Sullivan MacH. Co. v. Griffith, Rec.

94 Pa. Super. 207, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 164
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1928
DocketAppeal 1562
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 Pa. Super. 207 (Sullivan MacH. Co. v. Griffith, Rec.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan MacH. Co. v. Griffith, Rec., 94 Pa. Super. 207, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 164 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Plaintiff, Sullivan Machinery Company, a Massachusetts corporation, was the vendor in a certain conditional sales contract, by which it sold certain mining machinery to Bowena Coal Company, a Delaware corporation, having its principal office in the city of Johnstown, Cambria County, and owning coal lands in Somerset County, Pa. The defendant, Boy T. Griffith, was appointed receiver of Bowena Coal Company by the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County sitting in equity. Claiming that under the terms of the contract it was entitled to repossess itself of the machinery by reason of the vendee’s default in making certain payments, plaintiff, by permission of the proper court of Cambria County, instituted an action of replevin in the Common Pleas of Somerset County on December 8, 1926, gave the required bond and obtained possession of the property. The contract was dated April 22, 1925, (prior to the Conditional Sales Act of May 12, 1925, P. L. 603), and provided that the price of the machinery, $2,021.95, should be paid: one-third in thirty days from date of bill of lading; one-third in sixty; and the remainder in ninety days from that date, with interest on the second and third payments. The first instalment was paid but the vendee defaulted • on the ' second and third. The contract contained the usual provision that “title and right of possession” to the machinery should *210 remain in the vendor until the same had been fully paid for. The replevin case came on for trial upon plaintiff’s declaration, with an amendment thereto, and an affidavit of defense filed by the receiver. The averments of fact in the declaration relative to the execution of the contract (a copy of which was attached) and the default of the conditional vendee were admitted in the affidavit of defense but the receiver therein set up the affirmative defense that the No wen a Coal Company was insolvent at the time of the institution of the equity proceedings in Cambria County, which resulted in the receivership. The pleadings in this case, unlike those in Deere Plow Co. v. Hershey et al, 287 Pa. 92, hereinafter referred to, squarely raised the issue of the insolvency of the vendee at least as early as August, 1926. It is stated in the declaration that Griffith “was appointed receiver” of the coal company but nothing is therein averred with respect to the purpose of his appointment or the extent of the powers conferred upon him by the decree. The affidavit of defense, however, is specific and avers that the company was insolvent as early as May 3, 1926, upon which date one, W. C. Wilson, was appointed its temporary receiver, and is still insolvent. After averring the appointment of Griffith as permanent receiver on August 3, 1926, the affidavit pleads that he “has the right of a levying creditor and took good title to the machinery in question as against the plaintiff,” and, as the receiver of the purchaser, an insolvent corporation, is entitled “to the right of possession of the goods and chattels sought to be replevied. ’ ’ At the trial counsel for plaintiff offered in evidence the averments of the declaration admitted by the affidavit of defense, together with the copy of the contract attached to the declaration, and rested. In support of the averments of the affidavit of defense, the decree of the Common Pleas of Cambria County at No. 8, June Term, 1926, Equity Docket, dated Au *211 gust 3, 1926, appointing Griffith receiver and S. E. Dickey and M. J. Bracken appraisers to inventory and appraise the coal company’s assets, was offered and admitted in evidence. The appraisers were not called but their report, showing a total appraisement of $91,119.40, was admitted under objection. The receiver was permitted to testify, over plaintiff’s objection, that the total indebtedness of the corporation at the time of the receivership, including interest to date, was $186,066.41. H'e also testified that his efforts to dispose of the property by public sale under the direction of the court had failed up to that time, and other evidence, not material to the question involved on this appeal, was received under objection. At the conclusion of the evidence the learned trial judge directed a verdict in favor of the defendant for the sum of $1,566, the amount admittedly in controversy under the pleadings. Later, namely, on January 6, 1928, the court below, on plaintiff’s motion for judgment n. o. v., entered judgment in its favor and against the receiver “for the property named and described in the writ” and from this judgment Ave have the present appeal by the receiver. If this conditional vendee was in fact insolvent when the defendant was appointed its receiver on August 3, 1926, (and the evidence clearly indicates that it was) the final judgment of the court below is unjust and illegal because it gives this conditional vendor a preference over the other creditors of the coal company. The ease must turn upon the question of the legal rights of the receiver in the replevied machinery.

The distinction between the rights of receivers appointed to Avind up the affairs of an insolvent corporation and those of mere temporary receivers appointed to conduct the business of an embarrassed corporation as a going concern was clearly indicated by the present Chief Justice in Deere Plow Co. v. Hershey, supra. We quote the following' from the opinion in *212 that case as applicable to the case at bar, with the exception already noted that here the question of insolvency is directly raised by the pleadings: “Appellants contend defendant company was insolvent when receivers were named for it; that, the corporation being insolvent, the receivers were vested with all the rights of attaching or levying creditors against personal property in its possession. Against such creditors, a conditional vendor’s title was of no avail at the time this suit arose (Haak v. Linderman, 64 Pa. 499, 501; Thompson v. Paret, 94 Pa. 275, 280; Ott v. Sweatman, 166 Pa. 217, 221; Duplex Printing Co. v. Clipper Co.,, 213 Pa. 207, 211; Schmidt v. Bader, 284 Pa. 41, 45); and, under the Duplex Printing Co. case, supra, a receiver appointed to represent creditors of an insolvent corporation had the rights of levying or attaching creditors: see also General Electric Co. v. Richardson, 233 Fed. 84, 86. But the trouble with defendant’s position on these points is, first, that the pleading's do not raise them as issues in the ease; next, waiving that consideration as not insisted on before us, neither plaintiff’s statement of claim nor defendant’s affidavit of defense (see Hallowell v. Williams, 217 Pa. 501, 504-5) avers that, as a matter of fact, defendant corporation was insolvent when receivers were appointed for it. It is well known that, under some circumstances, receivers may be appointed for a solvent but embarrassed corporation (Cowan v. Pa. Plate Glass Co., 184 Pa. 1, 9; Blum Bros. v. Girard Nat. Bank, 248 Pa. 148, 156; Schipper Bros. Co. v. Economy Coal Co. 277 Pa. 356, 362; Cuncliffe v. Consumers’ Assn., 280 Pa. 263, 267), and in such case the receivers have no greater rights, as against a conditional vendor, than are possessed by the conditional vendee himself. ’ ’

The proceedings for this receivership were instituted in Cambria County by W. A. Sheeler, Jr., and J. D. Keiper, but neither their bill in equity nor the *213

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Related

Fried v. Fabiani
182 A. 717 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
In re Coover
19 Pa. D. & C. 25 (Cumberland County Court of Common Pleas, 1932)
Sullivan MacHinery Co. v. Griffith
99 Pa. Super. 589 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
94 Pa. Super. 207, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-mach-co-v-griffith-rec-pasuperct-1928.