Maremont Corp. v. Hoesch America, Inc.

663 F. Supp. 876, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5693
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 30, 1987
Docket82-CV-3118-DT
StatusPublished

This text of 663 F. Supp. 876 (Maremont Corp. v. Hoesch America, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maremont Corp. v. Hoesch America, Inc., 663 F. Supp. 876, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5693 (E.D. Mich. 1987).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

WOODS, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on remand from the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit pursuant to its opinion of September 12, 1986, 803 F.2d 720. This Court has been directed to make the following determinations:

1. Did Maremont’s seller, USP, have constructive possession of the steel in question?

2. Was Maremont a buyer in the ordinary course?

3. Was Hoesch a bailor with respect to the steel in the warehouse of the processors at the time it reclaimed the steel?

4. If so, were Hoesch’s rights as a bail- or superior to Maremont's rights as a buyer in the ordinary course?

At issue are rights in steel stored at two processor/warehouses on October 30, 1980. 1 The locations, sizes and amounts of the steel were:

LOCATION

TYPE Michigan Paterson Screw Products Heat Treat

9/16 C-1541 Rod 106,058 lbs. 25,410 lbs.

21/32 C-1541 Rod 338,242 lbs. 142,650 lbs.

Total 444,300 lbs. 168,060 lbs.

The facts have been set out at length both in this Court’s Memorandum Opinion and in the Court of Appeals’ decision, and only those facts directly bearing on the above issues which need emphasis or clarification will be repeated here.

I. DID USP HAVE CONSTRUCTIVE POSSESSION OF THE STEEL?

On August 9, 1979, Hoesch and Paterson Heat Treat agreed that Hoesch would ship steel to be held in storage by Paterson in Hoesch’s name for the account of USP until Hoesch authorized its release from storage. Sales confirmations dated August 8,1979, contained that same condition. Exhibit 34. (One of these was signed by Michael Heitchue, Controller at USP at that time, on August 20, 1979, in acceptance; the other was not.) Judy Cocking, Sales Coordinator at Hoesch at the time, testified that these sales confirmations included all the steel held by Paterson Heat Treat on October 30, 1980. Nothing was offered to contradict that testimony. The sales confirmations provided that the steel included on those documents were to be shipped to Paterson Heat Treat during August and September, 1979. Paterson Heat Treat sent receiving reports to Ms. Cocking *878 during September, 1979, which covered all the shipments of the type of steel at issue here which were still on hand on October 31, 1980. Exhibits 62N-P and 62A.

On the other hand, Maremont now contends that the agreement between Hoesch and Paterson Heat Treat was not arrived at until “more than one month after the last delivery of the steel in question.” Plaintiff’s Supplemental Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law at 2 (emphasis in original). In support of that proposition Mare-mont offers the finding in the original opinion of this Court that the steel had all been invoiced to Marwil by USP by.June 28, 1979. That finding is supported by the facts. In addition there was testimony by Michael Heitchue that steel was not entered on inventory cards at USP until after a receiving report was received from the processor. The steel in question was all entered on an inventory card at USP by July 1, 1979. Exhibit 29.

Maremont also notes William Grant’s testimony that there “probably” was some steel of USP’s on hand at the time the agreement was signed. Transcript at 222. There was no evidence, however, to link any such steel to the steel on hand on October 30, 1980.

The Court has weighed this conflicting evidence and has determined that it is more likely than not that the steel was received at Paterson Heat Treat after the agreement. USP should have had receiving reports in its possession showing the date on which the steel was received by Paterson Heat Treat, according to the testimony of Michael Heitchue. The only receiving reports in evidence, however, show that the steel was not received at Paterson Heat Treat until after the agreement was signed. This is consistent with the sales confirmations sent by Hoesch to USP. It is more plausible that the dates of entry on the inventory card at USP were in error or reflect some event other than receipt of the steel by Paterson Heat Treat than that both the receiving reports and sales confirmations were in error. Therefore, the Court has determined that USP did not have constructive possession of any of the steel in issue in this case which was sent to Paterson Heat Treat.

On or before October 30, 1978, Michigan Screw Products agreed that it would not release any amount of the steel purchased by Hoesch from steel mills for the account of USP without a release from Hoesch. This agreement was extended on April 3, 1979, and was'in effect during the purchases in question. The testimony was uncon-tradicted that this process was followed, and that the release was more than a ministerial act.

There is no evidence that either Paterson Heat Treat or Michigan Screw Products ever “acknowledged to the buyer ... [that the goods were held] for the buyer.” See § 2-705(2)(b). 2

Therefore, the Court finds that USP never had constructive possession 3 of the steel stored at either Paterson Heat Treat or Michigan Screw Products nor were Hoesch's rights to stop delivery cut off by operation of § 2-705(2)(b).

II. WAS MAREMONT A BUYER IN THE ORDINARY COURSE?

The issue is whether it is necessary for a buyer’s seller to have actual or constructive possession of the goods in question before the buyer can be a buyer in ordinary course. Neither the parties nor the Court have been able to find any cases which directly address this point, although there has been extensive consideration of the issue as to whether or not the buyer must have possession to be a buyer in ordinary course. See Big Knob Volunteer Fire Company v. Lowe & Moyer Garage, *879 Inc., 338 Pa.Super. 257, 487 A.2d 953, 957-59 (1985). This Court agrees with the Court in Big Knob (as does, indeed, the Sixth Circuit, at least implicitly, in affirming this Court’s award of damages with regard to the steel in the possession of USP at the time it was sold by Hoesch) which holds that identification of the goods to the contract is the critical moment that determines when a buyer becomes a buyer in due course. Id. at 958.

In all of the cases cited by Maremont the seller did have possession of the goods at issue. Maremont argues that “once the steel arrived at the processors it was essentially in the ‘back yard’ of USP.” Plaintiff’s Supplemental Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law at 6. The case cited by Maremont in support of that argument holds that a paper goods supplier who had delivered paper goods on consignment to a warehouse facility operator in the business of selling such goods did not have a right to the goods as against a creditor of consignee with a perfected security interest in the goods. Georgia-Pacific Corporation v.

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Bluebook (online)
663 F. Supp. 876, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maremont-corp-v-hoesch-america-inc-mied-1987.