132 A. 20 | Conn. | 1926
The plaintiff is seeking to foreclose two mortgages executed by the Gaynor Manufacturing Company. One of the two principal issues has to do with the question of priority between the second of these mortgages and a certain judgment lien filed by the defendant The Remington Arms Union Metallic Cartridge Company, upon the same property described in the mortgage. The court (Avery, J.), on demurrer to the answer of the Arms Company, held that the judgment lien had precedence, and from that decision the plaintiff has appealed. The facts are simple: On October 27th, 1917, the Arms Company began suit in the Superior Court against the Gaynor Manufacturing Company, and attached its real estate; April 24th, 1922, judgment was rendered in favor of the Arms Company; April 27th, 1922, the Gaynor Company filed a notice of appeal to this court, and thereafter perfected its appeal; April 5th, 1923, this court gave its decision affirming the judgment of the Superior Court; and May 24th, 1923, the Arms Company filed its judgment lien upon the real estate it had attached. Meanwhile, on September 27th, 1922, the Gaynor Company had given to the plaintiff the mortgage in question. The plaintiff claims that the mortgage has priority over the judgment lien upon the ground that the latter was not filed within such time after the judgment as would make it effectual to relate back to the date of the attachment. The correctness of this claim depends upon the proper construction to be placed upon that *736 portion of § 5233 of the General Statutes which provides that if a judgment lien be placed upon real estate attached in the suit, "within four months after such judgment was rendered, it shall hold from the date of such attachment."
Our law authorizing judgment liens to be filed against real estate was enacted in 1878 and has not since been changed. Public Acts of 1878, Chap. 58; General Statutes, § 5233 et seq. Section 5232 provides that any person having an "unsatisfied judgment" may cause a certificate, signed by the "judgment creditor" or his attorney or personal representative, to be filed, and prescribes the form; and this form begins as follows: "This is to certify that A. B., of ........., on the .... day of ........, 19 .., in the ...... court holden at ........, in the county of ........, did obtain a judgment in his favor, against C. D., of ........, for the sum of ........ dollars damages, and ........ dollars costs of suit, which judgment remains wholly unsatisfied (or, on which judgment the sum of ........ dollars is still due)"; and the form continues with the statement that to secure these sums a judgment lien "is hereby placed" upon the real estate described in the certificate. Section 5233 reads as follows: "Such judgment, from the time of filing such certificate, shall constitute a lien upon the real estate described in such certificate; and if such lien be placed upon real estate attached in the suit upon which such judgment was predicated, and within four months after such judgment was rendered, it shall hold from the date of such attachment." Section 5234 provides that no such lien shall be valid as to any real estate, or any interest therein, which might not have been levied upon under an execution on the judgment. In Beardsley v.Beecher,
Section 5233 throughout uses the phrase "such judgment," clearly having reference to the "judgment" to which reference was made in the preceding section. *738
That "judgment" is one by the terms of which a recovery of damages and costs, or costs at least, is awarded to the party filing the lien. Appellate proceedings in this court do terminate in judgments;Coughlin v. McElroy,
The judgment lien was not filed within such time after the judgment of the trial court was rendered that it would hold from the date of the attachment. This makes it unnecessary to consider other contentions put forward by the Arms Company in support of its claim of priority, except perhaps this, that by reason of the judgment of the trial court, it had an equitable and inchoate lien, which would be effectual against the plaintiff, which had knowledge of the facts. It would suffice to point out that no such knowledge on the part of the plaintiff is found. But if it were, the plaintiff in taking its mortgage would be entitled fully to rely upon the failure of the Arms Company to file its judgment lien within such time as would cause it to hold from the date of the attachment, and upon the abandonment of its right resulting from that failure.
The issue as to the priority of the judgment lien over the mortgage was raised by the first two grounds of plaintiff's demurrer to the answer of the Arms Company, and these grounds the court overruled. They should have been sustained. Certain other paragraphs *740 of the demurrer were overruled, but the proper disposition of the first two will make it unnecessary to consider any of these rulings except one, which, as it was decided at the trial in plaintiff's favor, we need only discuss in connection with the Arms Company's appeal. There is error and the judgment must be reversed unless the trial court was wrong in its decision that the mortgage was valid.
This decision was based upon the contention at the trial of the case that the mortgage was not valid because it insufficiently defined the debt secured. That mortgage was executed September 27th, 1922, and recited an indebtedness of the mortgagee to the plaintiff to the amount of $38,950, "as evidenced by its sundry promissory notes payable to the order of the said grantee with interest," and its condition was as follows: "Now therefore, if said note and notes for the same amounts or other amounts in renewal thereof shall be well and truly paid according to their tenor, then this deed shall be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect." Except for the phrase in the condition, "for the same amounts or other amounts in renewal thereof," there would be no question but that the mortgage is valid. Merrills v. Swift,
The mortgage, in addition to real estate and buildings, purports to convey certain personal property described as follows: "Together with all machinery, tools, implements, fixtures and other personal property tangible and intangible of every kind and description *742
located in said buildings and being situated upon the said first piece of land herein described." The Arms Company claims that this description is insufficient to convey any interest in the personal property. Beyond question that description does not meet the requirements of the statutes. General Statutes, § 5206; Hartford-ConnecticutTrust Co. v. Puritan Laundry, Inc.,
There is error upon plaintiff's appeal, the judgment is set aside, and the cause is remanded with directions to the trial court to sustain paragraphs one and two of the plaintiff's demurrer to the answer and counterclaim of the Remington Arms Union Metallic Cartridge Company, and to enter judgment for the plaintiff in accordance herewith. There is no error upon the appeal of the Remington Arms Union Metallic Cartridge Company.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.