LaGrange State Bank v. Numeritech, Inc.
This text of LaGrange State Bank v. Numeritech, Inc. (LaGrange State Bank v. Numeritech, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
APPELLANT
APPELLEE
This case involves a contest over funds interpleaded into the district court by Houston Instrument, a division of Summagraphics Corporation (Houston Instrument). The interpleaded funds represented payment for completed purchase orders for goods Numeritech, Inc. (Numeritech) manufactured and invoiced to Houston Instrument. These purchase orders had been transferred to Numeritech from financially-troubled La Grange Machine Works, Inc. (Machine Works). La Grange State Bank (the Bank), as a creditor of Machine Works, sought to impose a security interest on the interpleaded funds. The Bank and Numeritech each filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment alleging rights to the funds. (1) The district court granted summary judgment for Numeritech, thus denying the Bank's motion, and this appeal followed. We will affirm the summary judgment of the district court.
During the Spring of 1990, Houston Instrument sent purchase orders to Machine Works for various machined parts. When Machine Works received these purchase orders, it was in the midst of financial difficulties which prevented it from filling the orders. Instead, Machine Works transferred the purchase orders to Numeritech. Numeritech then filled the orders, delivered the parts to Houston Instrument, and sent invoices to Houston Instrument for the amount due for the parts. After Numeritech had filled and invoiced several of Houston Instrument's purchase orders, Houston Instrument ceased sending purchase orders to Machine Works, and began sending them directly to Numeritech.
The Bank and Numeritech have different views of the nature of Machine Works's transfer of the Houston Instrument purchase orders to Numeritech. The Bank argues that Machine Works subcontracted the manufacture of the parts to Numeritech. Numeritech argues that the purchase orders were merely referred to Numeritech because they had no business value to Machine Works since Machine Works was going out of business.
Meanwhile, Machine Works' financial difficulties caused it to default on a promissory note held by the Bank. On May 23, 1990, the Bank gave notice that it was accelerating the amounts due on the note and demanded full payment. To secure the note, Machine Works had given the Bank a security interest in all of its "accounts receivable, now on hand and hereafter acquired and the proceeds thereof, contract rights, chattel paper, instruments, general intangibles and rights to payment of every kind now or at any time rising out of the business of debtor." On July 3, 1990, the Bank purchased Machine Works' assets in a foreclosure sale.
By letter dated June 14, 1990, the Bank notified Houston Instrument that the Bank was claiming an interest in all of Machine Works' accounts receivable, which the Bank considered to include all purchase orders Numeritech filled. At this time, Houston Instrument's outstanding accounts payable for the machine parts it had received from Numeritech totaled approximately $18,000. Shortly after receipt of the Bank's letter, Numeritech demanded payment from Houston Instrument of the entire amount of its accounts payable. Houston Instrument paid neither the Bank nor Numeritech, due to the conflicting demands for payment.
After negotiations between Houston Instrument, the Bank, and Numeritech, the Bank abandoned its claim to any interest in the accounts stemming from the purchase orders Houston Instrument had sent directly to Numeritech. The parties agreed that Houston Instrument could release $6033 to Numeritech for parts delivered from these purchase orders. Houston Instrument's remaining accounts payable were $12,549.22, representing the goods supplied by Numeritech but originally ordered from Machine Works. The Bank did not abandon its claim to these accounts.
On November 9, 1990, Houston Instrument interpleaded $12,549.22 into the registry of the district court, naming Numeritech and the Bank as defendants. The Bank and Numeritech filed cross-claims and counterclaims. On February 13, 1991, the court ordered, upon agreed motion of the parties, that $2500 of the interpleaded funds be released to Houston Instrument for its attorney's fees. The Bank sought the release of the funds remaining in the registry of the court and reasonable fees and expenses from Numeritech. Numeritech also sought the remaining interpleaded funds, and claimed tortious interference with contractual relationships by the Bank.
Both the Bank and Numeritech each then filed motions for summary judgment on their cross-claims. The district court granted Numeritech's summary judgment motion for its claim on the interpleaded funds, and severed the order from the remaining claims. The Bank now appeals.
The standards for reviewing a motion for summary judgment are well settled: (1) the movant for summary judgment has the burden of showing that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law; (2) in deciding whether there is a disputed material fact issue precluding summary judgment, evidence favorable to the nonmovant will be taken as true; and (3) every reasonable inference must be indulged in favor of the nonmovant and any doubts resolved in its favor. Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 548-49 (Tex. 1985); United States Fidelity and Guar. Co. v. Travis Eckert Agency, Inc., 824 S.W.2d 628, 630 (Tex. App. 1991, writ denied).
The Bank contends that the district court erred in granting Numeritech's motion for partial summary judgment because the purchase orders, sent by Houston Instrument to Machine Works but filled by Numeritech, created a financial interest held by Machine Works which the Bank's security interest reached. We disagree.
The Bank argues primarily that the purchase orders Machine Works transferred to Numeritech constituted an accounts receivable of Machine Works. The Texas Uniform Commercial Code defines an "account" as "any right to payment for goods sold or leased or for services rendered which is not evidenced by an instrument or chattel paper, whether or not it has been earned by performance." Tex. Bus. & Com. Code. Ann. § 9.106(b) (1991). When Machine Works defaulted on its note held by the Bank, the Bank became an assignee to any right to payment Machine Works possessed. The statutory definition of "account" further narrows the issue to whether the purchase orders, standing alone, gave Machine Works, and the Bank as its assignee, a right to payment. We hold that they did not.
There is no evidence in the summary judgment record that indicates Machine Works either filled, or promised to fill, the purchase orders.
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