62 N.Y. 215 | NY | 1875
The plaintiff brings this action to recover the possession of a canal boat. He bases his right of possession upon a mortgage upon the boat, made by the owner at the time. It was never filed in the town of the residence of the mortgagor. (Laws of 1833, p. 435.) Such a mortgage is absolutely void against a subsequentbona fide purchaser, unless it, or a true copy of it, is filed in the office of the auditor of the canal department. (Laws of 1864, chap. 412, p. 993, §§ 1, 2.) The mortgage was dated September 5th, 1870, and a copy of it was filed in the office of the auditor on the twenty-second of that month. This filing made it a valid instrument for one year from the day of the filing. (Id. and § 3.) After one year from that date had elapsed, it ceased to be valid against such purchaser, unless within thirty days next preceding the expiration of that year, a true copy of it should be again filed in the office of the auditor, together with a statement exhibiting the interest of the mortgagee in the property. (Id., § 3.) A true copy was again filed on the 20th September, 1871, in that office. There was not together with it the statement required by the act. (Id., § 3.) It did then, after the 22d of September, 1871, cease to be valid against the subsequent bona fide purchasers. Such is the plain language of the statute, and its policy is as plain as its *218
language. The statute law of the State looks with great disfavor upon sales of chattel property, or incumbrances upon it, unless there be an accompanying immediate delivery, and a following actual and continued change of possession. (2 R.S., 136, § 5; Laws of 1833, chap. 279, p. 435; Laws of 1874, supra.) It permits a mortgage thereof to escape its reprehension, only on condition that it is, by filing in a public office, exposed to public inquiry and view. The plaintiff availed himself of this condition to protect his mortgage, and for one year he preserved the validity. The statute law permits a mortgage which has been thus preserved for one year, to be saved for another for the amount unpaid upon it, by filing again in the same office, with the exposure to public inquiry and view by statement filed with it, of what continues after the lapse of the first year, to be the interest of the mortgagee in the property. This the plaintiff neglected. But he claims that, by filing for the second year a true copy of the mortgage only, he starts anew under the first condition prescribed by the statute law. This is not so, for thereby he thwarts the policy and express requirement of the law, that he shall the second year, make known to all who shall choose to inquire whether his interest in the property has changed. It is not now for us to say whether, if he had omitted to file his mortgage in the year 1870, a filing of a true copy in 1871, or in 1872, would have been a compliance with the statute, and would have saved its validity. But he chose in 1870 to avail himself of the provision of the statute which for one year kept his mortgage good for him. He thus brought it under the purview and operation of the statute — within its grasp, so to speak. It then became as if the statute was passed for it alone, and applied to it alone, of all the chattel mortgages in the State. Then, the third section of the statute of 1864 said of it, as if of it alone: This mortgage shall cease to be valid as against subsequent purchasers in good faith, after the expiration of one year from the 22d September, 1870, unless within thirty days next preceding that expiration the plaintiff shall file it again, and unless he *219
shall file therewith a statement of his interest in the property. This he did not, and lost the benefit of his security, if anybona fide purchaser came in. Fitch v. Humphrey (1 Denio, 163) is an authority clearly in point, that the statement is an essential demand of the statute, and that nothing but a statement will answer that demand. The policy of the statute is, to make known to all interested, the state of the property and the incumbrances upon it from year to year. (Meech v. Patchin,
It is difficult, however, to reach the conclusion that Cornell was, within the meaning of the acts cited, a subsequent purchaser in good faith. Nelson bought the boat of the mortgagor, who was the owner of it; but Nelson bought with knowledge of the mortgage and expressly subject thereto. This, to be sure, did not prevent him from giving to a purchaser from him, ignorant of the existence of the mortgage, who should pay a valuable consideration for the boat, a title which would be free from the operation of the mortgage (Dillingham v. Bolt,
But there is another principle to be considered. The mere possession in one of personal property, with a special right in it, while the general ownership and right of possession is in another, will maintain an action of trover by the one, for the conversion of it; so that a bailor and a bailee, a shipper and carrier, or other like persons, one having a general, and the other a special property in chattels, may either of them maintain that action. (Dillenback v. Jerome, 7 Cow., 294.) The bailee, or person having the special property, is entitled, against a stranger, to recover in such action the entire value of the goods. (Armory v. Delamine, 1 Stra., 505; Brierly v.Kendall, 17 Ad. Ell. [N.S.], 937.) After *222 satisfying his own lien, or right of charge upon the goods out of the avails, he is a trustee of the general owner for the surplus. It follows from this, that if the special-property-man sues first and recovers, a recovery by him is a bar to an action by the general owner. (See Smith v. James, 7 Cow., 328; Wilbraham v. Snow, 2 Saund. [Williams], 47, e.) And it further follows, that when the bailee or special-property-man has obtained satisfaction, for his judgment got for the whole value, that thereby the whole title to the property is transferred to the defendant, not only that which the plaintiff had, but also that which the bailor, or general owner, had; so that the wrong-doer who has converted the property, by the payment of one judgment recovering the full value thereof, becomes both the general owner and special owner, then joining and having, both the possession and the right of property; though there is a dictum to the contrary in Barb v. Fish (8 Black., 481-486).
Applying these principles to the facts of this case, what is the result? It is plain that it would be a hard measure of justice to Cornell, though he stands before the court as a wrong-doer, that he should pay to Nelson, as the possessor of the boat, the full value of it, (for we must assume that the judgment of Nelson was for the full value), in satisfaction of one judgment, and to this plaintiff, as mortgagee of the boat, nearly as much more, as the value of his lien, in satisfaction of another judgment for the same tort. And how may he escape this? He could not, in the action of Nelson against him, set up, either in bar or mitigation of damages, the existence of the plaintiff's lien upon the boat. A defendant in trover may not set up title in a third person for such purpose, unless he connects himself with that title (Finch v. Blount, 7 C. P., 478; Duncan v.Spear, 11 Wend., 54; Earl v. Camp, 16 id., 562); so that in the action against him by Nelson, he was unable to avail himself of the existence of the mortgage, had he known of it. But it does not seem that the law will put even a wrong-doer in such predicament, as that he will be twice mulcted in civil action *223
for the same act. I think that an application of the principles above stated, may fairly be made to the case. Looking at the facts, we find that the mortgage was conditioned for the payment of $2,400 and interest, in installments. By the statement of the plaintiff, filed in the auditor's office, September 14, 1872, he claims that there was unpaid upon the mortgage, at that date, $1,250 and interest thereon, from the date of the mortgage. To make up that sum, there must have been unpaid the installment payable July 1, 1872. It thus appears, that a default in the performance of the condition of the mortgage had occurred before the recovery of the judgment by Nelson against Cornell for the conversion. The effect of that default was, that Marsden, the plaintiff, had become the absolute owner of the boat, subject only to the right of redemption in the mortgagee or his assignees, and had the right to take immediate possession of the boat. (Lewis v. Palmer,
The case is still stronger for the defendant Costello. He had all the title which Cornell could give him, which was certainly all that Nelson had. Costello is in the same position, then, as if he had taken title from Nelson. He is, besides that, a purchaser, a subsequent purchaser within the purview of the statutes, for he bought in good faith, and paid a valuable consideration; as to him, the mortgage of the plaintiff had ceased to be valid.
The other question raised in the case it needs not that we consider.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.