171 N.E. 705 | NY | 1930
Plaintiff bought from the defendant the Checker Cab Manufacturing Corporation, fourteen taxicabs under contracts of conditional sale, the price to be paid in monthly installments, secured by promissory notes. These promissory notes the conditional vendor sold to the defendant the Hugo Hoffman Credit Corporation, adding its own indorsement. At the same time it assigned the bills of sale, and guaranteed payment in accordance with the contracts. The plaintiff, the buyer, paid more than fifty per cent of the purchase price of the cabs, and thereafter made default. The Credit Corporation gave notice of this default to the Checker Corporation, *458 which paid the overdue installments according to its guaranty. Thereupon the Checker Company retook possession of the cabs for the buyer's breach of the condition. The seizure was followed by a resale in the name of the Credit Corporation, the owner of the notes. A notice of such sale, signed by the Credit Corporation, was published in a newspaper, posted at public places, and mailed to the buyer at its last known place of business. The notice was to the effect that the fourteen cabs, with forty-four others, would be sold at public auction at a stated date at room 805, No. 1767 Broadway, in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York, the office of the signer. The sale was held at the appointed time. The cabs were not present, within the view of those attending. They were miles away, at a garage in Long Island City. There was nothing in the public notice whereby expectant bidders were informed of their location or given an opportunity to inspect them. The fifty-eight cars, i.e., the fourteen bought by the plaintiff and forty-four others, were offered in a single lot. No one was present at the sale except an officer of the Credit Corporation, who bid $500 for each cab and bought them at that price. A large deficiency resulted.
Section 79 of the Personal Property Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 41) makes a resale compulsory whenever a conditional seller has retaken possession of his goods, and the buyer at the time of the retaking has paid at least half the purchase price. The sale must be within thirty days and must be one at public auction. Section 80-e provides that in the event of the failure of the seller to resell the goods retaken in compliance with section 79, "the buyer may recover from the seller his actual damages, if any, and in no event less than one fourth of the sum of all payments which have been made under the contract, with interest."
The plaintiff sues under the statute for one-fourth of the payments made pursuant to the contract. At the *459 trial the defendants had a verdict. The Appellate Division reversed upon the law and granted a new trial, the basis of the reversal being this, that the resale conducted as described was not a sale at public auction within the meaning of the statute.
We think plainly it was not. The general rule is that upon a sale of personal property at public auction, the property must be at hand and within the view of those attending (Stief v.Hart,
We think the plaintiff was at liberty to ignore a performance so farcical and futile, and recover a quarter of its payments, with interest, as if no sale had been attempted. The judgment is erroneous, however, in imposing liability not only on the Credit Corporation, but on the Checker Company as well. By section 61 of the statute, "`seller' means the person who sells or leases the goods covered by the conditional sale, or any legal successor in interest of such person." When the Checker Company sold and assigned to the Credit Corporation the bills of sale and notes, the latter corporation became the "legal successor in interest," and thereafter was the "seller" within the meaning of the statute. On this seller devolved the statutory duty to resell at public auction, and in default of such resale to return the statutory proportion of payments theretofore received. The fact is unimportant that in the retaking of the cabs the Checker Company co-operated with the Credit Corporation, or even acted on its own initiative. No doubt its guaranty of payment supplied it with an interest in regaining the chattels conditionally sold and thus diminishing its loss. The interest did not avail to revest it with its title as conditional vendor, which it had already assigned *461
to another upon the transfer of the notes (Rapp v. MabbettMotor Car Co., Inc.,
As to the defendant Hugo Hoffman Credit Corporation, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, and judgment absolute ordered against said appellant upon the stipulation, with costs in all courts.
As to the defendant Checker Cab Manufacturing Corporation, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the judgment of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *462