Johnston v. Lamson Co.

167 S.E. 417, 159 Va. 666, 1933 Va. LEXIS 275
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 12, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 167 S.E. 417 (Johnston v. Lamson Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Lamson Co., 167 S.E. 417, 159 Va. 666, 1933 Va. LEXIS 275 (Va. 1933).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Lamson Company, Incorporated, is a Massachusetts, corporation, with its principal office in Syracuse, New York. It operates under its letters patent and manufactures and installs a cash carrier system, which is known as the Lamson Preferred Cable Cash Carrier System. It entered into a contract on August 17, 1927, with the R. B. Bass Company, Incorporated, a Virginia corporation, engaged in conducting and operating its department store in the city of Roanoke, Va., to furnish and install in the store one of its systems to contain eleven stations and thirty-three cash boxes. It was agreed to be installed in accordance with a certain submitted plan, designated by a number, and dated August 4, 1927, and the Lamson Company also agreed to furnish without charge all parts necessary to keep the system in proper repair, with certain exceptions not needful to be mentioned.

The agreement was to be for a period of ten years from the date of the installation and to continue from year to year unless either party should notify the other in writing [671]*671sixty days before the expiration of the original term, or any extension thereof, of its desire to terminate the agreement. The Bass Company agreed to pay quarterly in advance the sum of $108.00 for the cost of installing or continuing the system, for the license to use it under the letters patent, for the agreement to supply parts for repairs and for the right to operate it in the designated premises during the term.

It was also agreed that the user could not assign or under-let the system without the previous consent in writing of the owner, the Lamson Company, and further that if the business of the user passed into the hands of a receiver, or if it discontinued business in the designated premises, all unpaid amounts to the end of the agreement, without notice or demand by the owner, would at once be precipitated and become due and payable, and the owner might enter the premises and take possession of and remove the system and that the user’s interest thereon would be valued at a sum equal to twenty per cent of the amount of the payments for the unexpired term, which sum would be deducted from the user’s obligation under the contract. The contract was accepted by the Lamson Company at Syracuse, New York, on August 17, 1927.

There were also stipulations in the contract that at end of the term the system was to be returned to the owner unless in the meantime it should be purchased by the user upon terms stated. The above recitals are in epitome the germane provisions of the agreement.

On the 5th of November, 1928, the name of the “R. B. Bass Company, Incorporated,” was changed to GilliamPadgett Company, Incorporated. This was accomplished by the appropriate legal steps. It was caused by the retirement of Mr. Bass and the coming into the latter concern of Messrs. Gilliam and Padgett. The Gilliam-Padgett Company, Incorporated, with the written consent of the Lam-son Company, entered into a written agreement, dated April 23, 1929, with the Bass Company by which it became the [672]*672assignee of all the latter company’s right, title and interest in the cash carrier system and it agreed to perform all of the covenants and stipulations embodied in the agreement between the owner thereof and the original user.

Subsequently a creditor’s suit was instituted against the Gilliam-Padgett Company, Incorporated, and by a decree entered therein, on May 23, 1929, Colonel James D. Johnston was appointed receiver for the company. The receiver took over the business and operated it until September 7, 1929, when he sold it to Mr. Frank Hirsh. Hirsh discontinued the business on February 8, 1930, and vacated the store premises, of which he notified the Lamson Company.

. Upon assuming the duties of the receivership there ensued a correspondence between the receiver and the Lam-son Company relative to the cash carrier system, and as the alleged effect of. these communications, by letters, form the basis of one of the defenses of the receiver to the claim of the company, their contents will be noted with particularity.

For clarity the appellant will hereafter be referred to as the receiver and the appellee as the company.

■. The first letter of the receiver to the company dated May 27, 1929, was a circular letter to the creditors of GilliamPadgett Company, Incorporated, informing them of the fact of the receivership, the financial condition of the debtor, and that in thirty days or less a substantial payment on the indebtedness might be expected. On June 3, 1929, the receiver wrote the company enclosing his check as receiver for $108.00 to cover the rent for the carrier system to September 1, 1929. He added that, as receiver, he desired to ., continue the rental and would pay for same during the time it was used, and that the company would be advised of the future of the Gilliam-Padgett Company which at that writing was uncertain.

The next letter of importance was dated October 3, 1929, in which the receiver acknowledged receipt of the company’s bill for rental of the system from September 1 to December 1, 1929, of $108.00, and further said that on September 6th [673]*673he had sold the stock of goods and fixtures to Frank Hirsh who took possession on September 7th and that he (Hirsh) would pay ratably for the rental of the syjstem, but if the company would send him a statement of the charges therefor, for six days in September, he would send his check for same, and that after September 6th the rental should be billed to Frank Hirsh. On October 7th the company wrote the receiver billing him for $7.20 to cover the rental for six days and noted the contents of the receiver’s previous letter to the effect that thereafter the rentals should be billed to Mr. Hirsh, and stated that his letter would be referred to its leasing department.

On October 9th the receiver enclosed his check for the $7.20 and closed his letter with this paragraph: “As indicated in my previous letter, I have disposed of the stock and will expect you to deal direct with Mr. Frank Hirsh for your system.”

On November 11, 1929, the company received a letter from John Hirsh,, dated November 9th, on the letter head of Gilliam-Padgett Company, Incorporated, as follows: “Enclosed you will find check for $100.80 covering statement of November 1, 1929, for Gilliam-Padgett Company, Incorporated, for the rental of carrier system from October 7th to December 1st.”

On November 15, 1929, the company wrote the receiver a letter caling his attention to the terms of the lease and the assignment by the Bass Company to Gilliam-Padgett Company and particularly to the provision accelerating the rental to its expiration in the event of breaching the contract. The company asserted its right to make claim against the Gilliam-Padgett Company in accordance with the terms of the contract. The receiver replied by saying in effect that the matter would have to be determined by the court and asked to be advised as to the total amount of the company’s claim. The company replied, insisting upon the validity of its claim and enclosed a statement of the amount which was $2,707.20, which was arrived at by deducting [674]*674from the total amount of the installments for the ten year period, all payments thereon, by whomsoever made, and twenty per cent of the balance on account of the user’s interest provided for in the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.E. 417, 159 Va. 666, 1933 Va. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-lamson-co-va-1933.