Peterson v. National Discount Corporation

35 P.2d 1097, 179 Wash. 108, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 729
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1934
DocketNo. 25117. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 P.2d 1097 (Peterson v. National Discount Corporation) 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
Peterson v. National Discount Corporation, 35 P.2d 1097, 179 Wash. 108, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 729 (Wash. 1934).

Opinions

Millard, J.

On March 28,1932, J. E. Peterson was appointed receiver of the insolvent Solon Grinding Company, a domestic corporation. This action was instituted by the receiver to set aside, as unlawful preferences, assignments of accounts receivable made by the insolvent corporation to the defendant within four months prior to the date of the filing of the application for the appointment of a receiver of the corporation, and to recover the amounts paid to defendant assignee on assignments made within that period. .

The trial court found that the assignments were given as security for payment of loans of money, and were void as unlawful preferences; that the defendant assignee had collected on the assigned accounts, within four months immediately preceding the receivership, $1,912.68, of which amount $352.92 was collected on accounts that had been assigned to the defendant more than four months before the receivership; and that the receiver was entitled to judgment against defendant assignee in the sum of $1,'912.68, less the credit of $352.92. Judgment was entered accordingly. Defendant has appealed.

The facts are as follows:

The insolvent corporation was engaged in the business of supplying babbit, babbited bearings, and like products, in the Northwest states. The appellant, a domestic finance corporation, was engaged in the business of financing business concerns whose needs are not covered by the ordinary commercial bank. One witness testified, “Our business is generally conducted *110 to financing any business which the banks will not handle.” Appellant states that,

“ . . . in doing this, it bought chattel mortgages, conditional sales contracts, accounts receivable, and occasionally notes, loaned money on chattel mortgages, trust receipts and sold either outright or on conditional sale contract, property repossessed on forfeited conditional sales contracts or chattel mortgages.”

"While appellant purchased at a discount sales contracts, accounts receivable, notes, etc., it was engaged in the business of lending money upon the security of accounts receivable and other security. It is clear that, except in the repossession and sale thereafter of property on forfeited conditional sale contracts or chattel mortgages, the appellant did not engage in the business of buying and selling merchandise or other property.

In 1928, the Solon Grinding Company applied to the appellant for financial assistance. Thereafter, continuing to within three days prior to the appointment of a receiver for the grinding company, money was advanced from time to time by appellant to the grinding company. Certain schedules of accounts receivable were prepared by the grinding company and submitted to the appellant. Upon its approval of the accounts, appellant would advance eighty per cent of the total amount of the accounts, less a service charge and less a discount charge of one per cent a month.

During the four-month period preceding the receivership, the practice was to take the assignments on three periodic dates, one on the 5th, one on the 15th and one on the 25th of each month. Each of the three series had a due date or “sale date” on the same date of the following month. At that time, a new schedule of accounts receivable, containing some of the same accounts, and some new accounts, would be prepared *111 by the grinding company and submitted to the appellant. After discounting the new schedule twenty per cent, plus one per cent interest per month, and the service charge, the appellant would redeliver the old schedule of the accounts receivable to the grinding company and give to the grinding company a check for the difference between the amount of the old assignment and the amount of the new assignment, if there remained a surplus on the new assignment.

Illustrative of this is assignment No. 3055-82, of March 25, 1932. On that date, the grinding company submitted a schedule of accounts receivable, amounting to $980.57. This was discounted $196.11, leaving a balance of $784.46. The handling charges amounted to $13.31. The accounts assigned February 25, 1932, amounted to $1,148.22. A discount of twenty per cent reduced the amount to $918.56. Of those accounts, $147.41 was collected and paid to the appellant. From the debt of February 25, 1932, amounting to $918.56, there was deducted $147.41, the amount collected on the assigned accounts of February 25, 1932, leaving a balance of $771.15 due to appellant on the debt' of $918.56 incurred under the assignment of February 25, 1932. This amount of $771.15 was charged back against the grinding company; that is, the assignment March 25, 1932, of accounts amounted to $980.57. From that, the appellant deducted the discount of twenty per cent, $196.11, the handling charge of $13.31, the indebtedness of February 25, 1932, in the amount of $771.15, or a total of $980.57. There was no surplus this time.

No note or other evidence of indebtedness was given by the grinding company to the appellant.

On the page scheduling the accounts which were assigned is a recital, signed by the grinding company and accepted by the appellant, to the effect that, in *112 consideration of one dollar and other valuable considerations, the grinding company “sells, assigns and sets over” to the appellant all its right, title and interest in and to the accounts receivable listed above. The assignment in each case is conditioned upon lengthy, printed provisions on the back of each assignment, and recites that the grinding company desires to sell to the appellant the open accounts receivable, and that the appellant purchases such accounts on the terms therein stated. Notice Was not given of the assignment of the accounts by the assignor or the assignee to the original debtors, it being understood between the parties that the fact of the assignment should be withheld from such debtors.

The grinding company, pursuant to agreement of the parties, made collections upon the accounts, and from time to time transmitted the original checks received therefor to the appellant. There was an occasional departure from this plan, due to the fact that payments were sometimes made in cash, and in a few instances the collections made were appropriated by the officers of the grinding company.

It appears that, when goods were returned to the grinding company by customers whose accounts had been assigned, the grinding company was permitted to credit its debtor with the value of the goods returned; that is, the grinding company was permitted to “contra” the accounts after assignment by allowing set-offs against the same because of accounts due from the grinding company to individual debtors whose accounts had been assigned to the appellant.

The accounts in the assignor’s accounts receivable ledger assigned to the appellant were stamped by representatives of the grinding company, “This account sold to National Discount Corporation,” with a stamp *113 supplied by tbe appellant to tbe grinding company for that purpose.

The appellant carried the transaction on its books as a loan, and the subsequent assignments were referred to upon the records of appellant as renewals. Credits allowed on new assignments were credited as upon a loan.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.2d 1097, 179 Wash. 108, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-national-discount-corporation-wash-1934.