.

The testimony shows that Louis Dick-man for about ten or twelve years prior to the spring of 1938 was engaged in the business of manufacturing furniture, and about that time his wife, Anna Dickman, registered the business under the Fictitious Name Act, 54 P.S.Pa. § 21 et seq., in her name, trading as the Emerald Furniture Manufacturing Company. The record discloses no consideration for the transfer of the business from Louis Dickman to Anna Dickman. The business was conducted under this arrangement with her husband, Louis Dickman, acting as manager until June, 1938, when the business was turned over by her to the partnership of Louis Dickman, her husband, and Jack W. Robinson, the bankrupts herein, who also traded under the name of Emerald Furniture Manufacturing Company. Anna Dickman by reason of certain purchases of lumber from Bright-Brooks Lumber Company was unable to make payments thereon, and accordingly on April 8, 1938, gave a bill of sale to the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company and John Cockey & Sons, covering all the machinery in the place of business, which it is agreed, was machinery which had been there, and used by her husband, Louis Dickman, prior to her registration under the Fictitious Name Act. The Bright-Brooks Lumber Company then gave to Anna Dickman a bailment lease under which she was to have possession of the machinery with title thereto remaining in the lumber company. There was never any change of possession from Anna Dickman to Bright-Brooks Lumber Company and the agreements were executed between them with the possession of the machinery in Anna Dickman. In July, 1938, the machinery was moved from Emerald Street where Anna Dickman and the bankrupts had formerly conducted the business to 3112-16 North 17th Street.

The testimony shows that the machinery was transferred from the place on Emerald Street, where Anna Dickman and the bankrupts had formerly conducted the business, to the bankrupts’ new place of business on North 17th Street at the direction of the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company. The record also discloses no consideration moving to Anna Dickman for the transfer of the business to the bankrupts, Louis Dickman and Jack W. Robinson. Before the bankrupts moved from Emerald Street to 3112-16 No. 17th Street, and while the record does not give the exact date, it was a comparatively short time after they took the business over from Anna Dickman, a writing was entered into between the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company and the [322]*322bankrupts dated June 18, 1938, the construction of which is determinative of the rights of the parties.

The Referee found as a fact that since no consideration was shown for the transfer of the business from Louis Dickman to Anna Dickman, that she had no title to convey to the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company by the alleged bill of sale of April 8, 1938, and accordingly the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company took no title which they could retain, and as a result, could give to Anna Dickman no possession or right of user; that as a consequence the attempt by the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company to enter into the agreement of June 18, 1938, was null and void, and accordingly the trustee of the bankrupts was entitled to administer the proceeds of the machinery. The petitioner or claimant contends that as between Anna Dickman and the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company, since she was the owner of the business, inter se, the parties could make whatever arrangement as to title they wished; that as to the rights of creditors or purchasers for value a different question would be raised, but that no question of this kind was involved here. The Bright-Brooks Lumber Company it contends having title, entered into a valid bailment lease between itself and the bankrupts, and that since it is a valid bailment lease under the laws of Pennsylvania, the trustee in bankruptcy has no right to the possession of the machinery or its proceeds.

Before determining the construction to be placed on the agreement of June 18, 1938, I believe that the position of the Referee that the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company had no title to the property in question in order to execute a valid bailment lease to the bankrupts is a sound one. The Court it is felt should look behind the screen of these transactions and reach the true intention of the parties, and when this is done, it is evident that the real party in interest throughout the transaction was Louis Dickman, and that the registration of the business in his wife’s name by Louis Dickman, during which time the testimony shows he managed the business, and the attempt by his wife, Anna Dickman, to convey title to the machinery by a bill of sale to the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company, the execution of an alleged bailment lease by it back to his wife, during which time the possession of the machinery remained with his wife, and the execution of an alleged bailment lease from the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company to the bankrupts, was merely a ruse to evade creditors. It is also significant that the only contribution by way of capital Jack W. Robinson gave to the partnership, was his experience.

The transfer of part of the machinery in question from Anna Dickman to the bankrupts, even though at the direction of the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company, was in reality a transfer of Louis Dickman’s machinery and no arrangements between Anna Dickman and the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company could defeat the right of the trustee in bankruptcy, who under Section 70, subsection c, of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 110, sub. c, is clothed with the powers of an execution creditor, to wit: “The trustee, as to all property in the possession or under the control of the bankrupt at the date of the bankruptcy or otherwise coming into the possession of the bankruptcy court, shall be deemed vested as of the date of bankruptcy with all the rights, remedies, and powers of a creditor then holding a lien thereon by legal or equitable proceedings, whether or not such a creditor actually exists”.

However, under the construction which I give to the agreement of June 18th between the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company and the bankrupts, assuming without admitting that the Bright-Brooks Lumber Company had title to the machinery, it effectuated a conditional sale which the vendor could not assert against the trustee in bankruptcy, since the conditional sales agreement was not recorded in accordance with the Statute in Pennsylvania. In re Press Printers & Publishers, Inc., 3 Cir., 23 F.2d 34. While I am not unmindful that bailment leases have had a long history in Pennsylvania commercial transactions, and that a valid bailment lease may still be executed in Pennsylvania since the adoption of the Conditional Sales Act of May 12, 1925, 69 P.S.Pa. § 361 et seq., because it does not effect the rights of parties to a bailment lease; General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Hartman et al., 114 Pa. Super. 544, 174 A. 795, and further that this Circuit has upheld and followed' the rules of the State Court with respect thereto ; General Motors Acceptance Corp. v.

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Bluebook (online)
40 F. Supp. 320, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-robinson-paed-1941.