Tinsley v. Canterbury Shopping Center

1 Va. Cir. 163, 1974 Va. Cir. LEXIS 2
CourtHenrico County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1974
DocketCase No. K-662
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. Cir. 163 (Tinsley v. Canterbury Shopping Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Henrico County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tinsley v. Canterbury Shopping Center, 1 Va. Cir. 163, 1974 Va. Cir. LEXIS 2 (Va. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

By JUDGE E. BALLARD BAKER

A basic issue is what legal rights Richmond Fixture and Equipment had in certain restaurant equipment on April 15, 1971, and whether those rights have been improperly infringed upon by the sale conducted at the request of Canterbury Shopping Center. The chronology of events, and my views as to the consequences, are as follows:

October 5, 1967 - Canterbury Shopping Center, as landlord, leased premises under construction to.Canterbury Old English Pub, Michael W. Matzuk, President of the tenant. Paragraph 10 gave the landlord a lien on fixtures or equipment placed or installed on the premises as security against the default of the tenant.

October 13, 1967 - Canterbury Old English Pub became incorporated as Canterbury Old English Pub, Inc.

[164]*164March 1, 1969 - Canterbury Old English Pub, Inc., took possession of the completed premises under its lease. Due to problems with a beer license, the tenant traded under the name Canterbury Inn, Incorporated, to the knowledge of the Shopping Center. Provisions of the assumed name statute, § 59.1-69 were not complied with, this being known to Shopping Center.

May 29, 1969 - By conditional sales agreement, Richmond Fixtures sold items to the tenant for $31,507.37, believing the tenant to be named Canterbury Inn, Incorporated.

While some of the items could arguably be fixtures, with § 8.9-313 becoming applicable, a consideration of the agreement and the interest of the parties in the leased premises leads to the conclusion that these items are not to be considered as fixtures. While the items have value as a unit in place, they are removable and no intent on the part of either party that they be made permanent parts of the realty has been shown. Danville Holding v. Clement, 178 Va. 223.

June 4, 1969 - Richmond Fixture records a financing statement referring to the conditional sales agreement, but it is recorded in the name of Canterbury Inn, Incorporated, instead of Canterbury Old English Pub, Inc.

At this point, it seems that the items involved are properly "equipment" as defined in § 8.9-109; Richmond Fixture has a "purchase money security interest" on the equipment, § 8.9-107; the security interest has attached, § 8.9-204; the security interest has not been perfected, § 8.9-303, because the filing failed to give the proper name of the debtor — Canterbury Old English Pub, Inc. (Virginia Comment to § 8.9-402.)

Section 8.9-301 tells who takes priority over an unperfected security interest. Sub-section (b) provides that a ". . . person who becomes a lien creditor without knowledge of the security interest and before it is Perfected;" prevails. A "lien creditor" is [165]*165defined in § 8.9-301(3) as a creditor , . who has acquired a lien on the property involved by attachment, levy, or the like. . . ." The lien given under the lease is not sufficient.

Canterbury Shopping Center, Inc., is not a lien creditor and Richmond Fixture would prevail at this stage.

January 16, 1970 - Canterbury Shopping Center, Inc., had a distress warrant levied on certain property on the leased premises, Canterbury Old English Pub, Inc., having fallen behind on the rent. No further action was taken on this levy. The question of whether this levy has the effect of giving priority to Shopping Center will be discussed later.

February 25, 1970 - Shopping Center obtained judgment against Pub, Inc., for possession and $4,705.35, covering rent and other items. The tenant left the premises around this time, leaving the equipment. Shopping Center had the premises padlocked and kept the keys.

Shortly after this, Shopping Center became aware that Richmond Fixture claimed an interest in items left behind by the tenant, though it did not learn the exact property or types of property. It did cooperate with Richmond Fixture, seeking desirable persons to rent the premises and buy the equipment formerly used by the tenant.

January 27, 1971 - Richmond Fixture is advised by Shopping Center that it has begun action to satisfy its $4,705.35 judgment by a sheriff's sale. The letter advises that no record of a lien by Richmond Fixture against Canterbury Old English Pub, Inc., can be found.

January 28, 1971 - The Sheriff executed a writ of fi. fa. at the leased premises.

March 1, 1971 - Richmond Fixture filed an amended financing statement in the proper name, Canterbury Old English Pub, Inc., of its debtor.

[166]*166April 15, 1971 - At a sheriff's sale the property was sold for $5,300. Prior to the sale, Richmond Fixture gave oral notice to those present that it claimed a first lien on all property. Prior to the sale, the Sheriff, on learning of the dispute, required Shopping Center to post an indemnity bond for $30,000.

The security interest of Richmond Fixture was perfected on March 1, 1971. Nothing in Sections 8.9-401 through 8.9-406 is sufficient to make the correction of March 1, 1971, relate the filing back to June 4, 1969. The error in the June 4, 1969, filing was misleading and cannot be termed minor. It prevented the filing from becoming effective. While the Stipulation refers to the March 1, 1971, correction as an "amended financing statement," I find nothing which gives retroactive effect to the correction.

Richmond Fixture had an unperfected security interest until March 1, 1971. Did Shopping Center become a lien creditor of the tenant without knowledge of the security interest and before March 1, 1971?

On January 16, 1970, Shopping Center had a distress warrant levied on the property, and a return was made by the Sheriff. Shopping Center was a lien creditor as long as that levy was alive. Under § 55-237, the return must be filed with the Clerk of the court within sixty days, and if a levy has been made, but property not sold, the clerk can issue a writ of venditioni exponas just as if the return was on a writ of fieri facias (§ 8-418). Assuming that the return was filed, and this is not stated in the Stipulation, there was no further writ issued relative to the distress warrant. While the matter is far from clear, it seems to me that the lien under the distress warrant levy ceased prior to the sale. V.C., § 8-412; Wickham v. Richmond Spike Co., 107 Va. 44; 8 M. J. Executions, §§ 36, 37; 11 M. J. Landlord-Tenant, § 23. A lien cannot remain valid and effective indefinitely with no action taken to enforce it.

[167]*167On January 28, 1971, Shopping Center became a lien creditor when a writ of fieri facias was executed pursuant to the judgment of February 25, 1970. (§ 8-411) On that date, which was before Richmond Fixture perfected its security interest, did Shopping Center have knowledge of the security interest?

Section 8.1 -201 (25)(c) says that, "a person ’knows' or has 'knowledge' of a fact when he has actual knowledge of it." "Knowledge" and "Notice" do not have identical meanings.

Paragraph 9 of the Stipulation states that Shopping Center, prior to January 28, 1971, ". . . became aware that Richmond Fixture claimed an interest in some of the equipment, fixtures and other property left behind by the judgment debtor. Shopping Center never learned the exact property or types of property in which Richmond Fixture claimed an interest . .

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Related

Wickham & Northrop v. Richmond Standard Steel, Spike & Iron Co.
57 S.E. 647 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1907)
Danville Holding Corp. v. Clement
16 S.E.2d 345 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. Cir. 163, 1974 Va. Cir. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinsley-v-canterbury-shopping-center-vacchenrico-1974.