Jacquard Knitting MacHine Co. v. Vennell

59 F.2d 496, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3389
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 1932
Docket4621
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 59 F.2d 496 (Jacquard Knitting MacHine Co. v. Vennell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacquard Knitting MacHine Co. v. Vennell, 59 F.2d 496, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3389 (3d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

This ease involves the constantly recurring question of whether the transaction involved was a bailment or a conditional sale of chattels. Under the Pennsylvania decisions, a single contract can make provision for a present bailment of. chattels and provide also for a future sale of such chattels on the arising of certain conditions. Where such a dual contract elearly evidences such intent of the parties, it will be enforced, and while the bailment lasts, the title will remain in the lessor, and no title passes until the bailment ends and until the future conditions arise and the owner then passes title by a bill of sale. But difficulty arises in these cases where contracts, which are in form bailments, are.really conditional sales with an attempted holding of title as security for the unpaid purchase money. The question in the present ease is whether when made, the contract here involved, while providing for a lease, was in fact a present conditional sale. The court below decided it was the latter, and from a decree so holding this appeal was taken.

A contract where the parties elearly intend a present bailment and a future sale with a then passage of title being legal and enforceable, we think the tests laid down by the Pennsylvania- courts, in substance, are that, where provision is made for a future sale of leased goods with the provision that title shall not pass until certain stipulated conditions exist, the transaction is to be deemed a present bailment and not a conditional sale.

In ascertaining whether the transaction be a lease or a conditional sale, where, as *497 here, tee language, particularly that of “clown payment,” is doubtful, susceptible of more than one construction, and therefore ambiguous, all the facts, the nature and situation of the subject-matter and of tho parties, and “the apparent purpose or object of making the contract in the form in which it was made” should be considered, Bangor Peerless State Company v. Bangorvein State Company, 270 Pa. 161, 165, 113 A. 390; Jackson v. Myers, 257 Pa. 104, 110, 101 A. 341, L. R. A. 1917F, 821; Myers’ Estate; 238 Pa. 195, 86 A. 89; or, to use the words of Mr. J ustiee Brewer in Davis v. Patrick, 141 U. S. 489, 12 S. Ct. 58, 60, 35 L. Ed. 826, in eonstruing a contract: “The real character of a. promise does not depend altogether upon the form of expression, but largely on tho situation of the parties.” This is in accord with the decisions in Pennsylvania, where in Keim & Keim v. Lochrie & Reese, 93 Pa. Super. Ct. 562, quoting from Tucker v. Fertig, 275 Pa. 351, 119 A. 412, the Superior Court said: «* * * in ascertaining the intention of the parties, we may properly consider the contract in view of the circumstances existing at the time of its execution, the situation of the parties at that time, the necessities for which they naturally provided, the advantages each probably sought to secure and the relation of the properties in regard to which they negotiated.”

Bearing on the question of the giving of notes, which was alluded to by the court below, we note that in Walton v. Tepel, 210 F. 161, 162, this court, referring to the Pennsylvania decisions, said: “The general principle dedueible from tho adjudged eases is that the mere giving of notos does not turn a bailment into a sale. * * * Manifestly, such notes are given, not to annul a contract of bailment, but to provide for its step by step fulfillment.”

With these principles in view, wc turn to the facts before us.

Tho Jacquard Knitting Machine Company, Inc., (hereafter called Jacquard) wag the owner of the knitting machines here involved. The Rex Knitting Mills (hereafter called Rex) had a knitting mill. On February 24, 1928, Jacquard, by a valid bailment lease, rented to Rex three of tho knitting machines here in question. This lease made provision for a sale of tho machines by Jacquard to Rex on payment by Rex of the rentals of the three machines as provided in the lease.

Subsequently, Jacquard leased three additional machines to Rex, and at that time the first lease was surrendered, and all six machines were included in a now' lease with provision for a sale of the six machines b3r Jacquard to Rex on payment of the rental of the six machines as provided in such second lease. •

Later on three more machines were leased by -Jacquard to Rex, and the second lease was surrendered, and all machines were included in a third lease, in which provision was made for a sale of the nine machines by Jacquard to Rex on payment of the rentals on 1he nine machines gs provided in such third lease. On the giving of the second and third leases, tho payments of rental already made were taken into account, and due credit given on the future rentals to be paid on the six machines covered by the second lease and tlie nine covered by the third lease. In the third lease the prior payments of rental made on the first and second leases on the six machines covered thereby were duly allowed for by the lump sum of $2,750; which in the third lease was termed a “down payment,” on the meaning of which the construction of the contract largely turns. This fact was referred to by the court as evidencing the “down payment” or earnest money usually incident to a sale. We think such was not the fact. The term “down payment” was used in the two preceding bailment leasts. Indeed, if those particular words are to he deemed evidence of a conditional sale, why should they not have the same effect in the two preceding contracts, which were concedcdly bailments ? lit reality, no such “down payment” was made in. money when the third lease was made, but it was a credit of rentals already paid on leases one and two, which, as we have seen, were lawful, enforceable bailments, and which by such action were to that extent coupled up with the third lease.

When this third lease was executed, and as part of the transaction, notes of even date were then given covering in the aggregate the total rental and amounts stipulated in such third lease and within the period in' which the aggregate rental was to be paid. This was done in pursuance of the contract provision, which was: “Rental to he paid as follows: $2,750.00 down payment; balance to lio secured by notes, as follows: 29 notes for $406.00 each; one note for $450.00; one note for $700.00; first note due October First; $700.00 note due October 25t,h, 1928.” The only provision in the lease for a sale was: “Provided, however, that if in addition to carrying out the above terms and conditions, including the prompt payment of rent, *498 the party of the second part also pays the sum of $1.00 within thirty days from the date of the last payment of rent, said machines shall become the property of the' party of the second part, and the party, of the first part shall give the party of the seeond part a bill of sale.” And the contract nowhere else refers in any way to a sale and a passage of title. Moreover, the lease provided that, in the event of bankruptcy, the lease should terminate, and stipulated that the lessor could then enter and repossess himself of the machines. It will, therefore, appear that the conditions never arose when a bill of sale was to be made. Rex defaulted in payment of the rental and was adjudged bankrupt.

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Bluebook (online)
59 F.2d 496, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacquard-knitting-machine-co-v-vennell-ca3-1932.