In re Halferty
Decision Date | 26 June 1943 |
Docket Number | No. 8245.,8245. |
Citation | 136 F.2d 640 |
Parties | In re HALFERTY et al. BRADEN v. BUCYRUS-ERIE CO. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Seventh Circuit |
L. H. Jonas and Ralph E. Suddes, both of Centralia, Ill., for appellant.
Roger S. Hoar, of South Milwaukee, Wis., for appellee.
Before SPARKS, KERNER, and MINTON, Circuit Judges.
The question presented is whether the written instrument in issue is a conditional sales contract, or a chattel mortgage given as security for the payment of all or part of the account involved.
On January 6, 1941, the debtors accepted in writing a written proposal from appellee to sell to them an oil well drilling machine called a spudder. The purchase price of the spudder was $4,500, payable $1,125 cash, and the balance in fifteen monthly installments. The only controversy presented involves the following clause of the contract: "Conditions: Title to the machinery shall remain in us until the purchase price (including any modifications or extensions, and whether evidenced by notes or otherwise) and all other sums which may be or become due from you to us (our emphasis), which you hereby agree to pay when due, shall have been fully paid in cash." The contract was never recorded as a chattel mortgage as required under Illinois Revised Statutes 1941, Chapter 95, sections 4 and 4a.
The contract further contained the following language: "If default be made by you in the payment of any installment when due, or in the performance of any of your agreements herein, or if a petition in bankruptcy, reorganization, composition, or insolvency be filed by or against you, then all deferred payments, and all notes and renewal notes given therefor, shall become immediately due and payable on demand; and all expenses of collection incurred by us, including attorney fees, shall be on you; and at our option, we may take possession of and remove the machine with your full co-operation, and all payments previously made shall be considered as liquidated damages and rental."
On January 30, 1942, the debtors petitioned for an arrangement under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 701 et seq., and subsequently were adjudicated bankrupts.
Appellee seasonably filed an intervening petition in the bankruptcy proceeding before the Referee, setting forth a copy of the contract, and alleging that there was still due on the purchase price of the spudder the sum of $2,025 with interest thereon from the date of the contract. It was further alleged that there was other indebtedness due and owing by the debtors to them, most of which was for repairs on the spudder, and the remainder was for repairs on a different machine. Appellee demanded immediate delivery of the spudder or the payment of the unpaid balance of the entire accounts with accrued interest. The trustee had previously sold the spudder for $2,300.
The Referee in effect held that the instrument constituted a conditional sales contract and not a chattel mortgage, and he recommended a payment by the trustee to appellee of $2,262.97 in full of all demands of appellee. The District Court approved the Referee's report, and from that decree this appeal is prosecuted.
Appellant contends that the contract here involved is, in effect, a chattel mortgage, which is invalid as to the trustee because it was not recorded. This argument is based upon negative conclusions drawn from what appellant states to be a definition of a conditional sales contract by the Supreme Court of Illinois in Gilbert v. National Cash Register Company, 176 Ill. 288, 294, 52 N.E. 22, 25. That court said: "It seems to be settled by the weight of authority that `where, by the written contract of the parties it is expressly provided that the title to the property shall remain in the vendor until the purchase money is fully paid, and there is no reservation of a lien, the transaction is a conditional sale and not a mortgage.'"
Assuming the quoted language to be an exclusive definition of a conditional sale, appellant concludes that unless the language of the instrument provides that the title of the thing sold shall pass to the purchaser immediately on the payment of the purchase price, then and in that event, the instrument cannot be considered as a conditional sale. That is a non sequitur of the language quoted.
Immediately following the quotation referred to the court said:
It is clear that what appellant claims to be an exclusive definition of a conditional sale by the Supreme Court of Illinois is not and was not intended as such.
However, appellant argues that under such definition the instant contract is defective as a conditional sale in that it does not provide that the title of the spudder shall pass to the purchaser on payment of the agreed price of it, but such transfer is deferred until further recited conditions are performed which in no way are connected with the sale of the spudder. He does not contend that the contract before us would not be a valid conditional sale if the words "and all other sums which may be or become due from you to us" were eliminated. In other words, he asserts that by the inclusion of those words, what would otherwise be a valid conditional sale is converted into a chattel mortgage. If this were true, it would constitute a lien upon property in favor of the appellee if recorded, but not having been recorded it would be invalid as against other creditors even as a mortgage.
We think there can be no doubt that both parties to this contract intended the instrument to be a conditional sale and not a mortgage, and the only question before us is whether they altered that intention by the insertion of the words above quoted.
To meet appellant's contention appellee relies upon the Uniform Sales Act of the State of Illinois, which was adopted by its Legislature in 1915. Chapter 121½, Ill.R.S., section 20 reads:
Section 74 of the same chapter is as follows:
"This act shall be so interpreted and construed, if possible, as to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the laws of those states which enact it."
This Act has been adopted by many states of the Union in order that there may be uniformity of the laws on this subject within the boundaries of the states adopting it. In the interpretation of similar uniform laws, the decisions of other jurisdictions on such points as have not been decided by the courts of the forum, are not merely persuasive, but are as binding as would be a decision of the highest court of the forum. This rule has in effect been adopted, with respect to uniform sales, by section 74 of the Illinois Act, which we have quoted. See also ShererGillett Co. v. Long, 318 Ill. 432, 149 N.E. 225.
Some states have subsequently enacted the Uniform...
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