110 Wash. 155 | Wash. | 1920
This is a controversy between the receiver of the Commercial Lumber Company, a corporation, and the Sterling Machinery Company, a corporation, over the validity of a conditional bill of sale, and the articles furnished thereunder by the Sterling Machinery Company to the Commercial Lumber Company. The trial court sustained the validity of this conditional bill of sale, and found that there was a balance due thereon in the sum of $2,191.83, with' interest. The receiver was given the right to elect whether he would
On April 17, 1918, one Charles.C. Miller purchased from the Sterling Machinery Company, by conditional bill of sale, certain articles which, when assembled and put in place, constituted a sawmill. One C. B. Farmer was associated with Miller, and they contemplated organizing a corporation to conduct the operation of the mill. For this purpose, the Commercial Lumber Company was subsequently created and the property turned over to it. With the Commercial Lumber Company, the Sterling Machinery Company carried two accounts; one designated as the conditional sales contract account; and the other as the open current account. Upon each account articles were furnished from time to time while the machinery was being installed.
. On April 11,1919, the Commercial Lumber Company being then insolvent, Charles F. Allen was appointed receiver to wind up its affairs. The Commercial Lumber Company, from time to time, had made payments upon both the' conditional sales account and the open account-. When the receiver was appointed, there was a balance due upon each of the accounts. Upon the open account the Commercial Lumber Company filed a general claim with the receiver. Upon the conditional bill of sale a demand was made for the amount due thereon, or for the return of the property. The demand, not being complied with, the Sterling Machinery Company filed a petition in the- receivership proceeding asking that the property covered by the conditional bill of sale be returned to it. The receiver answered this petition, and upon the issues thus framed the cause came on for trial, and resulted in findings of fact and conclusions of law and judgment sustaining the position of the Sterling Machinery Company.
The conditional bill of sale not being void on account of not being filed within time, the question then arises whether all of the articles furnished for which the judgment was entered for the balance due on that account were furnished therein. The appellant contends that certain of the articles for which recovery was had were furnished upon the open account. Here again we think the evidence sustains the holding of the trial court that all the articles for which it allowed recovery were furnished upon the conditional sales contract account.
There are some other questions raised and discussed by the appellant’s brief, but these we think relate to the claim upon the open account, which is not involved in this proceeding. The action here is by petition in
The judgment will be affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Mackintosh, Parker, and Mitchell, JJ., concur.