Napier v. Peoples Stores Co.

120 A. 295, 98 Conn. 414, 33 A.L.R. 499, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 1, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 120 A. 295 (Napier v. Peoples Stores Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Napier v. Peoples Stores Co., 120 A. 295, 98 Conn. 414, 33 A.L.R. 499, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 9 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Beach, J.

This cause was argued at the October Term, 1922, and as the result of that argument we were of opinion that, on the facts found, contracts A, B, and C had been broken by the defendant before the appointment of the receiver, and that contract D remained in force and unbroken at that date. A re-argument was ordered at the January Term on the single point whether the claim arising under contract D was allowable. As the questions involved are quite distinct, we discuss them separately.

Contracts A, B, C.

Under contract A, the sugar was to be delivered within the month of July, or as soon thereafter as possible; under contract B, within the month of August, or as soon thereafter as possible; and under contract C, within the month of September, or as soon thereafter as possible. The temporary receiver was not appointed until September 24th, and it is found that on September 23d—taking the latest date—the defendant repudiated all four of the contracts, by refusing to furnish further assortments and by refusing to accept sugar if it were shipped. On that date the time had arrived *418 within which the defendant was bound to take all the sugar contracted for by contracts A, B, and C. Under A and B assortments had been furnished; and under C the failure of the defendant to furnish an assortment had left the claimant free to ship available grades. On the findings all of the contracts were in full force, and the defendant was in the position of a debtor whose debt is payable on demand. It was under a present obligation to accept on shipment, and when it repudiated that obligation, by refusing to accept sugar if it were shipped, the contracts were broken. No waiting period remained before the time for performance within which the defendant might, unless notified of the claimant's election to treat the contract as prematurely ended, change it's mind, and tender performance when performance became due. A present obligation was repudiated and a present cause of action arose. The claimant was not bound to tender delivery of the sugar before bringing suit, because the defendant had waived that formality by refusing to accept it if it were shipped. Besides, the claimant had repeatedly asked the defendant to take delivery. Sales Act, §§ 4714, 4730. As to these three contracts the breach was complete, and a right of action for damages arose before the receiver was appointed on September 24th. The breach was not cured by the subsequent ineffectual attempts of the claimant to induce the defendant and the receiver to withdraw the repudiation, and the rule in Wells v. Hartford Manilla Co. has no application to the claims arising under contracts A, B, and C.

Contract D.

The claim arising out of this contract stands on a different footing. The time specified for delivery had not begun to run when the repudiation occurred. No present right of action could arise unless the claimant signified its election to treat the defendant's premature *419 repudiation as an anticipatory breach. It did not do so, and on the findings contract D remained in force and unbroken when the receiver was appointed. If we are to follow the rule laid down in the Hartford Manilla Co. case, the claim was properly disallowed, or at least it should be postponed in payment until all claims matured before the receivership have been paid. But in view of recent developments in the law as to the provability of unmatured claims in receivership proceedings, we deem it advisable to re-examine the subject.

When the Hartford Manilla Co. case was decided, in 1903, there was an indecisive conflict of authority upon the question whether claimants, who had been deprived by a receivership of the fruits of executory contracts unbroken at the date of the appointment, were or were not entitled to share in the assets on a parity with claimants whose contracts had been breached before the receiver was appointed. There were indeed but few decisions directly in point, and none is cited in the opinion.

So far as we know, there were in 1903 four cases, three of them in the New Jersey reports, holding that such unmatured claims were provable. Spader v. Mural Decoration Mfg. Co. (1890), 47 N. J. Eq. 18, 20 Atl. 378; Rosenbaum v. U. S. Credit System Co. (1898), 61 N. J. Law, 543, 40 Atl. 591; Bolles v. Crescent Drug & Chemical Co. (1895), 53 N. J. Eq. 615, 32 Atl. 1061, and New York Security & Trust Co. v. Lombard Inv. Co. (1896), 73 Fed. Rep. 537. Against these stood People v. Globe Mut. Life Ins. Co. (1883), 91 N. Y. 174; Lenoir v. Linville Imp. Co. (1900), 126 N. Car. 922, 36 S. E. 185, and Malcomson v. Wappoo Mills Co. (1898), 88 Fed. Rep. 680.

This unsatisfactory condition of the authorities remained, with some reinforcement on each side, until *420 the prolonged and complicated receiverships of the Metropolitan Street Railway and the New York City Railways invited a thorough reexamination of the principles underlying the provability of claims in receivership proceedings. Judge Noyes said of the state of the law in 1912: “This evolution of the creditors’ bill into the proceeding by which courts of equity undertake the general administration of the estates of corporations has not, however, brought with it any well defined principles with respect to the provability of claims of creditors. Leading textbooks hardly mention the subject and the authorities are few and far between. It is altogether a mistake to assume that cases like the present can be determined by the application of hard and fast rules. . . . They have yet to be formulated.” Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York City Ry. Co., 198 Fed. Rep. 721, 737, 738. In the same year the Supreme Court of Louisiana in a well-reasoned opinion, based on equitable considerations, allowed a claim based on a contract for the delivery of lumber, which had been partly performed and was in force and unbroken when the receiver was appointed,— the claim being for the difference between the contract price of the undelivered portion of the lumber contracted for, and its market price at the date of the receivership. And in doing so it observed that the weight of authority in this country was the other way. Peck v. Southwestern Lumber & Exporting Co., 131 La. 178, 59 So. 113.

Such was, in substance, the state of the authorities when the leading case of the Metropolitan Express Company’s claim was decided by the Circuit Court of Appeals in this circuit, reported under the name of Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York City Ry. Co., 198 Fed. Rep. 721, 735. The claimant had a contract by which the Metropolitan Railway Company had leased to it *421 for the term of twenty years the exclusive right of moving express matter over its system of street railways.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Longo
469 A.2d 1220 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1984)
Connecticut Junior Republic v. Sharon Hospital
448 A.2d 190 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1982)
Webster v. Southern California First National Bank
68 Cal. App. 3d 407 (California Court of Appeal, 1977)
French v. Nabob Silver-Lead Company
350 P.2d 206 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1960)
Rosnick v. Aetna Sheet Metal Works, Inc.
153 A.2d 435 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1959)
Herald Publishing Co. v. Bill
111 A.2d 4 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1955)
In Re the Dissolution of the Edgewood Park Junior College, Inc.
192 A. 561 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1937)
Bowers v. Great Northern Railway Co.
259 N.W. 99 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)
In re Brooks Sample Furniture Co.
4 F. Supp. 858 (D. Connecticut, 1933)
International Paper Co. v. Priscilla Co.
183 N.E. 58 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1932)
Block v. Bell Furniture Co.
162 A. 414 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1932)
T. A. D. Jones Co. v. Winchester Repeating Arms Co.
55 F.2d 944 (D. Connecticut, 1932)
Haddaway v. Smith
277 S.W. 728 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
American Sugar Refining Co. v. Blake
128 A. 523 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)
Baird v. Baird Hat Co.
120 A. 299 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1923)
Rosenfield v. Connecticut Fruit & Commission Co.
119 A. 895 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 A. 295, 98 Conn. 414, 33 A.L.R. 499, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/napier-v-peoples-stores-co-conn-1923.