In re Wyse Laboratories, Inc.

55 Ohio Law. Abs. 321
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 14, 1949
DocketNo. 9452
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 Ohio Law. Abs. 321 (In re Wyse Laboratories, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Wyse Laboratories, Inc., 55 Ohio Law. Abs. 321 (S.D. Ohio 1949).

Opinion

[322]*322OPINION OF REFEREE

By HERRMAN, Referee.

At Dayton, in said District, on the 14th day of July, 1949. This matter comes before the Court jointly on the Petition for Reclamation filed by The Maxwell Finance Company and the Petition of the Trustee for the sale of the assets of the bankrupt corporation. After proper notice was given, a hearing was held on the Petitions herein and testimony taken, which testimony has been reduced to writing and a transcript thereof has been filed with Exhibits attached. By agreement of the parties an order was entered permitting the sale of all of the property (excepting certain personal property covered by chattel mortgages listed as Exhibits F and G) and any liens, preferences or priorities which may be claimed were ordered transferred to the fund created by such sale.

This case may be divided into two separate matters, one involving the validity of certain chattel mortgages (Exhibits A through E) and the other concerning a factor’s lien claimed by The Maxwell Finance Company (Exhibits H, 1 and J).

The record discloses that beginning on or about March 19, 1946, James H. Wyse, Harold G. Wyse and David S. Wyse, partners, doing business as Wyse Laboratories, borrowed $30,000.00 from The Maxwell Finance Company on a promissory note and gave to The Maxwell Finance Company a chattel mortgage (Exhibit A! to secure the repayment of said note. Later on, said partners caused the .business to be incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio with their principal place of business at Dayton, Ohio, and again subsequently executed notes for varying amounts and gave chattel mortgages to secure the repayment of said notes. (Exhibits B through G). This Court has already found that chattel mortgages F and G are valid and subsisting liens against the property described therein, and in the discussion which follows the Court will only consider the other chattel mortgages because of the circumstances surrounding the methods used in financing which resulted in the execution of the notes and mortgages.

The Trustee has attacked the validity of these mortgages for the reason that an unusual method of handling the financing obtained. For example, Wyse would borrow $30,000.00 on March 19, 1947, due 90 days from date; executed a note and a mortgage on certain property to secure the payment of said note. On or about the due date of the obligation Maxwell would issue a check to Wyse for ($30,000,001 and then [323]*323Wyse would issue its check to Maxwell for $30,000.00, but the note which was then given at the due date would be marked “This is a renewal note.” This continued on many occasions throughout the transactions of financing and the testimony disclosed that in all of the situations wherein chattel mortgages A through E were given, at sometime or other there would be a payment by Maxwell to Wyse and check issued by Wyse back to Maxwell.

The Trustee’s contention, simply stated, is that when Wyse issued, a check to Maxwell the note for which the chattel mortgage was given as security then became paid and upon payment the chattel mortgage must fall. With this contention I cannot agree for the reason that the controlling case law -in Ohio requires us to look to the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction to determine the intention of the parties at the time of the transaction. 1 can find no evidence in the record which indicates any intention on the part of The Maxwell Finance Company or the Bankrupt Corporation that the method used constituted payment of the pre-existing note, thus discharging the security. The record is silent as to any reason for that particular method of handling the financing program This Court is of the opinion that there was no absolute payment of the obligation and that it was the intention of the parties that the new note should be a renewal of the old note and not a payment thereof. This Court follows the reasoning as set forth by Judge Hornbéck in the case of Madlener v. Greathouse, 31 Abs. 434, that the giving of a renewal note does not operate as a payment, satisfaction or discharge of the instrument for which it is given, unless it has been so agreed between the parties. The testimony of the President of the Bankrupt Corporation was to the effect that there was no intention to pay the pre-existing note by the back and forth issuance of checks and that in his mind he was merely, renewing the note. The Court, therefore, finds that the liens of The Maxwell Finance Company as set forth under its chattel mortgages, Exhibits A through E, are valid liens against the property described in said mortgages.

2. FACTOR’S LIEN

The second part of this opinion involves an Agreement dated June 25, 1946, between the bankrupt and The Maxwell Finance Company to create a factor’s lien under and by virtue of the provisions of §8364-1 GC et seq. The record discloses that on June 25, 1946, the bankrupt and The Maxwell Finance Company entered into a factor agreement which is in evi[324]*324dence as Exhibit I. On the same date the bankrupt executed a statement of itself as borrower, setting forth the merchandise to be covered by the factor’s lien which is in evidence as Exhibit J. On the same date a notice of lien was executed by both parties which is in evidence as Exhibit H. This notice was properly filed for record in the Office of the Recorder of Montgomery County, Ohio, as required by law. The factor’s lien was given as security for the repayment of various advances made by the factor to the borrower over a period of time extending through June 25, 1947.

The Trustee does not question the validity of the factor’s lien or the compliance with the provisions of the Factor’s Lien Law between borrower and the factor as of June 25, 1946, but does question the extent of the merchandise to be covered by the lien. The Trustee's contention is that the factor’s lien could only cover the merchandise as set forth in Exhibit J, listing the typewritten portion on the statement of the borrower as being the property covered and claims that the printed portion of said Exhibit does not apply. To be more specific, the Trustee challenges the right of the factor to have a lien on merchandise coming into existence or acquired by the borrower subsequently to the time of the execution of the written agreement or subsequent to the filing of the notice of the lien. The Trustee in support of this contention advances the argument that the factor was required to file additional notices in order to have the lien cover subsequently acquired merchandise, placing an interpretation upon §8364-2 GC, that it was necessary for the factor to secure additional statements from the borrower as other merchandise was acquired.

In this case we have no question of the iniquity of a secret lien which might be void under the provisions of Section 60a of the Chandler Act for we do have the giving of a public notice by the factor in order to establish his open and notorious lien.

The Factor’s Lien Law is new in Ohio, having been enacted in 1945. So far as this Court knows there are no recorded decisions interpreting the provisions of the Act, except a Common Pleas Court decision in Montgomery County where the validity of the Act was upheld without opinion by the Court. It would seem beneficial to examine the reasons and circumstances which produce the Act. Only one state has had a Factor’s Lien Act for any length of time, New York having passed such an Act in 1911, and with but few exceptions the fifteen states which have enacted Factor Lien Laws have all done so beginning in 1945, and thereafter.

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55 Ohio Law. Abs. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wyse-laboratories-inc-ohsd-1949.