244 F. 425 | 4th Cir. | 1917
In October, 1916, the parties named therein made this contract:
“Citizens’ Coal & Supply Company, of Bluefield, W. Va., hereinafter called the seller, sells, and Bluestone Construction Company, of Bluefield, W. Va.*426 hereinafter called the purchaser^ purchases, Lehigh Portland cement on the following terms and condition:
“The purchaser does hereby represent to the seller that twelve hundred (1,200) barrels of cement are to be used in the construction of State Normal School building, Short Creek, W. Va., for which construction the purchaser has contract, and that he hereby purchases twelve hundred (1,200) barrels of Lehigh Portland cement from the seller for use in such work, and that no portion thereof will be used for any other purposes. * * *
“If the purchaser shall fail to comply with any of the terms, conditions, or limitations of this contract, or if any of the purchaser’s representations herein are untrue, the seller may cancel this contract or any portion thereof, or any other order given to the seller by the purchaser, and such cancellation shall in no wise release the purchaser from unpaid accounts or from liability to said seller at the contract price for cement delivered prior to such cancellation.”
Other provisions, not in dispute, relate to price, terms of payment, time and place of delivery, and the like.
Under this contract two carloads of cement were delivered, one in December, 1916, the other in January, 1917, and the purchaser stored the same on the premises where the school building was to be erected. On February 10, 1917, the purchaser, Bluestone Construction Company, was adjudicated bankrupt on its own petition, and a few days later Custard, the appellee, was appointed and qualified as trustee. At that time little or nothing had been done towards the construction of the building, except to make the excavation, and the bankruptcy of the contractor resulted in a total abandonment of the contract. The trustee took possession of the cement that tire bankrupt had received and refused the seller’s demand for its return. In a proceeding to reclaim the property the referee in bankruptcy decided in favor of the trustee, and his ruling was confirmed by tire District Court. The seller appeals.
“We bad done business with Mr. Lucas [tbe manager of tbe bankrupt concern] previous, and always found bim very prompt in paying bis bills.”
In short, the sole basis of the asserted right to reclaim was the failure, brought about by bankruptcy, to use the cement furnished in erecting the building for which it was procured. But the “representation” that it would be so used was, at most, a promise to be kept in tire future, the breaking of which in the manner shown did not and could not affect the purchaser’s title. Indeed, we deem it too. plain for argument that the title to this cement passed with its delivery to the construction company, and thereafter became vested in the trustee by virtue of the Bankruptcy Act.
“To entitle a vendor of personal property to tlie benefit of tiie reservation of title as security for the purchase money thereof, as against creditors and purchasers, under section 3, c. 74. an agreement or contract must he made cotem-poraneousl.v with the sale, or before the delivery of possession of the property, between the vendor and vendee, that such reservation shall be made, and such reservation recorded.”
It is sufficient to add that under the amendment of 1910 (Act June 25, 1910, c. 412, § 8, 36 Stat. 840, amending Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, § 47, 30 Stat. 557 [Comp. St. 1916, § 9631]):
The trustee of a bankrupt, “as to all property in the custody or coming into the custody of the bankruptcy court, shall be deemed vested with all the rights, remedies, and powers of a creditor holding a lien by legal or equitable proceedings thereon.”
In our judgment, the title of appellee to the cement in controversy is not open to dispute.
The decree appealed from is affirmed.