17 Barb. 523 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1854
The facts of this case, as disclosed by the evidence, are substantially as follows: On the 5th of June, 1851, the plaintiff sold to one Bishop a canal boat, called “ No. 80 of Podunk,” and took a chattel mortgage thereon to secure some notes given by Bishop as a part of the purchase money. The mortgage was filed in the office of the clerk of the town of Schrceppel, Oswego county, on the 16th of September* 1851, where the referee finds Bishop then resided. On the 8th of July, 1852, one Patrick Gainer obtained a judgment against Bishop, upon an attachment previously issued by a justice of the peace at Kingston, Ulster county, on which the boat No. 80 was taken and sold by a constable ; the defendant in this suit becoming the purchaser of Bishop’s interest, upon that sale. In
I. It was insisted on the part of the defendant, that it did not appear that the boat, or Bishop the mortgagor, were in Schroeppel at the time the mortgage was filed. But it is not necessary that any such fact should appear. The statute (2 R. S. 186, § 16) requires the mortgage to be filed in the several towns and cities “ where the mortgagor therein, if a resident of this state, shall reside at the time of the execution thereof.” The referee has found as a matter of fact, and so is the evidence, that at the •time of the execution of the mortgage, Bishop, the mortgagor, resided in Schrceppel, and there the mortgage was filed, in compliance with the provision of the statute. There is nothing; therefore, in this objection.
II. It was further insisted that the mortgage not having been filed at the time it was given, was void as against the defendant ; and he, therefore, by the proceeding under the attachment and sale, acquired a right paramount to that of the plaintiff under his mortgage. The filing, it is said, is in lieu of actual change of possession, and therefore should have been immediate. The provision of the statute is in substance that every mortgage of goods and chattels, not accompanied by an immediate delivery; shall be void as against creditors of subsequent purchasers in good faith, “ unless the mortgage, or a copy thereof, shall be filed as directed in the subsequent section.” And the next section provides for the filing in the cities and towns where the mortgagor resided at the time of the execution of the mortgage.
III. It is finally objected to the plaintiff’s right of recovery, that inasmuch as the boat was navigating the Hudson river at the time of the seizure, she was a “ vessel of the United States,” and came within the provisions of the law requiring the mortgage to be recorded in the collector’s office at Hew-York, and that no proof having been given of any such registry, the mortgage was void as against the defendant. This point was argued with zeal and ingenuity, and if well taken, will prove of serious consequence to a large class of securities held upon canal boats navigating our inland waters, and performing occasional trips upon the Hudson river. The provision on this subject to which we are referred is in the act of congress passed July 29,1850, and
Upon this section two inquiries arise. (1.) Is a canal boat required to be registered or enrolled ? and (2.) Is she within the description of “ a vessel of the United States 1”
1. By an examination of the general scope and provisions oft the registering acts, it appears to us quite obvious that an ordii nary canal boat or scow, as the boat in question was, could never! have been designed to be embraced within the class of vessels concerning which a registry and enrollment is required. Without^ particularizing these provisions, it may be enough to say that the first act on this subject is one entitled “An act for registering and clearing vessels, regulating the coasting trade, and for other purposes.” (1 U. S. Stat. at Large, p. 55.) And the act which now regulates this whole subject of registry is entitled “ An act concerning the registering of ships or vessels.” (Id. p. 288, &c.) The entire scope of the provisions embodied in this act show manifestly that it was intended to apply to vessels sailing from a port within the district of the collector in whose office she was required to be registered, and engaged in foreign voyages or in the coasting trade. There is no act) that we .can discover, now in force, requiring the registry of| canal boats, as such, in the collectors’ offices of the United States! There appears to have been such an act passed some years since,! authorizing them to be enrolled for the purpose of collecting fees in aid of the hospital fund. A subsequent act, passed in July. 1846, released them from any contribution to this fund, and deprived them of the benefits created by it. (9 Stat. at Large, p. 38.) This act, though not in terms, yet by implication, seems to operate as a substantial repeal of the former act, the passage of which affords very pregnant proof that such boats were not
Hubbard, Pratt and [Bacon, Justices.]
2. We are quite clear that canal boats do not come within the description of “ vessels of the United States.” A steamboat, when her capacity, dimensions, and the power and extent of her navigability is considered, would seem to come much more naturally within this definition, and yet the enrollment of steamboats is specifically provided for by the laws of the U. States. (See 2 Stat. at Large, p. 694; 5 Id. 304.) And under the acts of this state authorizing, in certain cases, the attachment and seizure of “ any ship or vessel” within this state, it has been adjudged that a small undecked boat employed within a port, and not performing voyages coastwise from state to state, does not come within the description of a “ ship or vessel,” which terms are to be understood as used in common parlance and applying only to vessels of a larger class. (Farmers’ Delight v. Lawrence, 5 Wend. 564.) And in Many v. Noyes, (5 Hill, 34,) it is expressly held that a canal boat running between Albany and Troy is not a ship or vessel within the meaning of the statute. The fact that the boat in question in this suit happened to be on the Hudson at the time of the seizure cannot change the rule thus .well established. She was built for canal navigation, had been engaged in it during the same season, and at the time the attachment was issued was on a return voyage from Brooklyn in tow of a steamboat, a mode of navigation practised by hundreds of canal boats, which are not by such an occasional trip transmuted from their, primitive and unpretending character of“ Podunk scows,” into the more ambitious if not more respectable class of “ vessels of the United States.”
On the whole, therefore, we conclude that no error was committed by the referee in' this case, and the judgment must accordingly be affirmed