McKenney v. Buffelen Manufacturing Co.

232 F.2d 5
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 29, 1956
DocketNo. 14188
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 232 F.2d 5 (McKenney v. Buffelen Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKenney v. Buffelen Manufacturing Co., 232 F.2d 5 (9th Cir. 1956).

Opinions

CHAMBERS, Circuit Judge.

Buffelen Manufacturing Company is a California corporation. It manufactures at Tacoma, Washington, doors for which “shop lumber” is required and other products for which the lumber from “peeler logs” is needed. It will be herein referred to as Buffelen or as the milling company. Buffelen was the plaintiff in the district court in this diversity case. It is appellee here.

Operating in the timber of Tillamook County, Oregon, during the years 1948 to 1951 and perhaps many years before was a logging partnership known as Mc-Kenney Logging Company. It consisted of Bart McKenney and Einar Glaser together with their respective wives, Marie McKenney and Dorothy Glaser. They will be hereinafter referred to as McKenney & Glaser or as the logging partnership. The McKenneys and Glasers are citizens of Oregon and were among the the defendants in the trial court. The other defendants were Edward M. Buol and J. B. Carr and a Washington corporation called McKenney Logging Corporation. In 1951, Buol, a citizen of Washington, and Carr, a citizen of Oregon, organized and controlled McKenney Logging Corporation. McKenney and Glaser apparently were never stockholders, officers or directors of this company bearing McKenney’s name. The two did become, at least on the face of things, substantial creditors of McKenney Logging Corporation. Perhaps clarity may be improved and not confused if McKenney Logging Corporation is hereinafter referred to as the Buol-Carr Corporation.

At the root of the happenings here is a contract of January 8, 1948, between Buffelen and McKenney & Glaser. The contract recites past dealings of the parties including the amounts of loans or advancements to McKenney & Glaser by Buffelen. Then it provided that Buffelen had put up the money to acquire or finish acquiring certain timber lands and cutting contracts, and upon payment of the required sum that the title to these rights was taken in the name of Buffelen, the milling company. The contracts had originally been made by McKenney & Glaser. Of principal concern in the action here were the Belding holdings which on the record were in the name of Buffelen. Also subject to the contract were holdings of the partnership to which it is undisputed the partners had retained title.

In addition to its plant or plants at Tacoma, Buffelen was just completing a mill at Batterson, Tillamook County, Oregon. This was near the Belding holdings. The Batterson mill was designed to produce lumber of a “sawmill” grade which was lower grade than that required by Buffelen at Tacoma. Somehow the control of “sawmill” lumber gave Buffelen an advantage in acquiring peeler logs and shop lumber from others. Thus, the Batterson mill expanded along a little different line than Buffelen’s manufacturing activities at Tacoma.

By the contract, the logging partnership was to supply Buffelen with a certain amount of logs, according to its requirements, and was to give the milling company the right of refusal of all of McKenney & Glaser logs cut by them. Subject to one minor variation, Buffelen was to pay for logs at the market price. The investment that Buffelen had in the Belding and other holdings acquired through or with the help of McKenney & Glaser, together with the moneys advanced by Buffelen, was to be repaid on a “stumpage” basis, so much per thousand board feet of logs logged by the logging partnership. Further, it was provided that when Buffelen had regained the sums it had expended for trees in the woods then there should be no stumpage charge. (It was recited seriously that Buffelen had no desire to make money out of logging.) In other words, thereafter Buffelen would pay McKenney and Glaser for lumber stand[8]*8ing in the former’s name just the same as it would pay for lumber coming off of lands of the logging partnership in which the milling company had no interest. Further, after the Buffelen lands taken in fee were fully logged off, McKenney & Glaser were to have the fee to the lands for a nominal consideration of a dollar.

1948, 1949, 1950 and 1951 were busy production years for Buffelen and Mc-Kenney & Glaser. During those years, the latter produced and “sold” in logs to the former over 55 million board feet of lumber. Simultaneously, McKenney & Glaser paid Buffelen in installments the amounts they had agreed to pay on a stumpage basis. By the summer of 1951, Buffelen, by the contract, was entitled to no more “stumpage,” because all of the sums which Buffelen was to recover from McKenney & Glaser had been recovered by “stumpage.” At this point, McKenney & Glaser were in the enviable position of being able to “sell” to Buffelen at the market price Buffelen’s own trees (if such they were) after reducing them to logs.

For one reason or another, in 1951, Buffelen, no longer having McKenney & Glaser in its debt, and McKenney & Glaser no longer being in Buffelen’s debt, each became restive. Buffelen was trying to sell its Batterson mill and McKenney & Glaser wanted to sell out their equipment and all their timber rights, including those in Buffelen’s name. Barring McKenney & Glaser was a clause that they could not sell or transfer their contract with Buffelen or any lands or timber rights under the contract without the consent of Buffelen. McKenney & Glaser fell into the hands of one E. R. Errion, a broker, who seems to have led them to the point of no return and into a world of woe.

Buol and Carr were prospective purchasers. In the deal that was worked out, McKenney & Glaser transferred their equipment and “holdings” including the contract timber in the name of Buffelen to the Buol-Carr corporation, i. e. the McKenney Logging Corporation. Everything so taken, was pledged back to secure two notes each in the amount of $575,000.00, payable one to McKenney and one to Glaser. Seemingly, there was no cash payment. No written consent, as required by the June 8, 1948, contract, was given by Buffelen to the transaction.

Whether Buffelen was willing to accept the Buol-Carr corporation in place of McKenney & Glaser is not clear. Possibly they were for there seems to have been demands for lumber (and even some purchased) from Buol-Carr by Buffelen in the fall of 1951, but generally BuolCarr refused delivery. Buol-Carr took the position that the Buffelen-McKenney & Glaser contract of June 8, 1948, was a security transaction, that Buffelen had its money back and McKenney & Glaser had been free to sell to anyone without the leave of anyone else. Further, Buol and Carr and their company contended they were bona fide purchasers.

The Buol-Carr Company moved into the Belding tract and in two months cut about 5,000,000 feet of logs, removing 2,000,000 feet and selling it to others than Buffelen. The Batterson mill continued to operate generally on other logs purchased in the neighborhood. The other lumber was not wholly sufficient for the mill and much was of poor quality.

Buffelen on October 15, 1951, filed this action against the McKenneys, Glasers, Buol and Carr and Buol and Carr’s McKenney Logging Corporation. Damages and a restraining order were sought. The damages were asked for loss of profits at the Batterson mill and for trespass to the Belding tract.1 A [9]*9trial was held on January 14, 15 and 16, 1952. Before decision, the trial was reopened and continued on December 5, and 6, 1952. Meanwhile, on December 1, 1952, a supplemental complaint was filed asking for damages which had accrued after October 15, 1951.

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