Mohawk Industries, Inc. v. Connecticut Sewing MacHine & Supply Co. (In Re Mohawk Industries, Inc.)

49 B.R. 376, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 211, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6959
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 9, 1985
Docket19-30040
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 B.R. 376 (Mohawk Industries, Inc. v. Connecticut Sewing MacHine & Supply Co. (In Re Mohawk Industries, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mohawk Industries, Inc. v. Connecticut Sewing MacHine & Supply Co. (In Re Mohawk Industries, Inc.), 49 B.R. 376, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 211, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6959 (Mass. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

PAUL W. GLENNON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment filed by the debtor, Mohawk Industries, Inc. (“Mohawk” or “debtor”), the plaintiff in the above adversary proceeding. The debtor filed a complaint for declaratory judgment asking the Court to declare that the defendant, Connecticut Sewing Machine & Supply, Inc. (“Connecticut”) has an unperfected security interest in certain sewing machines now in the possession of Mohawk. 1 Connecticut filed its answer and counterclaim in which it asks the Court to determine who has title to said machines. Connecticut opposes the debt- or’s motion for summary judgment contending that whether or not the transaction entered into between it and Mohawk was a true lease or one intended as security is a question of fact requiring a trial to determine the intent of the parties.

FINDINGS OF FACT

A hearing was held in Springfield on August 8, 1984 on the debtor’s motion for summary judgment at which the Court requested responsive pleadings to be filed and took the matter under advisement. After a review of the record and pleadings, the Court finds that the following facts are undisputed:

1.On or about October 4, 1983, Connecticut supplied Mohawk with 22 specialized sewing machines for use in its canvas tent fabrication business.

2. In connection with the above transaction, Mohawk executed a Standard Security Agreement and Uniform Commercial Code (“U.C.C.”) Financing Statement naming Connecticut as the secured party, which security interest was not perfected by the required filings. 2

3. The sum of $93,238, represented by five simultaneously delivered invoices, numbered 13933, 13935, 13936, 13937 and 13938, was to be paid by Mohawk to Connecticut for the 22 sewing machines, after which Mohawk was to own the machines.

4. Each of the above five invoices states that the payment to be made by Mohawk was for a certain monthly “rental period” beginning October 4, 1983 and ending March 4, 1984, five months later.

5. Subsequent to October 4, 1983, the debtor paid invoice No. 13933 in the amount of $30,000.

7. No payments were made by Mohawk to Connecticut on the other invoices.

DISCUSSION

Richard J. Scullin, Jr. (“Scullin”), the President of Mohawk, was deposed by Connecticut on May 25, 1984 and admits that it was advantageous to Mohawk to structure the transaction between it and Connecticut as a “purchase rental” of the sewing machines. He says that in January or February of 1983, Mohawk entered into a contract with the United States Government for the production of 13,000 tents. The contract provided that Mohawk would be paid or reimbursed for rental of the equipment it needed to complete the contract which Scullin says would not be the case if there was an outright purchase. Accordingly, the first invoice for $30,000 was submitted to and paid by the government for *378 the “rental period” October 4, 1983 through November 4, 1983, and Mohawk paid the $30,000 to Connecticut. Scullin says that the second invoice for the “rental period” November 4, 1983 through December 4, 1983 was also paid by the government but alleges that because the equipment was not running properly, this payment was not forwarded to Connecticut. According to Scullin, he became aware that Mohawk was having financial problems sometime in December 1983. Mohawk filed its petition under Chapter 11 on January 13, 1984.

Connecticut avers that since Mohawk’s intent was to submit the invoices to the government as rental payments in order to have the invoices paid under Mohawk’s contract with the government, a lease with Connecticut was intended rather than a secured installment sale. In its answer, however, Connecticut admits writing a letter to Mohawk on January 16, 1984, three days after this bankruptcy proceeding was commenced, in which it proposed alternative methods for curing Connecticut’s default and characterized the existing agreement as a “rental purchase contract." As Connecticut itself observed, in this Court’s decision in In re New England Stone & Sand, Inc., Adv.Pro. No. 4-81-0375, slip op. at 8 (Bankr.D.Mass. May 8,1984), one of the bases for the conclusion that the transaction in that case was a conditional sale and not a lease was that the defendant himself had characterized the transaction as an “installment sale sort of thing.”

A leading treatise discusses the issue of whether a lease is a true lease or one intended as security controlled by Article 9 of the U.C.C.:

The ‘lease v. security interest' issue is one of the most frequently litigated issues under the entire Uniform Commercial Code. Different factors may influence parties to follow the widespread practice of casting what is in substance a secured installment sale into the form of a ‘lease’ providing for ‘rental’ payments. For example, the ‘lessor’ may hope to avoid complying with the Article Nine filing and default provisions. Or the ‘lessee’ may hope to get a larger federal tax deduction by paying ‘rent’ than he would were he to buy outright and take a depreciation allowance as a deduction. Or the ‘lessee’ may hope to avoid a local tax or local regulation that applies to owners but not lessees. If a party wants to think of himself as a lessor and has been advised by his lawyer that he is a lessor, he may choose not to file under Article Nine, and when trouble arises, find himself in a lawsuit....
The clearest possible such case [of a secured installment sale] is one in which the ‘lessee,’ by the terms of the ‘lease’ itself, is to become owner of the property at the end of the lease period in exchange for amounts previously paid, called ‘rentals,’ which were really nothing more than installments on the purchase price.... Frequently, though, the lease period will be relatively short, and the periodic payment therefore much higher than a fair rental charge for such intervals. In all such cases the lessor is simply a seller or other financer in lessor’s clothing who has retained an interest to secure the buyer’s promise to buy and pay the required installments on the purchase price.

J. White & R. Summers, Uniform Commercial Code, 878, 880 (2d ed. 1980) (footnote omitted).

As this Court recently observed, it is well settled that Massachusetts and the majority of other jurisdictions look to substance over form when deciding if a transaction is a lease or a conditional sale. In re New England Stone & Sand, Inc., supra, slip op. at 6-7 (citing Carlo Bianchi & Co. v. Builders’ Equipment & Supplies Co., 347 Mass. 636, 199 N.E.2d 519 (1964)). While intent is usually a question of fact, when the requirements for summary judgment are nonetheless satisfied and only one conclusion may reasonably be drawn, summary judgment is proper. Gard v. United States, 594 F.2d 1230, 1234 n. 2 (9th Cir. *379 1979), cert. denied, 444 U.S.

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49 B.R. 376, 41 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 211, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohawk-industries-inc-v-connecticut-sewing-machine-supply-co-in-re-mab-1985.