In the Matter of Bel Marin Driwall, Inc., Bert O. Summers, Doing Business as Erbentraut & Summers v. William B. Grover, Trustee in Bankruptcy

470 F.2d 932, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6550
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 27, 1972
Docket26899
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 470 F.2d 932 (In the Matter of Bel Marin Driwall, Inc., Bert O. Summers, Doing Business as Erbentraut & Summers v. William B. Grover, Trustee in Bankruptcy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Bel Marin Driwall, Inc., Bert O. Summers, Doing Business as Erbentraut & Summers v. William B. Grover, Trustee in Bankruptcy, 470 F.2d 932, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6550 (9th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

JAMES M. CARTER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal was taken from the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy referee’s turnover order. The question is whether direct payments by the bankrupt’s debtor (a general contractor) to the bankrupt’s creditor (a supplier to the bankrupt), made under obligation of California law, were invalid as setoffs under § 68b (2) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 108b(2) (1964), against the debtor’s obligations to the bankrupt’s estate. We reverse.

Facts

Appellee has substantially adopted appellant’s statement of the facts, about which there is no serious dispute. The bankrupt’s debtor was appellant Summers, doing business as Erbentraut and Summers, who was general contractor for a hospital remodelling project. Summers employed Driwall, who later became bankrupt, as a subcontractor. One of the subcontractor’s suppliers was the bankrupt’s creditor, Glidden-Durkee Co. (hereinafter referred to as G-D). Appellee Grover is Driwall’s trustee in bankruptcy.

On September 22, 1969, G-D notified Summers and his surety on his contractor’s bond of a specific claim for paint which G-D had furnished to Driwall. The amount of this claim is here agreed to be $1,467.02. On October 17, 1969, Driwall filed a voluntary petition in *934 bankruptcy, and was then adjudicated bankrupt by operation of law. Bankruptcy Act § 18(f), 11 U.S.C. § 41(f) (1964). The matter was referred to the referee, and on January 20, 1970, during the proceedings, Summers paid G-D the $1,467.02. Summers then claimed that amount as a setoff against a larger sum it admittedly owed the bankrupt for work done by the bankrupt on the hospital job.

The referee in bankruptcy found that:

“6. The payment made by the prime contractor to Glidden-Durkee has to be held as a self-serving payment with an eye to off-set in light of the clear testimony that there was a defect in the materials used which said defect was to be corrected by Glidden-Durkee by the supplying of further material and the factual finding of this court that the prime contractor indicated no responsibility would be placed on the bankrupt subcontractor for failure in relation to the materials themselves.
“Where there is no suit and no lien it is not only difficult but impossible to imagine why after adjudication of bankruptcy where full knowledge existed on the part of the prime contractor, the prime contractor should make a payment to anyone other than the party to whom he was contractually liable. When this circumstance exists it has to be determined that this essential preferential treatment was given with the view to utilizing the payment as an off-set.” (Finding of Fact No. 6.)
“2. From the facts above determined it must be a conclusion of law that no off-set can be allowed by the respondent’s [Summers’] payment to Glidden-Durkee of $1,469.02 after adjudication.” (Conclusion of Law No. 2.)

On October 12, 1970, after reviewing the record and hearing argument, the district court affirmed the referee’s order, and dismissed Summers’ petition for review. This appeal followed.

The Referee’s Findings

Appellee takes the position that the findings just quoted must be affirmed as the referee’s express determinations, after hearing testimony, that Summers’ intent in paying G-D was to acquire a setoff, which would be disallowed by the Act. 1 But where such findings and conclusions are clearly erroneous, it is our duty to reverse them. Fed.R.Civ.P., Rule 52; Costello v. Fazio (9 Cir. 1958) 256 F.2d 903.

At oral argument herein, appellee conceded that, contrary to the referee’s findings just quoted, there was in fact no defective paint involved in G-D’s claim for which Summers made payment. Our own review of the record presented here sustains that concession as a necessary one.

Further, the statement in the second paragraph of Finding No. 6, supra, that there was “no suit and no lien” to cause appellant’s payment, is contrary to the undisputed evidence that G-D properly noticed its materialman’s claim under California law. As will shortly be discussed in greater detail, it is apparent that at the time of the payment there was a direct obligation from Summers to G-D for the materials G-D furnished. The findings and conclusions thus also misapply the law relating to such claims.

*935 When these parts of the findings are excised, there remains only the referee’s inability to imagine any reason for the payment other than acquisition of an improper setoff. We are unable to accept such a basis for the challenged order. The findings and conclusions quoted swpra are clearly erroneous.

The Setoff

Unlike the referee, we have no difficulty finding a reason, other than acquisition of a setoff, for Summers’ payment to G-D. Under the California law applicable at times material herein, a general contractor and his surety were subject to judgment in favor of unpaid materialmen and suppliers. Calif.Code Civ.Proe. § 1185.1(c) (1955), repealed effective Jan. 1, 1971, Calif.Stats. eh. 1362, § 3, p. 2781 (1969).

The contractor, Summers, paid the supplier, G-D, pursuant to Summers’ duty to protect the owner of the job from the claim, a duty which these statutes imposed, and coincidentally no doubt to protect the bond from claim. The purpose of the statute was to protect owners from liability beyond the contract price for the job. Id., § 1185.-1(d). This obligation was independent of the duty of the bankrupt (the subcontractor) to pay for materials furnished him. If the materialman was unpaid, his claim could take the form both of a lien against the subject matter of the work, and a claim against the contractor and his surety. Id., §§ 1184.1, 1185.-1(a).

G-D gave written notice of its claim to Summers and his surety on September 22, 1969, prior to the petition in bankruptcy (although no doubt with knowledge of Driwall’s financial problems). Under the California statutes, such notice temporarily matured G-D’s claim against Summers and his surety, without need to foreclose the lien. Calif. Code Civ.Proe. § 1200.1(d) (1955), repealed effective Jan. 1, 1971, Calif.Stats. ch. 1611, § 47, p. 3405 (1969). At the time of Summers’ payment on January 20, 1970, G-D’s rights had been perfected by the notice and the obligation was established by the supplying of materials. There remained only timely commencement of suit for G-D to realize on its claim against Summers or his surety. Id., § 1200.1(d). Although the time for filing a lien against the work had expired, the time for filing suit against Summers or the bond had not. Id., §§ 1193.1(c), 1197.1, 1200.1(d).

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470 F.2d 932, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-bel-marin-driwall-inc-bert-o-summers-doing-business-ca9-1972.