60 A.2d 53 | Pa. | 1948
The Auditor General and State Treasurer, the Board of Finance and Revenue, and the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, all held that plaintiff could not recover because its claim was more than balanced by a setoff due to defendant, — a conclusion which, on the undisputed facts presented by the record, was undoubtedly correct.
Ruffsdale Distilling Company for a number of years sold the major portion of its output to the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board. In 1936 negotiations were entered into for the allowance by the Distilling Company to the Board of so-called "quantity discounts" for that year; the result was that, in correspondence dated April 15 and 16, 1936, the Distilling Company agreed to allow such discounts according to certain specified percentages on purchases made by the Board, and in December, 1937 and January, 1938 the Distilling Company paid the Board the sum of $8,634.72, which was the amount due for such discounts according to the schedule agreed upon.
At the end of the year 1938 the Distilling Company was indebted to the Board for various advertising and service charges in the amount of $9,503.95, but it was very short of funds and it urged the Board to allow it to pay this indebtedness in instalments instead of having it deducted by the Board from the Distilling Company's current invoices; as an argument to support such request it pointed out that some of the other distilling companies had not allowed any quantity discounts,1 that it was doubtful whether such allowances were not illegal under the Robinson-Patman Act, and that that question was *625 then under consideration by the Auditor General and State Treasurer or the Attorney General and a decision in regard thereto could be expected momentarily. Accordingly the Board agreed, in a letter to the Distilling Company dated February 10, 1939, that it would not deduct the $9,503.95 from current payments, but would allow the Distilling Company to liquidate the debt by paying $869.23 at once and instalments of $2,158.68 each on February 28, March 31, April 30, and May 27, 1939. It was stated in the letter that "Deduction of the amount due will not be made from our remittance unless we fail to receive payments as noted above. If it is determined that any portion of the above total claims should not be collected, we will adjust the above schedule of payments." By letter dated March 14, 1939, the Distilling Company accepted this arrangement except that it requested that the first instalment should be deferred to March 28 instead of February 28. It is clear that the phrase "If it is determined that any portion of the above total claims should not be collected, we will adjust the above schedule of payments" meant that if, before the instalment payments all became due, a decision was rendered by the Auditor General and State Treasurer or the Attorney General to the effect that the quantity discounts were illegal, proper adjustment would be made with the Distilling Company in regard to the payments it had made of such discounts.2 *626
The sum of $869.23 was paid in accordance with the arrangement thus entered into, but none of the four instalment payments was made, and on September 30, 1939 the Distilling Company went into bankruptcy. On December 21, 1939 the Liquor Control Board deducted from the Distilling Company's account the sum of the unpaid instalments amounting to $8,634.72.
On August 28, September 20 and September 21, 1939 Peoples Pittsburgh Trust Company (now, by merger, Peoples First National Bank Trust Company) made loans aggregating $9,700 to the Distilling Company, for which it received the latter's notes secured by assignments of invoices for liquor consigned by it to the Liquor Control Board. On April 10, 1942 the Trust Company presented to the Auditor General for settlement its claim against the Board on these invoices in the amount of $7,494.97, which was the balance then due on the Distilling Company's notes. The Board, while admitting liability on the invoices, defended on the basis of the $8,634.72 deduction it had made from the Distilling Company's account and which it now presented as a setoff to the Trust Company's claim.3
Testimony having been taken at a hearing before representatives of the Auditor General and State Treasurer, *627 the Trust Company on May 10, 1943 filed an amendment to the original statement of its claim in which, in addition to attacking the agreement of April 15-16, 1936 in regard to the allowance of the quantity discounts on the ground that they were discriminatory and illegal under the Robinson-Patman Act because they were not collected from all the companies selling liquor to the Board, it was, for the first time, alleged that the making of that agreement was induced by an oral misrepresentation by the then Chairman of the Board to the President of the Distilling Company that all the other distilling companies had agreed to allow such discounts. The Trust Company thus attempted to cancel or overcome the setoff presented by the Board by claiming on its part the amount of the discounts which had, because of such alleged misrepresentation, been improperly paid by the Distilling Company to the Board in 1937 and 1938 in pursuance of the 1936 agreement.
The Auditor General and State Treasurer disallowed the Trust Company's claim and found in favor of the Liquor Control Board. A petition for resettlement being denied, the Trust Company filed a petition for review before the Board of Finance and Revenue; this also was denied and the Trust Company thereupon appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, which entered a decree dismissing the appeal. The Trust Company has now taken a further appeal to this Court.
Admittedly the Liquor Control Board is indebted on the invoices held by the Trust Company as assignee, but admittedly also the Distilling Company is indebted to the Board in an even greater amount and was so indebted prior to the time when theDistilling Company made the assignments to the Trust Company ascollateral for loans. We fail to see, therefore, how there can be any question in regard to the right of the Board to setoff this indebtedness against the claim of the Trust Company. "An assignee's right against the obligor is *628
subject to all limitations of the obligee's right, to all absolute and temporary defenses thereto, and to all set-offs and counterclaims of the obligor which would have been available against the obligee had there been no assignment, provided that such defenses and set-offs are based on facts existing at the time of the assignment, . . ." Restatement, Contracts, § 167(1); Rider v. Johnson,
Decree dismissing appeal affirmed, at cost of appellant.