In the Matter of Lee Ready Mix & Supply Company, Inc., Bankrupt (Two Cases). William H. Dempster, Trustee in Bankruptcy v. Wallace Stone Company, Etc., Wallace Stone Company, Etc., Cross-Appellant v. William H. Dempster, Trustee in Bankruptcy, Cross-Appellee

437 F.2d 497, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 11948
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1971
Docket20516_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 437 F.2d 497 (In the Matter of Lee Ready Mix & Supply Company, Inc., Bankrupt (Two Cases). William H. Dempster, Trustee in Bankruptcy v. Wallace Stone Company, Etc., Wallace Stone Company, Etc., Cross-Appellant v. William H. Dempster, Trustee in Bankruptcy, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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 Lee Ready Mix & Supply Company, Inc., Bankrupt (Two Cases). William H. Dempster, Trustee in Bankruptcy v. Wallace Stone Company, Etc., Wallace Stone Company, Etc., Cross-Appellant v. William H. Dempster, Trustee in Bankruptcy, Cross-Appellee, 437 F.2d 497, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 11948 (6th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

437 F.2d 497

In the Matter of LEE READY MIX & SUPPLY COMPANY, Inc., Bankrupt (two cases).
William H. DEMPSTER, Trustee in Bankruptcy, Appellant,
v.
WALLACE STONE COMPANY, etc., Appellee.
WALLACE STONE COMPANY, etc., Cross-Appellant,
v.
William H. DEMPSTER, Trustee in Bankruptcy, Cross-Appellee.

No. 20515.

No. 20516.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

February 9, 1971.

John T. Garey, Saginaw, Mich., for William H. Dempster; Janet E. Kinnane, Bay City, Mich., on brief.

Leopold P. Borrello, Saginaw, Mich., for Wallace Stone Co.; Cook, Nash, Deiber & Borrello, Saginaw, Mich., on brief.

Before EDWARDS and CELEBREZZE, Circuit Judges, and O'SULLIVAN, Senior Circuit Judge.

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court, Eastern District of Michigan, involving the validity of two Security Agreements made between the Wallace Stone Company and the now bankrupt Lee Ready Mix & Supply Company. The District Court ordered the Trustee of the Bankrupt to pay $10,063.00 to the Wallace Stone Company pursuant to a lien established by a valid Security Agreement dated February 25, 1964. Further, the District Court ordered the Trustee to pay $7,437.00 to the Bankrupt's estate in that a second Security Agreement, amending the first one, dated July 15, 1966, was held to be invalid and unenforceable. The Appellant-Trustee is appealing that part of the District Court order which validates the February, 1964 Security Agreement. The Appellee-Lienholder is cross-appealing that part of the District Court order which invalidates the July, 1966 Scurity Agreement.

The facts are undisputed. The Wallace Stone Company, a division of J. P. Burroughs & Son, Inc., was a major supplier of sand and gravel to the now bankrupt Lee Ready Mix & Supply Company. On February 25, 1964, with an outstanding debt on open account in excess of $30,000 due to the Wallace Stone Company, the Board of Directors of Lee Ready Mix authorized a Security Agreement with the Wallace Stone Company in response to a request by that Company for "some form of security * * * in order to assure Lee Ready Mix of a supply of sand and gravel to continue operations." The Security Agreement was executed on a printed form providing generally for a lien on certain assets for a stated account of a past due debt. However, where the printed form left blank a place for a description of the debt to be secured, the Wallace Stone Company typed in the following legend:

"This instrument is given for security of an open account in the amount above stated [$25,000] and any amount of said account which is over 90 days old shall bear interest at the rate of five (5%) per cent per annum, the total of said amount to be paid within three years from date hereof."

The Security Agreement was duly registered and filed according to the laws of the State of Michigan.

From February 25, 1964 through July 15, 1966, the Bankrupt continued to purchase supplies from the Wallace Stone Company and paid on open account to the Wallace Stone Company the total sum of $82,235.04. During that same period, however, the Bankrupt's total indebtedness on open account for material purchased from the Wallace Stone Company increased from over $30,000 to $53,907.89. After negotiations as to whether Wallace Stone would continue as a supplier of the Bankrupt and open up a new dock near the Bankrupt, the parties negotiated a second Security Agreement amending the amount of debt to be secured on open account from $25,000 to $30,000. This second Security Agreement, dated July 15, 1966 was executed by the President of the Bankrupt without authorization or ratification by the Board of Directors of Lee Ready Mix. Subsequent to this second Security Agreement the Bankrupt continued to purchase supplies from the Wallace Stone Company and paid $5,328.94 to the Wallace Stone Company prior to its filing for bankruptcy. On the date the Bankrupt filed its petition in bankruptcy, the Bankrupt owed the Appellee $50,082.87.

The Appellant contends that the first Security Agreement, dated February 25, 1964, was made to secure an existing debt to the extent of $25,000.00 and that the funds paid by the Bankrupt after February 25, 1964 and before its filing for bankruptcy discharged the stated secured debt of the February 25, 1964 Security Agreement. We do not agree.

The first Security Agreement authorized by the Wallace Stone Company was by its own terms intended to attach a lien on certain of the debtor's assets to secure a portion of the "open account" which existed between Wallace Stone and Lee Ready Mix. As the minutes of the Board of Directors of Lee Ready Mix reveal, the Board believed that if Lee Ready Mix did not provide security for their outstanding indebtedness which was in the form of an open unsecured account, the Wallace Stone Company might not continue to provide Lee Ready Mix with supplies of sand and gravel for future operations. Thus, not only did the express typewritten language of the Wallace Stone Company manifest an intention to secure a portion of an "open account" debt in order to maintain a continuing business relationship, but also the minutes of the Board of Directors of Lee Ready Mix reveal an intent to mortgage a revolving minimum sum of $25,000.00 on open account to secure the continuation of supplies to the financially distressed Lee Ready Mix & Supply Company.

Under Michigan law, a Security Agreement which purports to mortgage a corporation's assets will generally not be effective unless it is authorized by the Board of Directors of the debtor corporation. M.C.L.A. § 450.10(d) and (m) (1966). The By-laws of the Bankrupt do not expressly divest the Board of their statutory authority with regard to the mortgaging of corporate property. Therefore, the minutes of the Board of Directors which authorize the lien memorialized in the first Security Agreement are properly considered in determining the nature and scope of the parties' contractual relationship.

In Kaunitz v. Wheeler, 344 Mich. 181, 73 N.W.2d 263 (1955), the Supreme Court of Michigan held that whether the parties have converted the debt obligations of an open account into a settled balance of a stated account must depend on the facts. The Court then quoted with approval language from White v. Campbell, 25 Mich. 463, 468:

"That it [the conversion of an open account into a stated account] has taken place, may appear by evidence of an express understanding, or of words and acts, and the necessary and proper inferences from them." 73 N. W.2d at 265.

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