United States v. Boston & Berlin Transportation Co.

237 F. Supp. 1004, 15 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 22, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8422
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 13, 1964
DocketCiv. A. No. 1674
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 237 F. Supp. 1004 (United States v. Boston & Berlin Transportation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Boston & Berlin Transportation Co., 237 F. Supp. 1004, 15 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 22, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8422 (D.N.H. 1964).

Opinion

CONNOR, District Judge.

This was a trial, without a jury, of the issues remaining between the United States of America as plaintiff and Catherine Nevins as intervening defendant, and represents the last stage of a suit for tax lien enforcement which commenced eight years ago. The fund in which both present litigants claim priority is held in an escrow account in the Berlin Savings Bank & Trust Company in the name of J. L. Blais, trustee for Romeo J. Lavigne. These funds in escrow constitute the remaining assets of the Boston and Berlin Transportation Company, against which the tax liens herein are being asserted.

The factual background leading up to the present trial is as follows. The Boston and Berlin Transportation Company, hereinafter referred to as the corporation, borrowed $13,900.80 on December 14, 1951, and executed a mortgage on its rolling stock as security. Because of the insecure financial condition of the corporation, Mrs. Catherine Nevins was required to sign the note as “co-maker” in her individual capacity.1 The mortgage was duly recorded in the City Clerk's Office in Berlin, New Hampshire, on December 17, 1951; and two days later the note and mortgage were assigned for value to the Howard National Bank & Trust Company of Burlington, Vermont, hereinafter referred to as the bank.

On February 15, 1952, the corporation entered into a contract to sell its motor carrier business, including the mortgaged rolling stock, to Romeo J. Lavigne for $27,000.00. The terms of the contract provided that Lavigne would pay to the mortgagee bank the balance due on the note, and would pay the rest of the $27,000.00 consideration to the corporation. The mortgagee bank agreed to this transaction. There was no novation effected on the note; the mortgage was in no way altered.

From March through November, 1952, a series of tax liens against the eorporation were duly filed. On June 8, 1953, the note and mortgage were assigned to “Arthur O. Dupont att. for Romeo J. Lavigne.” At some time in 1953, Lavigne ceased making payments under his contract of purchase, but on May 26,1954, he gave a note to the corporation in the amount of $12,685.12, the unpaid balance. On May 19, 1955, the District Director of Internal Revenue at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, caused to be served on Lavigne a notice of levy to secure the collection of taxes claimed to be due from the corporation. From that date, the weekly payments by Lavigne were deposited in Savings Account No. 27159 at the Berlin Savings Bank and Trust Company. These weekly payments of pi'incipal and interest amounted to $5,400.21 and constitute the escrow fund here in dispute. The amount now totals over six thousand dollars.

The validity of the tax lien of the United States is not here disputed. Mrs. Nevins intervened as a defendant in the proceedings, however, to assert a prior claim to the funds in escrow by virtue of her position as putative assignee of the mortgage on the rolling stock of the corporation. Mrs. Nevins claims, in effect, that she made certain payments to the bank on the note, that she subsequently became the assignee of the mortgage and note, and that the assignment of the mortgage gives her a secured interest in the assets of the corporation.

In passing upon the claim of Mrs. Nevins, there are five issues of fact and law which must be inquired into: (1) the amount of her payments on the note; (2) her status with respect to the note; (3) her status with respect to the mortgage; (4) the priority as between the mortgage and the tax lien; and (5) the relation between the security represented by the mortgage and the actual funds held in escrow.

(1) Attorney Arthur O. Dupont was the only witness who testified at the trial. It appears that, with respect to the [1007]*1007transactions involved in this litigation, Dupont acted simultaneously as agent for Mrs. Nevins, the corporation, and Romeo Lavigne. Dupont testified that he handled through his trust account funds advanced by Mrs. Nevins and funds paid by Romeo Lavigne, that he kept track of these funds in separate ledger accounts, and that he channeled these funds to the bank, to the corporation, and to the corporation’s creditors on behalf of the corporation. Dupont testified that in this manner Mrs. Nevins had advanced substantial sums to shore up the sagging finances of the corporation. Various figures were mentioned during the course of the trial as being the contributions of Mrs. Nevins. The only advances relevant here, however, are these made by Mrs. Nevins in payment of the note to the bank. Dupont’s final testimony with respect to these note payments was that she had paid the first nine installments on the note, from January through September, 1952, and that these payments totaled $5,200.70.

Evidence tending to counter Dupont’s assertion took two forms. The answers to interrogatories submitted by Lavigne in 1956, two years before Mrs. Nevins intervened, state that Lavigne paid to the bank the entire amount of the mortgage between September 15, 1952, and June 10, 1953. A financial statement of the corporation furnished to the Internal Revenue Service on October 30, 1953, and signed by both Dupont and Mrs. Nevins, states that Lavigne had been making the payments to the bank. Dupont was unable to supply a satisfactory explanation for these two exhibits. He did state, however, that Mrs. Nevins must have made the payments because the corporation had no money to do so, and because Lavigne was not legally permitted to do so until September, 1952. He also produced a check representing payment of the second and third installments, which ■check was drawn on his trust account from funds held in the name of Mrs. Nevins in her individual capacity. He further pointed out that the last payment to the bank listed by Lavigne and equal-ling nine installments on the note was dated June 10,1953, or two days after the bank had assigned the note to Dupont. Dupont’s testimony was also to the effect that Mrs. Nevins had not received any reimbursement for her payments.

On the basis of the above testimony, I find that Mrs. Nevins did make the first nine payments on the note to the bank and that she has not been reimbursed for these payments. I further find that the figures presented by Lavigne are reliable to the extent that they represent the amounts of money paid by Lavigne. I find, however, that the payments by Lavigne were made not directly to the bank, but rather were disbursed to and through the trust accounts of Dupont. How much of Lavigne’s payments were allocated by Dupont to the bank, to the corporation, and to the corporation’s creditors, remains, due to Dupont’s ambiguous status, somewhat of a mystery. I further find that Dupont’s hasty mathematical calculations on the witness stand are slightly inaccurate, and that the amount of the nine installments ($579.20 each) is $5,212.80 rather than $5,200.70 as testified.

(2) Although the face of the note in question contains the signature of Mrs. Nevins as “co-maker,” Dupont testified that she signed the note only because she “didn’t have much choice” ; that otherwise the corporation would not have received the loan. Under these circumstances, I find that Mrs. Nevins signed the note not as a principal obligor, but as a surety. Cf. Derry Bank v. Baldwin, 41 N.H. 434 (1860); Grafton Bank v. Kent, 4 N.H. 221 (1827).

(3) Dupont testified that, although the assignments of the note and mortgage were to himself at “att. for Romeo J. Lavigne,” he was in fact acting as agent for Mrs. Nevins as well. On this basis, Mrs. Nevins claims that she is now the assignee of that mortgage.

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237 F. Supp. 1004, 15 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 22, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-boston-berlin-transportation-co-nhd-1964.