Maremont Corporation v. Hoesch America, Inc.

852 F.2d 568, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9926, 1988 WL 76541
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1988
Docket87-1804
StatusUnpublished

This text of 852 F.2d 568 (Maremont Corporation v. Hoesch America, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maremont Corporation v. Hoesch America, Inc., 852 F.2d 568, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9926, 1988 WL 76541 (6th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

852 F.2d 568

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
MAREMONT CORPORATION, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
HOESCH AMERICA, INC., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 87-1804.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

July 22, 1988.

Before WELLFORD and ALAN E. NORRIS, Circuit Judges, and R. ALLAN EDGAR*, District Judge.

WELLFORD, Circuit Judge.

Previously before us and remanded to the district court for further findings, this commercial dispute was brought in the district court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. We found no error in the district court's prior conclusion that Maremont was a buyer in the ordinary course with respect to a part of the quantity of steel involved (approximately 9,400 pounds).1 As a buyer in the ordinary course, we held that plaintiff Maremont possessed rights superior to Hoesch's with respect to that quantity. As to the great bulk of the steel, the remainder, consisting of about 600,000 pounds that Maremont had purchased from United Steel Products (USP), now defunct, we remanded (1) for findings as to whether or not USP had constructive possession of the steel in question, (2) for a conclusion as to whether or not Maremont was a buyer in the ordinary course, (3) for a finding whether Hoesch was a bailor with respect to steel in the warehouses of the processors at the time it reclaimed the steel, and (4) for a conclusion as to whether Hoesch's rights, if any, as a bailor would be superior to plaintiff's rights as a buyer.

Marwil Products (Marwil), a division of Maremont, specializes in the manufacture of "U-bolts" for use in the automotive industry. Marwil would order steel from USP, a retail supplier, who would in turn contact Hoesch, a wholesale supplier. Hoesch, essentially USP's broker or inventory financier, would order raw steel directly from the mills for USP and have it delivered to a steel processor to be pickled and limed. The steel would then be shipped on to USP to be drawn and cut to Marwil's specifications before being sent to Marwil for its use in manufacturing U-bolts. At times Marwil placed "blanket orders" with USP, which would arrange with Hoesch to have the steel delivered to the processors and left there until Marwil, through USP, requested its processing and further shipment.

Two of the processors to which Hoesch shipped steel were Michigan Screw Products (MSP) and Paterson Heat Treat, Inc. (PHT). On or before October 28, 1978, MSP agreed with Heosch 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, and this agreement was later extended. Hoesch paid MSP storage charges, but did not pay PHT such charges. Steel was not to be released except upon Hoesch's approval.

In a letter dated August 9, 1979, Hoesch's representative Judy Cocking confirmed a similar understanding with PHT. In that letter, Cocking advised that the steel would be for USP, and all charges would be for the account of USP, but that the tags on the material would be marked Hoesch "and should remain in the name of Hoesch America until a release is made from this office." All parties concerned, including USP, understood these release agreements to mean that the steel was owned by Hoesch and was to be simply stored with MSP or PHT when shipped with no treatment performed until Hoesch gave its consent upon USP's request for release of the steel to be processed. Marwil, however, had no knowledge of this arrangement. PHT issued to Hoesch receiving reports and periodic inventory lists showing the amount of Hoesch's inventory held in storage. In addition, Hoesch itself took physical inventories of the steel it had in storage at MSP and PHT.

The essential facts of the controversy were set out in our prior unpublished per curiam decision which was filed September 12, 1986, and we do not reiterate all of them. District Court Judge Woods, upon remand, set out his findings and conclusions in a twelve page memorandum decision dated June 30, 1987. Some 444,300 pounds of the steel in dispute were located at MSP's warehouse, and approximately 168,000 pounds were located at PHT's warehouse.

A. FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS OF THE DISTRICT COURT

1. Constructive Possession by USP

The district court found that Hoesch and PHT agreed prior to shipment that the latter would not process the steel to be held in storage by PHT in Hoesch's name for the account of the middleman, USP, until Hoesch authorized its release. Maremont contends that this finding was error because Hoesch and PHT did not reach an agreement about the steel until "one month after the last delivery." Maremont bases this contention on prior findings by the district court that USP included with its invoices to Maremont a bill of lading showing delivery and that Maremont had been invoiced for all the steel involved in this dispute by July 18, 1979, several weeks before the Hoesch-PHT agreement. Maremont also argues that the steel in question was all entered on USP's inventory cards by July 1, 1979, after a receiving report was received from the processor.

The district court found that all steel stored at PHT was inventoried and recorded on USP's records before PHT sent receiving reports to Hoesch. USP had previously invoiced it to Maremont (or its division Marwil).

The question of whether USP forwarded copies of the bills of lading to Maremont with its invoice for the steel shipped to PHT was not clear. The district court concluded that its prior finding that the steel had all been invoiced to Maremont by USP by June 28, 1979 and paid for by July 18, 1979 was supported by the facts, and Maremont does not challenge that finding. The district court also determined, however, that all shipments to PHT were made after the effectuation of the release agreement on August 9, 1979, thus precluding any reliance by Maremont upon the bills of lading accompanying those shipments when making payment. These two findings effectively reverse the prior findings that the steel was shipped to the processors before Maremont was invoiced. The determination by the district court that it was "more likely than not" that the shipments to PHT occurred after the release arrangement was effectuated is within the scope of the remand by this court. This result, although unusual, is therefore not precluded by the "law of the case" doctrine.

MSP agreed with Hoesch that it would not release from storage at its warehouse any of the steel purchased by Hoesch on the account of USP from the manufacturer without a release from Hoesch. This agreement was in effect, according to the district court's findings, during the time of Maremont's purchases. The MSP-Hoesch agreement was carried out, and MSP, like PHT, never "acknowledged to the buyer ... [that the goods were held] for the buyer" under Sec. 2-705(2)(b) of the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted in Michigan (Mich.Comp.Laws Ann. Secs. 440.1101 et seq.). Under that section of the U.C.C.

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852 F.2d 568, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9926, 1988 WL 76541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maremont-corporation-v-hoesch-america-inc-ca6-1988.