Balz v. Shaw

34 N.Y.S. 5, 13 Misc. 181, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 861
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 3, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 N.Y.S. 5 (Balz v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balz v. Shaw, 34 N.Y.S. 5, 13 Misc. 181, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 861 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

BOOKSTAVER, J.

On the 23d of .December, 1893, two persons, representing themselves to be Mr. and Mrs. Schwartz, called at plaintiff’s place of business to purchase a piano, and, after some negotiations, plaintiff sold them an upright for the sum of $450, the piano being delivered the following day, at 244 West Fifty-Second street, at which time $10 of the purchase price was to be paid, and notes to be given for the remainder, running 60, 90, and 120 days, respectively, to be secured by a chattel mortgage on the piano. The following day the piano was delivered at the place designated, and the $10 was paid by the person representing herself as Mrs. Schwartz, who at the same time signed the chattel mortgage. The notes specified in the mortgage had then been filled out and signed, but, as they did not specify the place where they should be made payable, it was agreed that new notes, with the name of the bank inserted, should be made, and sent "to the plaintiff, and the salesman thereupon took the money and the chattel mortgage. On the 29th December following, Mr. Schwartz went to plaintiff’s store, and offered instead of the three notes a promissory note made by one George Marks for $529.30, dated December 23, 1893, payable 90 days after date. This note was accepted by plaintiff as a substitute for the notes called for in the chattel mortgage, and was not due at the time when this action was brought. At the time of the giving of this note, Schwartz asked payment of the difference, but the plaintiff instead gave him a receipt for $440 on account of the piano, and also an acknowledgment that, when the note was paid, Schwartz should receive the difference. The chattel mortgage was never filed. The evidence on the part of the defendant tended to show that Schwartz, about January 2, 1894, applied to the defendant for a loan of $600 on property in the house 244 West Fifty-Second street, including the piano in question. Defendant sent an agent to examine and report on the piano and other furniture, and the value, and after such report, showing the piano was in the possession- of Schwartz at his residence, and after Schwartz had shown him the receipt given him by the plaintiff, which was in the following language: “Baus Piano Factory. J. Balz, Proprietor. Warerooms, 113 East 14th St. $440.00. New York, Dec. 29, 1893. Received of Mr. J. Schwartz four hundred and forty (by note) dollars on account of piano. [Stamped] Jacob Balz. Dec. 29, 1893. [Signed] Jacob Balz.” Defendant agreed to loan $550. Before doing so, he caused [7]*7a search to be made in the register’s office for chattel mortgages or liens on the property, and found none, and thereupon gave Schwartz his check for $550; and Schwartz gave him two notes, for $275 each, and signed and delivered to defendant a chattel mortgage on various articles of household property, including the piano in question, and also made an affidavit that there were no liens against the same. Subsequently, for an additional loan made by defendant, Schwartz gave him a second chattel mortgage. On or about February 8, 1894, defendant took possession of the property described in the chattel mortgages, including the piano in question, they being on the premises in Fifty-Second street, and had possession of the same when this action was commenced.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case, and again when all the evidence was in, the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint, on the grounds: (1) That the sale from Balz to Mrs. Schwartz was an absolute, and not a conditional, one, taking back a chattel mortgage for the purchase price of the property, which was never filed or recorded; consequently, that the title to the property vested in the purchaser free and clear at that time of all rights of the plaintiff, so that the purchaser had a right to do as she wished with the piano. (2) That on the 26th or 29th day of December, whatever is the date, the receipt was given vesting the title in Mr. Schwartz to the piano in question, so that the chattel mortgage or conditional agreement whereby they were to give certain notes was done away with and canceled, and the new contract substituted therefor. (3) Because this action was commenced prior to the time when the note matured, and therefore was prematurely brought. (4) Because on the 14th February, 1893, the plaintiff, having taken the note of a third party, and given the receipt he did, waived the conditional payments and the chattel mortgage, and therefore had no right to the delivery of the piano to him, or to demand the same from the defendant. The court denied the motion, and submitted the case to the jury, in a charge more favorable to the defendant than either the facts or the law warranted; indeed, so favorable that, had the jury found a verdict in his favor, the judgment would necessarily have been set aside on account of errors in the charge.

After the charge, one of the jurors asked a question which went to the vital point in the case, namely: “If the lady represented as Mrs. Schwartz owned the piano, what right had Mr. Schwartz to dispose, bargain' or barter the instrument in any way,”—to which the court replied: “I charge you in reference to that matter that the presumption of law is that Mr. Schwartz was the owner at the time he made the mortgage to Mr. Shaw, and the question for you to determine is, are there any circumstances in the case which would indicate that that fact is not true. You will bear in mind that an individual may buy property one moment, and cease to be the owner the next, because he may transfer it. Therefore, I charge you in this case that the presumption of law is that Schwartz was the owner at the time he made the mortgage to Shaw.” This was certainly as favorable to the defendant as he could have asked; yet the jury found there were circumstances in the case which rebutted [8]*8that presumption, as they well might, when Mr. Shaw, oh the 12th February, 1894, before the action was commenced, and knowing- all the circumstances proved in the case, wrote to the warehouseman: “Mr. Balz claims the piano. I think the sale is a conditional one. If you agree with me, then deliver the piano to Mr. Balz,” upon certain conditions. From the facts in the case, it is clear that the sale was made to Mrs. Schwartz, and not to Mr. Schwartz. She gave hack the chattel mortgage. While this mortgage was never filed, still it was valid as between the plaintiff and Mrs. Schwartz, the mortgagor; and as against her he was entitled to the immediate possession, because of her breach, among other things, of the condition and provision as to keeping the piano for her own use on the premises designated in the mortgage, which may be inferred from the fact that she was in possession of it last before the defendant obtained possession in the absence of explanation. She paid a part of the purchase price. The fact that the husband subsequently negotiated with the plaintiff that the balance was to be received in a note of another person, instead of Mrs. Schwartz, in no way changes the relations of the parties. - Any one has the right to pay the debt of another if he chooses, and the mere fact of his doing so would not make him the owner of the property. Had the defendant’s mortgages been executed by Mrs. Schwartz, they would have had priority over the mortgage executed to the plaintiff, because then the statute in regard to the filing of chattel mortgages would have governed. But the defendant took his chattel mortgages from Mr. and not Mrs. Schwartz. There is absolutely nothing in the case which tends to show that he ever became the owner of the property by assignment or otherwise from his wife. Consequently, he could give no title to the piano through the mortgages, as no one can give to another a better title than he himself possesses. 26 Am.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 N.Y.S. 5, 13 Misc. 181, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balz-v-shaw-nyctcompl-1895.