National Bank of Washington v. Myers

450 P.2d 477, 75 Wash. 2d 287, 1969 Wash. LEXIS 738
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1969
Docket39306
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 450 P.2d 477 (National Bank of Washington v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Washington v. Myers, 450 P.2d 477, 75 Wash. 2d 287, 1969 Wash. LEXIS 738 (Wash. 1969).

Opinion

*288 Hill, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $75,629.13 entered on June 14, 1966, in an action on a promissory note ($62,961.86 principal, $9,667.27 interest, and $3,000 attorney’s fee). The judgment was in favor of National Bank of Washington, a national banking corporation, and against A. J. Myers and Dorothy I. Myers, his wife. 1

There is a cross-appeal because the judgment limited the amount of attorney’s fee to $3,000.

The defenses (or counterclaim and affirmative defense) to the action on the note present the only issues raised by the appellant and require an understanding of a somewhat complicated business transaction and a prior rescission action.

Dr. A. J. Myers agreed to purchase 22 units of ice manufacturing and vending equipment (two combination ice manufacturing and vending machines—one to be set up in Yakima and one to be set up in Moses Lake—together with 20 ice vending units to be set up at various locations in the Yakima Valley and Columbia Basin areas. 2 This equipment was manufactured in Fort Smith, Arkansas, by the Council Manufacturing Company (hereinafter called Council) and sold to Dr. Myers by the Modern Refrigeration Company (hereinafter called Modern) with offices in Seattle.

The 22 units of ice manufacturing and vending equipment were shipped by Council from Fort Smith. The National Bank of Washington, through its Central Yakima Branch (hereinafter referred to as the Bank), advanced the money to secure the release of the equipment from the carriers and took a promissory note from Dr. Myers in the sum of $63,044.41 to cover the advances made. A chattel mortgage on, the equipment in that amount was given to the Bank as security. The note and chattel mortgage were executed April 9, 1962.

The operation of the equipment began in late April, 1962. Many operational difficulties immediately developed, the *289 technical and detailed character of which we need not describe. Despite the efforts of both Modern and Council, these difficulties were not remedied. On May 24, 1962, Dr. Myers, with the knowledge and on the advice of the branch manager of the Bank, commenced an action against Modern, the seller, and Council, the manufacturer, asking for rescission of the sale and damages.

Council was dismissed from the action because it was not transacting business in the state of Washington; and the rescission action against Modern was set to be tried on March 18, 1963. Despite the pendency of the rescission action, efforts to make the machines operate satisfactorily were continued by Modern and Council, with the acquiescence and approval of Dr. Myers, through the 1962 and 1963 season. 3 Dr. Myers continued his operation of the equipment until it was shut down for the year in October, 1962. Dr. Myers never thereafter operated the equipment.

The situation, as the 1963 operating season approached, was that the rescission action was set for trial on March 18. Modern and Council still believed that the equipment could be made to operate satisfactorily; Dr. Myers was willing to let them try, but refused to accept any financial responsibility for the 1963 operation for fear of further losses.

On March 17, the day before the trial of the rescission action was to begin, an agreement was reached at a meeting in Yakima between Dr. Myers and the representatives of Modern and Council (attorneys representing all parties were present). The agreement was that Modern would pay Dr. Myers $5,000 for a continuance of the trial and as evidence of its good faith in the efforts being made to make the equipment operate satisfactorily. Council agreed to send a man from the factory in Fort Smith, Arkansas, with a truck and trailer loaded with parts for replacements and repairs and with the necessary tools.

Apparently Modern decided that if the repairs were to be satisfactory, it' was necessary that the equipment be *290 operated; and with Dr. Myers refusing to take any financial responsibility for the operation, Modern arranged with Vernon Stone to operate the equipment, after notifying Dr. Myers of its intention.

The $5,000 was paid. Council sent out its man with a truck and trailer loaded with parts as it had agreed. Representatives of Modern and Council worked through the season in an effort to make the equipment operate satisfactorily.

Dr. Myers’ expression concerning the agreement of March 17, and what followed, was as follows: ■

No, they made an effort to avoid the trial as I was hoping could be done by making an agreement, as I mentioned, to put the rollers and belts in, and new doors, a third set of doors on the front, put the coin mechanism outside in a case with a key that locked it so that the coin would go directly through the mechanism rather than through the door, and would generally revamp the machines and guarantee to me that they would then work. In addition, this agreement gave me the opportunity of not only allowing them to do this, but to supervise their operation until they were certain that the changes they made had been properly made, and if I wanted to operate them after that, I could, or if it proved they were not operable--

Dr. Myers inspected the work that was being done during the summer, and insisted that certain things be done. As late as September., 1963, he “inspected a box at the insistence of Mr. Stone.” He personally took one of the machines apart in July to inspect its coin mechanism into which someone had poured a coke. As he expressed it, “Although I wasn’t operating the route, I was trying to help Mr. Stone where I could.”

The insurance on the equipment during the 1963 season was charged to Dr. Myers’ account by the Bank. In the late summer, the insurance company sent a check for $240.16 to Dr. Myers to cover a loss by vandalism. Dr; Myers turned the check over to the Bank; part of the proceeds were applied to the payment of interest ánd principal on the note.

*291 The efforts by Modem and Council to repair the equipment were futile, and the trial of the rescission action commenced on October 14, 1963. Modem had become insolvent and in August, 1963 made a common law assignment for the benefit of creditors to the Seattle Association of Credit Men (hereinafter called SACM). The assignment had been accepted in September, 1963, and SACM intervened in the rescission action.

The case was tried without a jury, and it continued through November 5. The findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment were not signed until April 8, 1964.

The judgment in the rescission action was against Modern; and against SACM as common law assignee for the benefit of the creditors of Modern, for $77,288.19, 4 together with interest thereon from May 24, 1962 (the date of the rescission) .

It was, and is, the contention of Dr. Myers that the judgment should have given him a lien on the equipment he had purchased from Modern.

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Bluebook (online)
450 P.2d 477, 75 Wash. 2d 287, 1969 Wash. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-washington-v-myers-wash-1969.