Miller Pasteurizing Mach. Co. v. Conway

214 F. 485, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1825
CourtDistrict Court, D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 23, 1914
DocketNo. 2114 June Sess. 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 214 F. 485 (Miller Pasteurizing Mach. Co. v. Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller Pasteurizing Mach. Co. v. Conway, 214 F. 485, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1825 (pennsylvaniad 1914).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This case is one of replevin. The trial was had before the late Judge Holland and a jury. There was a verdict for defendant under binding instructions from the trial judge. A motion was made for a new trial which was pending at the time of the decease of Judge Holland. .

The facts upon which the plaintiff based its claim of title to the disputed property may be sufficiently outlined in a short statement. The property, the title to which is in dispute, belonged to the plaintiff company, and was sold by it to an ice cream manufacturer, known as the Bahls Ice Cream & Bakery Company, and the property was delivered to the purchaser at its place of business No. 2009 North street. The sale was evidenced by a paper writing dated April 11, 1911, which stated the terms of sale and provided that the title should remain in the vendor until the purchase price had been fully paid. The property purchased consisted of machines and appliances for the manufacture of ice cream, and was set up and installed by the purchaser as part of its manufacturing plant. The purchaser occupied leased premises, and agreed that these fixtures should become part of the realty and be left upon the premises and belong to the landlord. The landlord retook possession of the leased premises and of these machines, etc., and sold the real estate, including these machines, to the defendant, Thomas Conway, Jr.

Next in the chronological order of events, the company which had bought the machines of the plaintiff was adjudicated a bankrupt. In the course of the bankruptcy proceedings two events transpired which, while they have no direct bearing upon the question now before us, are perhaps necessary, or at least helpful, to a full understanding of the evidence offered at the trial.

Following the agreement of purchase, the purchaser delivered to the vendor, the plaintiff in this case, certain old machines, at an agreed valuation of $450, and paid to the plaintiff the further sum of $700 in cash, for which a credit of $1,150 on the purchase price was allowed, and gave to the plaintiff its promissory note for $2,035 for the balance of the sale price. This note was renewed at least once, and either the original or the renewal note was discounted for the plaintiff by some bank. In the course of the bankruptcy proceedings the plaintiff presented a claim against the bankrupt estate, basing its claim upon the amount of the unpaid purchase money for the replevied property 'represented by the note referred to. It is not entirely clear whether the claim was made by the plaintiff as the holder of this' note or was [487]*487made by the bank which had discounted it. It would appear that the claim had been made by the plaintiff because there seems to have been a form of claim filed in which the claim was set forth to be an unsecured claim for which the plaintiff held no security as collateral or otherwise.

The other event was that Thomas Conway, Jr., the defendant, applied for what was in effect an order on the receiver or trustee in bankruptcy to turn the replevied machines and appliances, which are the subject of this replevin suit, over to him as his property acquired by him through his purchase from the landlord and as not being part of the assets of the bankrupt estate. This order was eventually made and the property was turned over to him. In this connection, it might be further stated that following, this proof of claim the name of the plaintiff appeared upon the dividend sheets in the bankruptcy proceedings -as a creditor entitled to a 4 per cent, dividend, amounting to something more than $80, and a check for this amount was made out and sent to the plaintiff by the trustee in payment of this dividend. This check was attempted to be returned by the plaintiff to the trustee by being sent bade to him, and was in turn resent by the trustee to the plaintiff; the trustee refusing to accept of the return of it. The plaintiff subsequently brought its action in replevin, giving the usual re-plevin bond, and the machines and appliances referred to were delivered to it by the marshal.

The case was then p,ut at issue upon the question of whether or not plaintiff had such right of possession to the property replevied as entitled it to recover.

• The case as now presented comes before the court as if it were a case upon an appeal, and the questions presented are appellate questions.

The view which otherwise might be had of the questions, both of fact and law, involved in the trial of the case, and the appellate questions which arise out of this record, are somewhat obscured by the course of the trial and by the manner in which the plaintiff’s side of the issue was presented. Instead of confining itself to its prima facie case of showing title in itself to the property replevied and of its possession by the defendant when the writ issued, the plaintiff essayed to answer an anticipated defense. Had the plaintiff confined itself to testimony and evidence, which would have supported a prima facie title in itself, the real points in the case would have been sharply defined and clearly raised.

The proofs in support of this title would have been confined to proof of plaintiff’s original ownership of the machines, of the contract of bailment, and of the exercise of its right to reclaim possession of the bailed property. Had the defendant offered no evidence, the case of the plaintiff would have turned (assuming the contract of bailment) upon the sole question of whether the mere issuance of the writ of re-plevin was a sufficient exercise of its right to reclaim possession of the property, or whether it was necessary for the plaintiff to have made demand or given other notice of its claim of ownership.

If the trial judge had held the plaintiff to have made out a prima [488]*488facie case, the defendant would have been put to his defense. This defense might have consisted of evidence of the following'facts:

(1) In denial of the exercise of the right of the plaintiff to reclaim possession of the property that the plaintiff had elected to treat its bailee as its debtor for the purchase price by filing a claim against its bankrupt estate, thereby affirming the title of its vendee.

(2) The agreement of the bailee by which it sold the replevied property to its landlord, and he, in turn, to the defendant, against whom as an innocent purchaser for value the plaintiff could not assert title in replevin.

To the first proposition of the defense the plaintiff would have replied that it had been misled into filing its proofs of claim by false representations, and that it had withdrawn its claim and had returned to its original position as an owner of the property.

The plaintiff would have met the second proposition with a denial that either the landlord or the defendant was an innocent purchaser for value. This would have left in the case: First, the proposition of law whether the agreement of April 11, 1911, was a mere sale and purchase of the machines or was one of bailment, with such title reserved by the bailor as to enable it to assert it against the bailee. If this proposition was ruled in its favor, then the case would have turned upon the two propositions of fact, whether the plaintiff had lost or exercised its optional right, and, if this were found in its favor, whether the defendant or his vendor was an innocent bona fide purchaser for value.

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Bluebook (online)
214 F. 485, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-pasteurizing-mach-co-v-conway-pennsylvaniad-1914.