Rochester Capital Leasing Corp. v. K & L Litho Corp.

13 Cal. App. 3d 697, 91 Cal. Rptr. 827
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 1970
DocketCiv. 35819
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 13 Cal. App. 3d 697 (Rochester Capital Leasing Corp. v. K & L Litho Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rochester Capital Leasing Corp. v. K & L Litho Corp., 13 Cal. App. 3d 697, 91 Cal. Rptr. 827 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered against Rochester Capital Leasing Corp. (Rochester), appellant, which as plaintiff *700 sought damages allegedly arising from the breach of three lease agreements, hereinafter defined, entered into by the various defendants (respondents).

In August 1962, Harry Kater and Milton Lieberman, both defendants in this action, organized defendant K & L Litho Corporation (Litho) to engage in the business of printing. Messrs. Kater and Lieberman acquired presses and other equipment, financing a large part of the purchase price with the proceeds of a $9,400 note obtained from the Bank of America. In November 1962, an agreement was concluded between Litho and Rochester whereby Litho conveyed title to the presses and equipment and other personal property including those items purchased with money borrowed from the Bank of America, to Rochester. Concurrently Rochester leased the same personal property to Litho. The lease required Litho to pay Rochester $511.38 each month for 60 consecutive months.

Under the lease-back arrangement, Litho retained the use of the presses and the equipment and received from Rochester the sum of $22,728.16. Said sum was disbursed in California through an escrow established by the parties pursuant to a notice given under Civil Code, section 3440. Bank of America and other creditors of respondents were paid and title to the personal property was cleared prior to or concurrently with the sale and lease-back between the parties.

Simultaneously, an identical separate arrangement relating to a single press, title to which was originally vested in Kater Engraving Company (Kater), also a named defendant, was executed with the exception that the payments amounted to $57.33 per month for a period of 60 months.

In March 1963, a further agreement was executed which provided for the advance of $1,230 for the repair of two of the presses. Messrs. Kater and Lieberman obligated themselves to pay $28.41 a month for 60 months under this agreement. (The sales and concurrent lease-back agreements made by the different defendants with Rochester, will hereinafter be referred to as the Rochester agreements.)

In March 1964, the personal property subject to the Rochester agreements was assigned, with the consent of Rochester, to Coast Productions (Coast), a printing business owned and operated by persons other than Kater and Lieberman.

The Rochester agreements provided that the filing of an involuntary petition in bankruptcy against lessees would constitute a breach. In the event of breach, Rochester was empowered by the lease to take possession of the personal property without demand or notice to lessee. No provision was made for the sale of the property. On January 14, 1965, an involun *701 tary petition was filed against Coast. Coast as successor-lessee was and had been in arrears since October 15, 1964, in its payments under the Rochester agreements, and was in arrears in its obligations to other creditors. Rochester then proceeded to sell at public auction personal property described in the Rochester agreements. Respondents contended that there never was a proper sale.

The trial court found that the Rochester agreements made in the form of lease-backs were not lease-backs but were transactions representing loans of money made by Rochester to respondents at usurious rates of interest and that the security for such loans was the personal property which respondents conveyed to Rochester.

The finding of the trial court that the Rochester agreements were loans secured by chattels and that the lease-back arrangement disguises the true nature of the transactions is based upon abundant testimony and numerous exhibits. We are guided not “. . . by what the parties appear to be or represent themselves to be doing, but by the transaction as disclosed by the evidence.” (Golden State Lanes v. Fox, 232 Cal.App.2d 135, 139 [42 Cal.Rptr. 568].)

At bench, Litho received $22,728.16 as the alleged purchase price from Rochester upon the execution of the two lease-back agreements relative to the presses and complementary equipment. A third agreement, entered into some months afterwards, called for the repair of certain of the presses and did not provide for any “lease” but merely for periodic payments by Litho. Under all three agreements, Litho bound itself to pay Rochester a total of $35,827.20 over the ensuing five-year period. This amount represents a difference of $13,099.04 between Rochester’s payment to Litho, and the latter’s total payments under the “lease” agreements.

The total lease payments required from respondents amounted to a sum equal to the original advance referred to as purchase price made by Rochester to respondents, plus interest for the term of the advance or loan. The term of the lease itself was coincidental with the period of time during which the principal sum and the interest thereon were to be paid to the lessor. After the expiration of the original lease period, the lessee had the option to renew, but the payments under the renewed principal lease were to drop sharply to $227.28 per year, a nominal sum in comparison to $6,136.56, the annual payment under the original term of the lease. An option to repurchase the presses does not appear in the record before us; however, the absence of such an option is not, in view of the particular facts of this transaction, determinative. (Project. California Chattel Se *702 curity and Article Nine of the Uniform Commercial Code, 8 U.C.L.A. L.Rev. 806, 827.) It is clear that in substance the parties created a debit and credit relationship which was not terminated until Litho had fully paid the sum borrowed plus interest. Such a debit and credit relationship is, of course, characteristic of a loan. (Burr v. Capital Reserve Corp., 71 Cal.2d 983, 991 [80 Cal.Rptr. 345, 458 P.2d 185].)

On appeal, Rochester does not seriously question that the transactions at bench were in fact loans and the evidence is indisputable that Rochester’s money was to be returned at a profit of 11.5 percent per annum.

No evidence was introduced nor is any argument made which would tend to establish that the so-called “rentals” in the Rochester agreements could reasonably or otherwise equate with an amount for which presses and equipment of the kind covered by the Rochester agreements would rent for on the open market. There is, however, testimony to the effect that the “rental” amounts were calculated with an eye upon Rochester’s expected rate of return on its investment. In fact, Rochester’s course of conduct after Coast’s failure to meet its obligations under the Rochester agreements, including the bringing of this action, corroborates the trial court’s conclusion that Rochester itself looked upon the transactions at bench as loans.

“In determining whether a transaction constitutes a loan, the significant consideration is the substance of the transaction rather than its form or the terminology used by the parties.” (Burr v. Capital Reserve Corp., 71 Cal.2d 983, 989 [80 Cal.Rptr.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Cal. App. 3d 697, 91 Cal. Rptr. 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochester-capital-leasing-corp-v-k-l-litho-corp-calctapp-1970.