Livermore Falls Trust & Banking Co. v. Richmond Manufacturing Co.

79 A. 844, 108 Me. 206
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 9, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 A. 844 (Livermore Falls Trust & Banking Co. v. Richmond Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livermore Falls Trust & Banking Co. v. Richmond Manufacturing Co., 79 A. 844, 108 Me. 206 (Me. 1911).

Opinion

Emery, C. J.

From the evidence we find certain material facts to be as hereinafter stated :—

May 5, 1909, the Livermore Falls Trust and Banking Company (hereinafter called the bank) held various promissory notes of the Richmond Manufacturing Company (a corporation engaged in the manufacture of wood novelties and hereinafter called the company) as follows:—

A group of five notes aggregating $25000 dated Feby. 1, 1905 secured by a chattel mortgage, in the usual form, of all its tangible personal property, mills, machinery, tools, unmanufactured stock, manufactured goods, etc., etc. ; a group of nine notes aggregating $26000 and of various dates between February, 1905, and July, 1906, secured by a second chattel mortgage covering the same property, but made subject to the prior mortgage of Feby. 1, 1905 ; and a group of notes dated subsequent to 1906. Nov. 8, 1908, the company gave the bank a third mortgage of all its tangible personal property, and also of all its then existing book accounts, and such accounts as it should acquire from the sale of any of the personal property. The second and third mortgages were conditioned for the payment of all sums that were then or might thereafter be due the bank from the company. The second group of notes, the nine dated between February, 1905, and July, 1906, were signed by various individuals, in form as co-promissors, but really as sureties, as was known to the bank.

The foregoing notes were all unpaid and overdue May 5, 1909, on which day the bank, without giving any notice of its intention, took possession of all the property covered by either of the three chattel mortgages, and on the 15th of the same month began due statutory proceedings for foreclosure of all of them. In the meantime, however, on the 10th of the same month, May, 1909, the bank began actions at law against all the parties on the nine notes signed by the individual sureties and secured by the second and third mortgages. Pending these actions the sureties brought a bill [209]*209in equity against the bank alleging- that the value of the mortgaged property taken by the bank was enough to pay all the indebtedness of the company to the bank, or would have been if properly cared for and managed by the bank after possession taken ; and praying for an accounting by the bank and for an injunction against the suits on the notes. All the suits including that in equity were reported to the Law Court for decision upon the pleadings and evidence.

There was no redemption of the mortgaged property and the title of the bank to all the tangible property subject to any of the mortgages became absolute through completed foreclosure at least as early as Nov. 3, 1909. The main question, therefore, is, how much credit for the mortgaged property the bank must allow upon the indebtedness to it of the company secured by the mortgages, or, more immediately, what credit therefor must be allowed on the nine notes in suit signed by the individual sureties. The amount of such credit, however, will be affected by the solution of several subsidiary questions which are now to be considered.

1. At the time the bank took possession of the mortgaged property, the company had on hand a large amount of unmanufactured stock and also had contracts for the manufacture and shipment of wood novelties, etc. The sureties claim that these contracts, or some of them, were profitable for the company and were such as the bank should have completed, but did not, and hence the bank should be debited with the profit it would have thus made. They also claim that by taking possession of the property, shutting down the mills, etc., the bank caused great depreciation in the value of the property, and that it should be debited with this depreciation.

Without considering other answers to these claims, it is a sufficient answer that the bank, even as mortgagee in possession, was under no legal obligation to carry on the business of the mortgagor. Granting that by taking possession of the mortgaged property, the bank stopped a going concern, prevented the company and the sureties from fulfilling profitable contracts, and generally reduced the market value of the plant, it nevertheless was within its rights [210]*210as mortgagee. • It had given it the right to take the mortgaged property into its own possession upon the failure of the company and the sureties to comply with the conditions of the mortgages, but it did not have imposed upon it the duty of assuming the burden and risk of carrying on the business for their benefit. If it became trustee, it was for conservation, not for operation. The company and the sureties could have prevented such taking possession and all the consequences complained of by paying'the indebtedness secured by the mortgages. To their failure to do so must be attributed the loss sustained.

There is no evidence that the mills, machinery, etc., could have been leased, and hence we do not find that the bank should be debited anything for rents and profits.

2. When the bank took possession of the mortgaged property, it also took possession of the books of the company containing their accounts for merchandise sold, etc. Some of these accounts the bank collected in whole or in part, but did not collect them all, nor did it put any of the uncollected accounts in suit or use other means to enforce payment except by solicitation, etc. What accounts it did not collect it turned over with the books to the trustee in bankruptcy upon his appointment in September following. The sureties now claim that the bank must be debited with the value of those accounts whether collected or not,' such value to be fixed by the court from the evidence, as in the case of tangible personal property.

The answer to this claim is that choses in action, such as book accounts, are not within the law governing chattel mortgages. That law applies only to goods and chattels capable of manual delivery. Emmons v. Bradley, 56 Maine, 333; Emerson v. E. & N. A. Ry., 67 Maine, 387; Marsh v. Woodbury, 1 Met. 436; McKie v. Gregory, 175 Mass. 505. The inclusion of book accounts in a mortgage of goods and chattels simply operates as a pledge or an equitable assignment of them. The mortgagee does not acquire absolute title to them by a statutory foreclosure of the mortgage as a chattel mortgage. To «acquire such title he must have them sold as a pledge or under equity proceedings. It follows that the mort[211]*211gagee is not obliged to give credit for their value upon completion of foreclosure of the chattel mortgage, but only for what he collects of them. Emmons v. Bradley, 56 Maine, 333; McKie v. Gregory, 175 Mass. 505. He may proceed with the collection until the indebtedness secured by the assignment is fully paid, but when that is paid the remaining accounts belong to the assignor, as also do any proceeds of collection in excess of the indebtedness. There is no forfeiture as in the case of tangible property under a foreclosed chattel mortgage.

Of course the assignee must not release any of the debtors in such accounts, nor impair any security given for them, but by simply accepting the assignment he does not assume the duty to collect, nor the obligation to incur the expense of suits and the risk of insolvency of the debtors, of counter claims, of uncredited payments, of claims for recoupment, etc., etc.

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Bluebook (online)
79 A. 844, 108 Me. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livermore-falls-trust-banking-co-v-richmond-manufacturing-co-me-1911.