46 A. 462 | N.H. | 1898
The only issue is between the plaintiffs and the claimant. The question is whether the plaintiffs can take the property without first satisfying Clark's claim for money loaned Records in reliance upon the property as security. The transfer to Clark was in good faith, with no intent to defraud creditors, and as between the parties is conceded to be valid.
The first ground upon which the plaintiffs claim Clark's title is invalid as to them is that the conveyance from Records to him was a chattel mortgage (Jones Ch. Mort., s. 19; Potter v. Locomotive Works, 12 Gray 154; Carpenter v. Snelling,
No different delivery is required in the case of a mortgage than of an absolute sale. A delivery sufficient to pass the title as against third persons in the one case will in the other. Smith v. Moore,
Among the illustrations given by Richardson, C. J., are the sale ship and goods at sea. In Conard v. Insurance Co., 1 Pet. 386, 449, it is said: "In case of even an absolute sale of personal property, the want of such possession is not presumptive of fraud if possession cannot, from the circumstances of the property, be within the power of the parties. The same rule applies in case of a ship in a distant port, and of a sale of goods already in the hands of the purchaser where a change of possession is impossible." Manton v. Moore, 7 T.R. 67. Ricker v. Cross was approved in Patrick v. Meserve,
In the present case, the property is described in the agreement given Records by Clark as "all the personal property in and about Maplewood Hotel premises at Bethlehem, N.H.," a description in substance that given us by the referee. It was located at Bethlehem, the parties were at the time in Boston, and, if nothing else appeared, the property might well be held to have passed without manual tradition on account of its character and situation relative to the parties, subject to impairment of Clark's title in its validity as to third persons by his negligence in obtaining actual possession; but a more satisfactory reason why actual manual possession was not given, and a more substantial ground for the conclusion that the title passed without manual tradition of the property, rests in the fact that both were impossible. The property was in the possession of Cruft, under a lease for a definite term from Geiger, from whom Records received such title as he had. The lease is not before us, but we infer from the term used that it was a bailment for hire. Under such a contract Cruft had both the possession and the right to the possession. Records had neither, and never had. The law did require him to commit a trespass, or a breach of the covenants of the lease, to enable him to transfer to Clark what Geiger had sold to him.
The property during the lease was not subject to levy on attachment or execution against Geiger, Records, Clark, or whoever was the general owner; it could be attached as against them, at all, only by trustee process (Hartford v. Jackson,
As the property could not be levied upon during the term, Cruft could not be charged as trustee as long as he held under the lease. P. S., c. 245, s. 33. As Cruft, as bailee, had the exclusive right to the possession, not only against third persons but against the general owner as well (Sto. Bailm., s. 395), it was not only impracticable, but impossible, for Records lawfully to have actual possession or to deliver it to Clark. The law does not require what is impossible. Records' right was merely to receive the property at the termination of the lease; and to a valid transfer of that right, a manual tradition of the property he had the future right to receive was no more essential than a transfer of a future right to receive the same value in money would require an actual delivery of cash. The right he received from Geiger and transferred to Clark resembled, if it was not in *394 effect, a mere chose in action. The transaction was, in substance, in both cases an assignment of a right rather than a sale of chattels.
It is held in the cases cited above, and is a general rule, that where personal chattels are in the custody of a third person and he is notified of the sale, no change of possession is required. Morse v. Powers,
There would seem to be no occasion for a different rule where the subject of the deposit is personal chattels rather than money. As the assent of the custodian cannot be essential to pass the title, notice to him where the purchaser has exercised diligence to secure possession of the goods can only be necessary upon the ground that one cannot be made custodian for another without his consent, express or implied, and hence in order that the possession of the custodian should enure to the purchaser, it must appear expressly or by implication that he had agreed or assented to hold for him. This is the argument in Hallgarten v. Oldham,
But whatever view as between the parties in equity, for the protection of Records' equitable interest in the property, should be taken of the transaction between Records and Clark, it clear that the conveyance from Records to Clark was not mortgage within the contemplation of the statute. It contained no condition and therefore could not be verified by affidavit. The law contains no provision for the record of such an instrument. Its record would have added nothing to its validity. *396
The conveyance was absolute in terms, but intended as security. There was an express secret trust. Such a conveyance, of either real or personal property, is fraudulent in law, though no fraud in fact is intended, and is void against creditors of the grantor who seize the property by attachment or levy. Watkins v. Arms,
The plaintiffs, however, contend that the service of the writ upon Cruft created a lien in their favor upon the specific chattels in his possession, by force of which they acquired the same rights as against Clark's title as if the chattels claimed had been actually seized by the sheriff.
That trustee process is an equitable proceeding in which the rights of the parties are determined upon equitable principles, and that, in the absence of fraud in the intent, the trustee cannot be charged for chattels in his possession unless he has in his hands property belonging to the defendant which the defendant has the legal right to take and carry away, are propositions for which in this state the citation of authority seems superfluous. Pollard v. Pollard,
That upon equitable principles the trustee could not be deprived of his right to hold the property in his hands as security because the conveyance to him was absolute in form, though intended as security, is expressly decided in Boardman v. Cushing,
The claimant is properly made a party to the action. P. S., c. Where it appears a third party claims the property, the validity of his claim will not be passed upon unless is made a party. Dyer v. Webster,
In Giddings v. Coleman,
Boardman v. Cushing, decided in 1841, has been repeatedly cited and approved, and was discussed and relied upon in Thompson v. Esty, ante, pp. 55, 70. See, also, Stedman v. Vickery,
But we are not called upon to weigh the soundness of this claim against the long line of well considered cases which have been cited, for the premise upon which it is founded is fatally defective. A plaintiff in trustee process does not acquire lien upon the specific property in the hands of the trustee by service upon him. The substantial difference between attachment by direct seizure and by trustee process is that the validity of the attachment in the latter case does not depend upon the officer's taking or retaining possession of the property, and creates no specific lien upon the defendant's property in favor of the plaintiff. In place of such lien, the plaintiff acquires right to hold the trustee personally responsible for the value of the goods for which he may be charged. Drake Att., s. 453; 2 Wood Att., s. 325; 2 Shinn Att., s. 467; Bufford v. Sides,
What the rule is in Massachusetts under the language of the statute of the state (Mass. P. S., c. 183, s. 21) is unnecessary to consider. Parker v. Kinsman,
That the service of the writ upon the trustee constitutes attachment of the defendant's property rights in the trustee's hands is beyond question (Broadhurst v. Morgan,
Upon grounds already suggested, there was a sufficient delivery from Records to Clark. If there were not, the want of change of possession would only imply a secret trust where one is expressly found. If Clark's title is not invalidated by the one, it is not by the other. See Robinson v. Mitchell,
Case discharged.
All concurred. *400