199 F. 474 | S.D. Ala. | 1912
This is a reclamation proceeding brought by the Page Woven Wire Pence Company, a corporation, against the trustee of said bankrupts on a petition praying that the petitioners may have a lien upon the funds of said bankrupt estate to the amount and value of certain goods, consisting of woven
But “to entitle a seller of goods to rescind the sale for fraud, there must have been an undisclosed knowledge of insolvency and an intention not to pay for them on the part of the purchaser when the goods were bought.” In re Levi & Picard (D. C.) 148 Fed. 654.
In the absence of fraud in making the statement reclamation should not be allowed. In re Levi & Picard (D. C.) 148 Fed. 654; Ellet-Kendall Shoe Co. v. Ward, 26 Am. Bankr. R. 114, 187 Fed. 982, 110 C. C. A. 320.
“The representations must be willfully false, or must have been such that the buyer did not believe to be true, or had no reasonable grounds to believe to be true, and by means whereby the seller was deceived, and thereby induced to consummate a sale he otherwise would not have made.” In re Roalswick (D. C.) 110 Fed. 639.
And it has been held that:
“A known condition of insolvency at the time of the purchase, and the failure of the bankrupt to disclose such condition to the claimant, cannot*477 be regarded as fraudulent. The law, haying in view the ordinary conduct of business affairs, draws a distinction in matters of this kind between withholding information and making false statements for the purpose of deceit.” In re Davis (D. O.) 112 Jfed. 296.
“Does the evidence show that the Marengo County Mercantile Company, by false and fraudulent representations of material facts,'obtained from the petitioners the goods, wares, and merchandise, the proceeds of the sale of which are claimed?”
Under the allegations o’f their petition, the petitioners must establish these several propositions to entitle them to rescind the sale in question, and to obtain an order for the payment of the sum of money claimed by them therein: (1) That the bankrupt was insolvent at the time of the purchase of the goods, wares, and merchandise; (2) that the bankrupt concealed its insolvency from the petitioners, which insolvency was known to the said bankrupt at the time of said purchase; (3) that false and fraudulent representations were made by it with the intent to deceive and defraud petitioners, and were so made to induce the petitioners to sell and deliver to said purchaser the goods in question, with the intent and design not to pay for them.
The referee has failed to certify to the judge the question presented for review, except as to whether or not the order made by him, disallowing the petition, was correct. And there is no summary of the evidence relating thereto. “Both of these provisions are important and required, and should be carefully observed. The summary of the evidence is required in order to save the judge the labor of examining what is often a mass of testimony oil many different questions, and of extracting so much as may be relevant to the point immediately in hand. The summary may also be valuable as showing what evidence has been considered by the referee before coming to a conclusion.” In re Kurtz (D. C.) 125 Fed. 992; Crim v. Woodford, 136 Fed. 38, 68 C. C. A. 584; General Order, or Rule 27 (18 Sup. Ct. viii), in Bankruptcy.
However, the case is before me, and I have carefully examined and considered it.
The referee expresses the opinion that the evidence is sufficient find that at the time of the sale the bankrupt was insolvent. He has furnished no summary of the evidence relating thereto. Assuming that the petitioners have established that proposition, and that the referee’s finding on it is correct, as T do, it does not follow that the bankrupt concealed its insolvency from the petitioners, or had knowledge ,of its insolvency at- that time. George F. Conant, the president of the bankrupt company, and who purchased the goods from one Edwards, the agent and traveling salesman of the petitioner, was called as a witness by the petitioners. He testified that on September 22, 1910, the date of the purchase of the goods, his company was “in good shape”; that its assets were greater than its liabilities. He also testified that business was
The evidence fails to satisfy me that the bankrupt made any, false statements or was guilty of any positive fraud at the time of the purchase of the goods. As said by the court in Re Aarons, & Co., 28 Am. Bankr. R. 400, 193 Fed. 646, 113 C. C. A. 514:
“Fraudulent concealment in this case must be established by, silence, if at all. But we think it is not so established, because we are unable to see that the bankrupt was under any obligation to speak or to disclose its financial condition to the petitioners; no request for any statement having been made.” ;
■ I agree with the referee in his opinion that the evidence is not sufficient to find that the bankrupt had the intent and design not to pay for the goods at the time of their purchase, or had then no reasonable expectation of being able to do so.
E. B.- Robertson, the manager and treasurer of petitioners, testified that. h.e had special charge of the acceptance and approval of all orders and the making and signing of all contracts with customers of his company. He said Edwards made the contract involved -here subject to his (witness’) approval. The contract was received by him at his office in Adrian, Mich., on September 24, 1910, for acceptance and approval. Before doing so, he stated it was necessary for him to be satisfied of the financial standing and credit of the Marengo County Mercantile Company. He immediately consulted the published book of commercial ratings of bankers, merchants, etc., issued by .the Bradstreet Company, and found that
“If the Montgomery office got such a request from them for this report it came by mail, and if a reply was made it was sent by mail. If they have the information wanted, they answer the day the request is received. If*480 a special report is asked for, it is always a week or ten days before we can get up the information for such a report.”
This witness also testified:
“That by the usual route of travel it would take a letter about two days to come from Adrian, Mich., to Montgomery, Ala., and in like manner it would take about two days returning.”
If witness Robertson requested the special report from Bradstreet Company at Montgomery, Ala., on September 24th, the day' he received the contract and order for the goods, and the contract was approved on September' 26th and goods ordered shipped, then such action of Robertson could not have been at all predicated on such special report or information as stated. The contract was approved in two days after it was received for approval, and it would have taken at least four days to have received the special report after request. There is evidently some mistake or error in this statement of the witness. Moreover, Exhibit C, designated by witness Robertson as a true copy of the special report referred to, shows upon its face the date of September 9, 1910, as, presumably, the date of the "T-D-" rating by Bradstreet Company; and, on the back thereof, at the beginning of a printed form of letter from Bradstreet Company addressed to Page Woven Wire Fence Company, is the date March 7, 1911, as presumably the date of transmittal of such special report to petitioners at Adrian, Mich., upon which report witness says he relied in granting credit to the bankrupt on September M, 1910.
The goods were purchased and received under these conditions. They were sold, and being sold by the buyer in accordance with said conditions, and those unsold remained and continued in the possession of the buyer until dispossessed by the receiver and trustee in bankruptcy.
This contract was, in substance and effect, a chattel mortgage on said goods.-
A mortgage on a stock of merchandise, which expressly or impliedlj^ provides that the mortgagor shall remain in possession of the property until condition broken, or the mortgagee in his own interest chooses to dispossess him, is, before such possession is taken, void, as a matter of law, as to purchasers and creditors of the mortgagor. The retention of possession by the mortgagor (the
If the insolvency of the bankrupt, at the time the goods were purchased, has been shown, T do not find fj-mn the evidence that there was any fraudulent concealment of it. 1 am inclined to think that the bankrupt did not know it was bankrupt until its property was attached by creditors, and it was put into bankruptcy.
The order of the referee is affirmed, and the petition dismissed, with costs.