Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Cody Finance Co.

214 F.2d 695, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2756
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 1954
Docket4781_1
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 214 F.2d 695 (Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Cody Finance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Cody Finance Co., 214 F.2d 695, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2756 (10th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

HÚXMAN,' Circuit Judgé.

This is a contest between the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, herein called the RFC, and the Cody Finance Company, a co-partnership, .herein called the finance company, over who has the superior .right to. the possession of certain assets of ..the-Motor Sales Corporation for the .purpose of liquidating them, in order to apply .the pro.eeéds.from such liquidation in satisfaction of the claim each has against the motor .company. This is an appeal from the judgment of the trial court determining that the finance company by virtue of two assignment agreements was the owner of certain accounts and notes receivable in question to the exclusion of the RFC, which claimed a prior lien thereon.

The decision in the case turns upon whether the appellee, the finance company, had actual knowledge or facts to-put it upon inquiry, when it took its assignments of the accounts and bills receivable as security for its loan, of a prior assignment of the same assets to the RFC to secure a loan to it and, if it had sufficient information to put it upon inquiry, whether it sufficiently discharged the duty then resting upon it so as to give it a first and prior claim to the assets, notwithstanding that its assignment was subsequent in point of time to that of the RFC.

There is little dispute in the facts. The Motor Sales Company, a Wyoming corporation, was engaged in the business of selling automobiles at Cody, Wyoming. It did a large business and required extensive financing. On March 24, 1950, it borrowed $94,000 from the RFC. To secure this loan it executed certain mort *697 'gages arid a document entitled “Blanket Assignment of Accounts and Notes Receivable.” This instrument was not placed of record. It assigned to the RFC notes and accounts receivable then 'held or thereafter acquired while any indebtedness remained due on the loan. It permitted the motor company to retain possession of the securities, deposit the proceeds thereof in- its own bank account in the First National Bank of •Cody, and use them in its business. It required the motor company to maintain notes and accounts receivable in an amount of at least $30,000, with right of substitution. It provided that if at any time the accounts receivable fell below $30,000 the motor company agreed to deposit cash in the bank in trust for the RFC, which together with the notes and bills receivable on hand, would equal $30,000. The instrument constituted the bank the agent of the motor company to-check the accounts and report the •status- thereof to the RFC. It provided in the event of default in the amount of the required deposits that the entire ■amount of the indebtedness should become due and all such notes and accounts 'receivable should immediately become ¡the property of the RFC for the purpose ■of applying the proceeds thereof upon ,the indebtedness then due and that upon notification by the RFC the bank should .-then hold the' cash and notes and bills for ,the use and benefit of the RFC. Neither .the bank, the denominated agent of the .motor company, nor the motor company ¡had, copies of the agreement in their •files.

1 Sometime thereafter, the motor company needed additional financing to continue in business. On October 25, 1950, it obtained a loan of $30,000 from the finance company. On that date it executed two instruments -denominated “Assignment Agreement,' Chattel Mortgage and Real Estate Mortgage.” By !the terms thereof the motor company assigned to the finance company all notes receivable, accounts receivable and all money then due or to become due to the motor company in connection with its automobile and garage business, with authority to have and to hold and collect the same, and providing that the funds so collected and received should be the property of the finance company and should not be credited or deposited to the account of the motor sales company. These instruments were filed and recorded in the office of the county clerk.

The notes and accounts receivable so pledged were left in the custody of the motor company until about November 9, 1950. At that time the manager of the finance company, becoming alarmed at the financial status of the motor company, removed all the securities to his own place of business, where they remained except for a brief occasion when they were temporarily returned to the motor company in order that certain bookkeeping entries might be made.

The trial court made findings of fact. It found as a fact that the finance company made a seareh such as a reasonable prudent person would have made under like circumstances to ascertain if the assets involved were encumbered and found no existing encumbrance thereon. Based upon these and other findings, it concluded as a matter of law, 116 F.Supp. 700, that the RFC did not obtain title to the securities under its instruments and had only an equitable lien thereon. It further concluded that the finance company was a bona fide purchaser for value of the assets without actual or constructive notice of the claim of the RFC and, .as such, was entitled to the assets and the proceeds thereof.

RFC in its appeal assigns two errors on which it relies for reversal. They may be combined and stated as one, as follows: 1. Th,e court erred in finding and holding that the finance company was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice of a claim of the RFC and that it made a good faith investigation, such as a reasonable prudent person would make to ascertain the existence of other claims against these assets.

While expressing doubt that the finance company had notice of facts or circumstances imposing a duty to make *698 an inquiry, the court found that it had made a bona fide search to ascertain the existence, if any, of pre-existing liens on these assets, such as a reasonably prudent person would have made under like circumstances, and that such search revealed no proof of the existence of the instrument to the RFC. The rule with respect to the duty to make inquiry is well stated in 66 C.J.S., Notice, § llb(2), page 645, as follows: “When a person has notice of circumstances which put him upon inquiry, and he actually makes due inquiry into the circumstances and either fails to discover the existence of any rights in conflict with his own or becomes satisfied that the suspicions which have been awakened are unwarranted, or that a change in the circumstances has obviated the grounds of his apprehension, he is to be regarded as having acted bona fide and without notice of the fact.”

The facts from which it must be determined whether, assuming that the finance company had knowledge of circumstances sufficient to put it upon inquiry, it made a bona fide search is to be determined from the following facts. Ernest J. Goppert was the General Manager of the finance company. He was also a practicing attorney and an officer of the First National Bank of Cody. Practicing with him was Jerry Housel, who was Assistant Manager of the finance company, handling many of its transactions, and was its General Manager in Goppert’s absence. At the time he was also the attorney for the Motor Sales Company. At the time Leggett, the Manager of the Motor Sales Company, approached the finance company for this loan, Goppert was on a visit to Sedan, Kansas. The motor company was in financial distress and its business was about to be closed up and time was of the essence in procuring this loan from the finance company. Accordingly Leg-gett and Housel phoned Goppert at Sedan, Kansas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 F.2d 695, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reconstruction-finance-corp-v-cody-finance-co-ca10-1954.