159 N.Y.S. 357 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
This action is brought to recover possession of seven boilers installed on city property, or, if not the possession, the balance due on their purchase price.
Three causes of action are alleged in the complaint; the first refers to three 100-horse power boilers sold and delivered by plaintiff to the subcontractor Rossman & Bracken Company on April 25, 1904, and by that company installed in the Gouverneur Hospital pursuant to its agreement with John R. Sheehan & Co., the general contractor with the city; the
At the close of the case both sides moved for a direction of a verdict, and the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered upon this verdict. We think the judgment is right and should be affirmed.
All of these boilers were sold to the subcontractors under conditional contracts of sale containing the following provision: “ The title to any boilers furnished shall not pass from the company to the purchaser until it is fully paid for * * *. If default is made in the payment of any such notes, or in the payment of any sums falling due under this contract, the company may enter the premises where the boilers may be situated and remove the same as its own property, and the purchaser agrees to provide, at his own expense, the exit necessary to effect such removal.”
These contracts of sale were executed in duplicate, and one duplicate was delivered to the subcontractor, in compliance with section 115 of chapter 418 of the Laws of 1891, as amended by chapter 354 of the Laws of 1898 and chapter 259 of the Laws of 1904, being the then existing Lien Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 49).
It is quite apparent from the evidence that the city had no knowledge whatever of the conditional character of the sale to the subcontractors until long after the boilers were installed on the city’s property, and the city had made substantial payments for them to the general contractor. There is nothing in the case from which we can infer that the city permitted the boilers to be set up with the understanding on its part that title was to remain in the plaintiff until they were paid for. Then again the boilers were so affixed to the buildings that they became an integral part thereof, thus changing their character as personal property and making them a part of the realty. And obviously the plaintiff knew and inferentially it intended that such a result would follow the installation of the boilers, since the conditional agreements of sale expressly refer to the general contract with the city for the purpose of fixing the terms of payment and the character of the boilers to be furnished. The conclusion necessarily follows that, as between the plaintiff and the city, the boilers in question became and now remain a part of the realty.
We have here a case in principle quite like the case of Jermyn v. Hunter (93 App. Div. 175). There the action was brought to recover possession of a steam boiler which had been sold conditionally to Ooons & Wilson, a firm of contractors, who were under contract to install the heating apparatus in the owner’s building. The real property wherein the boiler was installed was sold to the defendant under a judgment of mortgage foreclosure and sale. The property was bought in by the defendant, in ignorance of the conditional sale of the boiler. Plaintiff recovered judgment, which was reversed by this court. The court held that under the evidence the boiler as installed became real property, and that the vendor could not recover against the purchaser of the premises in the absence of evidence showing that the owner knew that the boiler had been sold conditionally. In the course of the opinion the
In the case before us, as stated above, the boilers were fully installed and substantially paid for by the city in ignorance of the claim that they had been sold to the subcontractor under conditional bills of sale. For this reason the plaintiff should not recover against the city. It may seem harsh that the plaintiff must lose a substantial part of the purchase price of these boilers, but it would be even more unjust to require the city to pay, when the boilers were installed without notice of the claim of the plaintiff, and when the city has already paid for them in full. Moreover, the plaintiff could have protected itself against the subcontractor’s default by taking advantage of the Lien Law, and by filing proper notices of its claim with the president of the borough and the comptroller of the city in the case of the baths, and with the board of trustees of Bellevue and Allied Hospitals and the comptroller in the case of the hospital, as provided for in the city’s contracts with the general contractor, with the provisions of which the plaintiff presumably was well acquainted, since it had made those con
In the case of the boilers furnished for the Allen Street Baths and the East One Hundred and Ninth Street Baths, although notices were served upon the borough president, none was served upon the comptroller until after final payment had been made to the contractor.
The evidence strongly suggests that by its earlier notices the plaintiff sought to secure itself under the provisions of the Lien Law, and finding them ineffective for that purpose, it sought to make them available to show that the city was not a purchaser in good faith. In our opinion, they cannot have that effect. The city with its large and complex organization for carrying on the work of the municipality, ought not to be subjected to liability upon notices served as these were.
Moreover, the city with due regard to the possible claims of those supplying materials for the buildings, provided in its agreement with the contractor that upon receipt of the notice therein specified it would retain sufficient of the money coming to the contractor to pay the claims after their adjudication in actions to foreclose the liens. As stated above, the plaintiff must have known of this provision, as the city’s contract is in part incorporated in the conditional agreements. Instead of
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Smith, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.