232 Mass. 124 | Mass. | 1919
Joseph F. Day before his bankruptcy, being the owner of an ice pond and an ice house, employed the defendant ice company to harvest his ice. It was further agreed-between
On May 26, 1915, Day assigned the ice in the ice house (harvested during the winter of 1914-15) to the Lynn National Bank by an assignment absolute in form but intended to be given by way of security for a debt then owed by Day to the bank. The bank contended that the ice was delivered to it by Day on that day. This was denied by the ice company. The ice company contended that the ice was in its possession until it was resold by it as will be stated later on.
Subsequently (at a date not stated in the record) Day became bankrupt and the plaintiff was duly elected and appointed the trustee of his estate.
It is alleged in the answer filed by the bank that after May 26, 1915, “ said ice, .[meaning, the ice harvested during the winter of 1914-15] by agreement between said Coolidge Ice Company and your claimant [the Lynn National Bank], was sold by said Coolidge Ice Company and the sum of $1,484.27 was received by said Coolidge Ice Company for said ice.”
It is hard to believe that this ice, which if sold by Day to the ice company on March 19, 1915, was sold for $3,096.60, was resold by the ice company later on for less than half that price. It is still harder to believe that the proceeds of that resale amounted to the sum (to a cent) which was due from the ice company to Day for the ice harvested in 1914-15 less the cost of harvesting it plus a balance of $449.12 due from the ice company to Day for ice sold by Day to the ice company during the year 1913-14. Nevertheless on the record we must take that to be the fact.
The contention of the ice company is that the title to the ice harvested during the winter of 1914-15 passed to it when it made the final credit entry on March 19, 1915.
The contention of the bank is that no title passed to the ice company on March 19, 1915, and that the title to the ice did pass to the bank on May 26, 1915.
To the contention of the bank the ice company replied (in 'effect though not in terms) that, even if title did not pass to it on March 19, 1915, it did not pass to the bank on May 26, 1915, because absolute transfers of personal property by way of security were made subject to the chattel mortgage act by St. 1913, c. 656, and by the terms of that act an unrecorded transfer (where possession is not delivered to ,the transferee) is not good against third persons, and it was decided in Bingham v. Jordan, 1 Allen, 373, that an assignee in insolvency is a third person within the meaning of this provision of the chattel mortgage act and that the same must bé true of a trustee in bankruptcy. If this last view of the transaction is correct, the title to the ice vested in the trustee in bankruptcy by virtue' of the assignment of all the bankrupt’s property to his trustee.
If the first of these contentions is correct, the proceeds of the resale of the ice by the ice company belong to it (the ice company) because the ice was its ice when it was resold.
If the second view is correct, the ice resold by the ice company belonged to the bank and it is entitled to the proceeds of the resale now in the hands of the ice compan
If the third view is correct, the title to the ice vested in the trustee in bankruptcy and the proceeds of the resale now in the hands of the ice company belong to him.
The trustee in bankruptcy elected to adopt the first of these three views and on February 28, 1916, brought an action against the ice company to recover from it the price of the ice, namely, $3,096.60 less the cost of harvesting it, namely, $1,035.15, and in addition the balance due from the ice company for a similar sale in the previous year amounting to $449.12, in all $1,484.27.
The ice company filed an answer in which it admitted “its liability upon the contract” as set forth in the declaration and
What the bank laid claim to in this answer was not the two sums of money sued for by the trustee in bankruptcy due from the ice company to Day but the proceeds of the resale of the ice by the ice company. This is stated in terms in the answer of the bank. It is apparent from the answer of the bank that the bank did not lay claim to the two sums for which the trustee had brought suit against the ice company. All that the bank laid claim to-was the proceeds of the resale of the ice; and it laid claim to the proceeds of the resale of the ice because it contended that the ice when it was resold by the ice company belonged to it and not to Day.
On the coming in of this answer of the bank judgment should have been rendered against the bank as a claimant to the two sums sued for by the trustee, namely, $1,035.15 and $449.12. The answer showed that the bank was not an assignee of these two sums and that it had not in any other way any right or title to them.
But, in spite of this, the plaintiff and the bank went to trial upon the issue of the ownership of the ice on the day when the ice was resold by the ice company and the case is now before us
By force of R. L. c. 173, § 37, the ice company is entitled to its costs out of the fund. By force of R. L. c. 203, § 1, the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the bank its costs accruing after the bank intervened as a party in this action.
The entries will be judgment for the plaintiff with interest from the date of the writ, the ice company to have its taxable costs out of the fund, and the plaintiff to recover from the bank its taxable costs from the date when the bank intervened as a party.
So ordered.