Weidman Lumber Co. v. Spear

18 N.W.2d 429, 311 Mich. 208, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 398
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1945
DocketDocket No. 10, Calendar No. 42,655.
StatusPublished

This text of 18 N.W.2d 429 (Weidman Lumber Co. v. Spear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weidman Lumber Co. v. Spear, 18 N.W.2d 429, 311 Mich. 208, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 398 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

*209 Reid, J.

'Plaintiff appeals from a judgment for defendants in an action tried before the circuit judge without a jury. The facts are set forth in a stipulation of facts with exhibits attached thereto. The suit is for lumber delivered after a petition in involuntary bankruptcy had been filed and before the appointment of a trustee in bankruptcy. Plaintiff claims that the sale of the lumber was made to defendants by George L. Connors as receiver, after, qualifying as such, having been appointed by order of the circuit court for Ontonagon county; that the receiver could not sell except for cash, had no right to sell the lumber to pay a pre-existing debt owed to defendants; 'that Abbott M. Pox was appointed by the Federal court temporary trustee in bankruptcy on April 22, 1938, and qualified as such, April 23, 1938; that the plan of. reorganization tendered in the answer of Weidman Lumber Company in the bankruptcy matter on April 15, 1938, claiming the benefit of section 77 B. of the bankruptcy laws, was approved by the Federal court on April 22, 1938; that after the reorganization had been arranged for, the Federal court on March'23, 1940, constituted plaintiff successor to Fox, temporary trustee in bankruptcy; that thereupon plaintiff became vested with all the power, right and authority of the temporary trustee to bring action against defendants on the theory that as upon a quasi-contractual obligation defendants owed plaintiff for the lumber received by them without being entitled to á set-off for the pre-existing debt; that such suit does not involve a preference.

Plaintiff company in its brief further recites its answers to questions propounded by the trial judge not answered in the written stipulation of facts: first, that no claim was filed by defendants in the *210 bankruptcy case; and second, the statement of the president of plaintiff company, that plaintiff has sufficient assets to pay the creditors of plaintiff a dividend of 20 per cent.; that the chances of creditors receiving 40 per cent, are very slight and over 40 per cent, nonexistent.

These statements as to creditors of plaintiff company must be taken to refer to conditions as they stood before the reorganization, especially in view of the following statement also recited by plaintiff as made to the trial judge:

“As the court has undoubtedly gathered from the plan of reorganization of Weidman Lumber Company submitted1 in this matter, the various unsecured creditors of that company accepted class A common stock in the reorganized company for the full amount of their claims, such stock being issued on the basis of $10 a share. Under the plan of reorganization the stockholders of the original Weidman Lumber Company were given 2 years within which to buy back the company by paying the unsecured creditors 50 cents on the dollar. This limitation has long since expired, and -the stockholders of the original Weidman Lumber Company have not made any attempt to redeem their company. As it now stands the unsecured creditors of the original Weidman Lumber Company will have to be paid, if at all, out of the value of the stock which they hold in the reorganized company.”

Defendants do not deny these statements recited in plaintiff’s brief as made to the trial judge. We may take such statements as true as far as concerns the claims and theories of the party making them, which is the plaintiff itself. Some such plan to bring the corporation out of a bankrupt condition would be a prerequisite of the Federal court’s order terminating the temporary trusteeship.

*211 It is considered, therefore, as far as plaintiff’s theories and1 claims in this case are concerned, that after March 23, 1940, the date of the order of the Federal court terminating the trusteeship in bankruptcy, the plaintiff was no longer bankrupt but was entirely free from debt unless the debt be that due defendants as for an unpaid bill. After that date and on March 3, 1941, the instant suit was begun. The temporary receiver, Connors, appointed by the State court, never took any action to rescind or avoid this sale nor to recover back the lumber as sold by him without authority or right. The suit on that claim by the temporary trustee in bankruptcy was dismissed.

Plaintiff claims its right of action is based on a quasi-contract and presupposes a duty of defendants to pay Connors, receiver, for the lumber it claims the receiver sold them without right to pay the pre-existent debt, as a claim based on law an,d justice and not founded on any express or implied promise or agreement of defendants.

The final account of Connors, receiver, was allowed in the Ontonagon circuit court, August 8, 1938, and supplemental accounts, October 8, 1938. There is nothing in the record to show that the authority of Connors, as receiver, was transferred to plaintiff. Apparently the receivership in the State court was simply terminated because of the paramount authority of the Federal court in bankruptcy, in the proceeding then still pending therein.

Defendants admit that the sale of the lumber amounted'to a preference, but claim the preference nomvoidable. Defendants further claim that the temporary trustee had the sole right to sue to void the preference. The temporary trustee in bankruptcy began, suit against defendants alleging the preference voidable, but permitted the suit to be *212 dismissed with, costs taxed against him, closed his trusteeship and turned the assets back to the reconstituted company without further action against defendants.

The Weidman Lumber Company had been in business for upwards of 10 years, and was generally reputed to be in good financial condition. Defendants had had business dealings with the company over a long period and had experienced no difficulty.as to payments due defendants. In September and December, 1937, the. Weidman Lumber Company bought oats and bran from defendants to the value of $1,040.20. Plaintiff’s office was at Trout Creek and its mills were at Trout Creek and Ewen. Defendants’ place of business was at Marquette. At the time of the purchase of the oats and bran the Weidman Lumber Company was actually insolvent, which fact was unknown to defendants then and until after defendants had obtained the lumber by the sale which is attacked by plaintiff. On January 7, 1938, J. S. Weidman, Jr., president of the Weidman Lumber Company, wrote defendants that he had been out of the office the last' two days when defendants had been trying to reach him, which he supposed was about the account, and said lumber hadn’t been moving recently but he would send defendants a check just as soon as possible. On March 1,1938, defendants wrote Weidman Lum--ber Company, attention of Mr. Connors, as to the offer of Mr. Weidman that defendants take some hemlock lumber but said defendants’ yard was deep with snow and trusted they would take some of the Weidman Lumber Company’s material in the spring. In reply on March 8, 1938, Mr. Connors wrote:

“In reply to your letter of March 1, we are pleased to observe that you are making an effort'to use some of our hemlock later on in the springe
*213 “We also have some #1, #2 and1 #3 Com pine.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 429, 311 Mich. 208, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weidman-lumber-co-v-spear-mich-1945.