In re Turrentine & Thompson

6 F. Supp. 490, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1729
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 F. Supp. 490 (In re Turrentine & Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Turrentine & Thompson, 6 F. Supp. 490, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1729 (N.D. Tex. 1934).

Opinion

JAMES C. WILSON, District Judge.

Turrentine & Thompson, a partnership, is doing a general job printing business, on rather a large scale. They do any kind of printing job, such as stationery, etc., large or small. This work is done by machinery, some of the individual pieces of machinery and presses each weighing more than a ton, and all of it electrically powered. This system of machinery is operated by employees, only in emergencies by the partners themselves, their regular work being supervision and the business management of the concern.

Revised Statutes of Texas 1911, art. 3785, subd. 5 (Rev. St. Tex. 1925, art. 3832, subd. 5), exempts, from execution, etc., to the head of a family, “all tools, apparatus and books belonging to any trade or profession.” A question of exemption of such property, under this statute, is presented. Is such machín ery, so driven by electrical power, apparatus? That is the important question, and rather a difficult one, to be decided. It arises out of these faets: August 9, 1932, the firm was indebted in the sum of five or six thousand dollars, unsecured, including $1,200, also unsecured, to F. G. Thompson, a brother of C. H. Thompson, one of the partners. On that date negotiations were closed for the [491]*491purchase by Turrentine, at a price of $4,000, of said partner’s interest. It was arranged, at least Turrentine and C. H. Thompson so testified, that F. G. Thompson was to loan Turrentine $4,000 with which to pay such purchase price. So a mortgage was executed by Turrentine, on all of the machinery and fixtures, to F. G. Thompson, not only to secure the $4,000, but included the $1,200, making a total of $5,200. This brought on, within four months, the involuntary petition in bankruptcy by the petitioning creditors herein. They alleged that no loan was really made by F. G. Thompson to Turrentine; that, though in form it was real, in fact it was a bogus, simulated transaction, intended to and had the effect to delay, hinder, and defraud creditors. They urge also that the inclusion in the mortgage of the $1,200 was a preference, under Bankr. Act, e. 3, § 3a, Acts of Bankruptcy (11 USCA § 21 (a), and that, since the firm was insolvent, as alleged, they are entitled to an adjudication. All issues were submitted to the court.

Despite the length of time this exemption statute has been in effect in Texas, and the many decisions by Texas and federal courts construing it, the law is still in a nebulous state as to what kind of machinery propelled by steam or electric or any power other than hand, if any, is exempt as “tools or apparatus of trade.” This court, in deciding this question, is bound by the decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas and of the Circuit Court of. Appeals of the Fifth Circuit. It is only in the event the question has-not been directly passed upon by these courts that this court is privileged to look to the decisions of the Courts of Civil Appeals of Texas, and then only as persuasive, since they are not courts of last resort. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in the ease of Peyton v. Farmers’ National Bank, 261 F. 326, 330, where the case involved mill machinery propelled by electric motors, held, as follows: “Where hand power is used, the machinery is held to be ‘tools or apparatus of trade’; but, where steam or any other power than hand is used, machinery so propelled is held not to be included within the statutory terms. There are decisions of the Courts of Civil Appeals of Texas which do not seem to observe the distinction.” Judge Grubb, thus speaking for the court, was construing the decision of Chief Justice Gaines of the Supreme Court of Texas in Willis v. Morris, 66 Tex. 628, 1 S. W. .799, 803, 59 Am. Rep. 634, where it was said: “Expensive and complicated machinery propelled by steam-power, or any power other than hand, is not exempt as ‘tools of trade;’ the latter phrase being held to apply only to simple instruments used by hand. Thomp. Homest. & Ex. § 756. The word ‘apparatus’ used in the statute may take a wider range, and embrace such minor machinery as may be operated by hand, and such as courts of high authority have held not to be included under the term ‘tools,’ as used in similar enactments.” The ease passed upon by Chief Justiee Gaines involved machinery and tools for the manufacturing of cotton gins which was claimed to be exempt upon two grounds, one of them being that such machinery was “tools or apparatus of trade.” The question was directly presented in that ease and the holding against the contention. Judge Grubb’s decision was made in 1&19 and Judge Gaines’ in 1886. I am rather impressed that Peyton v. Farmers’ National Bank, supra, gave a broader scope to Judge Gaines’ decision than was intended by this language: “The word ‘apparatus’ used in the statute may take a wider range, and embrace such minor machinery as may be operated by hand. * * * ” This must be read in the light of the times with respect to machinery at the time it was written. It was a holding that minor machinery propelled by hand was exempt, and that the heavy machinery involved in that particular ease was not, but, as I view it, was not a holding that no machinery propelled by other power might not also be exempt as apparatus. It will be noted that Judge Gaines, in construing the phrase “tools of trade,” held it “to apply only to simple instruments used by hand.” By using the adverb only he very definitely limited its significance to simple instruments used by hand. However, in defining the meaning of the word “apparatus,” he avoided the use of the adverb only and simply held it to “embrace such minor machinery as may be operated by hand.” If he had used it, there would have been.the definite limitation as given to it by Judge Grubb. It would appear that Judge Grubb construes apparatus to embrace only minor machinery propelled by hand. Many of the courts of Civil Appeals of Texas since the decision in Willis v. Morris, supra, have held, and I think properly so, machinery operated by steam, electricity, and other like power, to be exempt as “apparatus” under the statute. For example, in Hinekley-Tandy Leather Co. v. Hazelwood (Tex. Civ. App.) 35 S.W.(2d) 209, where electrically driven machinery, ordinarily seen in modem shoe shops, with a long shaft equipped with pulleys and belts, which, when in operation, turn emery wheels, brushes, sewing devices, etc., was held to be exempt as apparatus. Such [492]*492is minor machinery and seems to be typically apparatus under all the definitions given of the word by courts, as well as dictionaries. But a cobbler’s business could increase to such proportions in the manufacture of shoes that his machinery would cease to be apparatus. Though numerous decisions might be cited where the Courts of Civil Appeals have held power propelled machines and mechanical devices exempt under the statute, none can be cited where ponderous power driven machinery such as we have here is held to be exempt as “tools or apparatus of trade.” It is simply not apparatus under any definition. Though a liberal meaning is given to such statutes, to extend the meaning to include such machinery would be a lawmaking process. Attorneys for the bankrupt press for consideration, as controlling, all of these Texas decisions, some by the Supreme Court, where printing presses were held as exempt. As far as I know, all of them were hand operated, but, if the same presses were power operated, they might very properly be held to be exempt. But this does not mean that everything that cap be called a printing press is exempt. The machines, weighing many tons, seen in our modem publishing houses, such as print our great daily newspapers, are printing presses, but they are not apparatus, and are not exempt.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Supp. 490, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-turrentine-thompson-txnd-1934.