Moss Industries, Inc. v. Irving Metals Co., Inc.

57 A.2d 922, 141 N.J. Eq. 421
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 5, 1948
DocketDocket 158/247
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 A.2d 922 (Moss Industries, Inc. v. Irving Metals Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moss Industries, Inc. v. Irving Metals Co., Inc., 57 A.2d 922, 141 N.J. Eq. 421 (N.J. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Promptly after the final hearing of this cause I filed an ungarnished memorandum in which I announced: "I have given the cause studious consideration, and I have definitely resolved that the counter-claim accompanying the answer of the defendant should be dismissed, and a decree advised in favor of the complainant."

Mr. Irving Reichenthal, who conducts his business activities through the corporate instrumentality known as Irving Metals Company, has chosen to prosecute an appeal which, in view of the decree, is, of course, the right of his company regardless of the activating motive. Hence, in obedience to *Page 422 the constitutional mandate as yet effective I am obliged to acquaint the appellate tribunal with the reasons for my conclusions.

Having been privileged to hear the testimony in the tone and manner in which it was delivered, to observe the courtroom demeanor of the principal witnesses, and particularly to behold the cupidity of Mr. Reichenthal, so arbitrarily and indeed boldly exhibited throughout the entire litigation, I shall undertake to relate the story of the case.

The complainant, Moss Industries, Inc., may be described as a family corporation which has been engaged for approximately a century in the business of manufacturing metal products. The company survived the difficult conditions of the last economic depression. In November, 1946, it became the victim of a so-called jurisdictional labor strike, followed by a more devastating misfortune in February, 1947, in the death of its experienced president.

The deceased president's son, George S. Moss, who was then being educated for admission to the legal profession, succeeded as president of the company and in association with his uncles undertook the management of the business. Parenthetically, I may remark that the young man is noticeably well educated and intelligent, but I conjecture that he had not yet learned from experience or otherwise that there are wolves in the fields of metropolitan business as well as in the woods.

He did, however, soon discover that while the company had valuable assets, the cessation of its manufacturing operations was rapidly creating a shortage of cash. The credit position of the company with the Corn Exchange Bank and Trust Company of New York, Fulton Street Branch, was sufficiently favorable to cause its manager to indulge occasional overdrafts which in the initial stages of that practice were customarily adjusted without alarming delay. The ability of the company to meet overdrafts gradually became more intensely difficult. The ultimate anxiety of the bank manager concerning the payment of remaining overdrafts is a circumstance which threadlike passes through the fabric of this controversy. *Page 423

Among the unencumbered assets of the complainant company was a large quantity of so-called new metals, such as etching brass, stainless steel, nickel silver, all in original unopened cases. At that time the company was paying 50c and 55c a pound for nickel silver, 40c a pound for aluminum, 40c a pound for stainless steel, and 38c a pound for brass. It had in excess of 200,000 pounds of such metals in its warehouse of an aggregate value probably in excess of $70,000. The metals were marketable but, as Mr. Moss describes them, they constituted the "life stream" of the manufacturing operations hopefully to be soon resumed by the company.

The unsatisfied overdrafts, as I recall the evidence, amounted at the time to approximately $12,000, and the bank manager recommended, more likely insisted, that Moss sell some of the metals or, alternatively, utilize them as collateral security for a loan sufficient in amount to pay the overdrafts and to provide some surplus to alleviate the existing painful shortage of liquid resources.

It was in that exigency that the bank manager introduced young Moss to Mr. Reichenthal, a dealer in scrap metals, with money to loan upon a practical and businesslike basis. I heretofore digressed to impart some characterization of Moss. To avoid impartiality in the descriptive lines of my narrative, I pause to present Reichenthal as a shrewd and crafty bargainer who is not likely to be caught in any business transaction with nothing but chaff in his hands.

These gentlemen conferred on May 28th, 1947, and a handwritten memorandum of the terms of their agreement with a copy was prepared. It reads:

"This agreement made 28th day of May 1947 between Irving Metal Co. Inc., Rahway, N.J. Moss Industries Inc. of 113-53 St. Bklyn. Irving Metal Co. Inc. agrees to advance 12c per lb. for brass, Irving Metal Co. to truck said metal both ways. The metal to be kept in storage by Irving Metal Co. Inc. for a period not exceeding one year, permitting Moss Co. to take any and all metal which has been delivered, the Moss Co. to pay 14c per lb. for said metal received by them. There is to be no other charge. Any quantity less than 1000 lb. taken by Moss must be trucked by Moss. This is not a sale but an advance. If Moss fails to take metal back in one year, Irving Metal Co. will retain title. The amount involved not to exceed 200,000 lb." *Page 424

The memorandum which at the very least is indicatory of the footprints of the parties was signed on behalf of the complainant company by Moss as president, but Mr. Reichenthal had unfortunately neglected to have his eye glasses with him (it seems to me I have heard this alleged absolution before), and furthermore he announced that he expected to meet at cards in his club that evening a friend who was an attorney to whose scrutiny he preferred to submit the proposed agreement — an unremunerative imposition so well known to our profession. But let me begin here to season this report of the case with a few quotations from the testimony. Direct examination: "Mr. Reichenthal, when you and these gentlemen were discussing this metal, was there anything said by you to lead them to believe that you were going to loan them any money?" Answer: "I should loan them money?" "Yes." "For what?" "On the metals." * * * "Was there anything said by anyone about loaning them money on the material?" "Loaning them, no." Counsel persevered: "There is in there (the memorandum) some phraseology with regard to them having the right to redeem these materials within a period of a year." "Yes." "Was that ever discussed and agreed to by you?" "Not that I know of." "Do you know?" "No." "It wasn't agreed to by you?" "Not that I know of." Cross-examination: "And this paper sets forth what you talked about. Is that right?" "That's right."

It has been said that some men have two reasons for doing anything — a good reason and the real reason. Their actions, however, often unmask the latter. On the day following the conference to which I have just referred, Reichenthal visited the complainant's plant in Brooklyn and inspected the stock of metals. I fancy that his palms then began to itch. His trucks soon arrived and the physical removal of the metals from the complainant's plant in Brooklyn to the defendant's storehouse in Woodbridge Township, Middlesex County, New Jersey, began. So prompt an arrival of the defendant's trucks seems to exemplify the occurrence of a miracle. "Now, Mr. Reichenthal, did you authorize the sending of any of your trucks and truck drivers to the plant of the Moss Industries *Page 425 to pick up any materials?" "No, sir." "You didn't do that?" "No, sir."

Notwithstanding the unprecedented fortuity to which I have last alluded, it is the acknowledged fact that between May 29th, 1947, and June 10th, 1947, inclusive, 208,000 pounds of the metals were transported by the defendant's vehicles to its storehouse in Woodbridge Township.

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Related

Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Doerr
303 A.2d 898 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1973)
Moss Industries, Inc. v. Irving Metal Co., Inc.
61 A.2d 159 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
57 A.2d 922, 141 N.J. Eq. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-industries-inc-v-irving-metals-co-inc-njch-1948.