Baxter v. Gilbert

12 Abb. Pr. 97
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Abb. Pr. 97 (Baxter v. Gilbert) 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
Baxter v. Gilbert, 12 Abb. Pr. 97 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court.—Hilton, J.

—At the trial of this action, the following facts were established:

[98]*98On June 18, 1857, Andrew McNally, being the owner of the sloop President, to secure the payment of his note for $650, due November 1, 1858, payable to and then held by Simeon Atkins, executed and delivered to him a mortgage upon the vessel. On May 22,1858, Atkins, being indebted to John C. Baxter upon a promissory note for $140, due November 25, 1858, executed and delivered to Baxter, as security for the payment of the note, an assignment of the mortgage. Neither the mortgage nor the assignment were filed in the register’s office of the city and county of New York, but the mortgage was duly recorded at the custom-house, in New York, on the day of its date.

On August 31,1858, the note for $650 being then outstanding, McNally, for the purpose of paying it, executed and delivered to Atkins a bill of sale of the sloop, which, on March 18, 1859, was also recorded at the custom-house. The note, however, was never delivered up to McNally, nor does it appear that Baxter ever assented to or had any knowledge of this transaction. Atkins took possession of the sloop under the bill of sale, and so remained, up to the time when she was sold, under an execution, in the manner which will be shown hereafter.

On January 21, 1859, Justice Palmer recovered a judgment against Atkins, in the third district court of this city, for $105.19, and issued an execution therein to Thomas Cushing, one of the city constables, who went with it and levied upon the vessel. At the time of the levy, Atkins told him of the existence of the mortgage so assigned to and held by Baxter; whereupon Cushing went to Baxter to inquire respecting it, and was shown the mortgage and the assignment, and told that Baxter claimed a lien upon the vessel. Subsequently, Cushing informed Mr. McAdam, the attorney for Palmer in the judgment, that Baxter “had some claim.” McAdam thereupon called on Baxter to inquire respecting it, and was told that it was upon a mortgage of Atkins, and that his claim was about $140. McAdam swears that Baxter did- not say he had an assignment of a mortgage, but that “ he had a mortgage from Atkins on that vessel.” After this information, McAdam searched the records of the customhouse, and found the mortgage of McNally to Atkins, and also the subsequent bill of sale from McNally to Atkins, there [99]*99recorded; without communicating to Baxter the result of his search, he advised his client, the defendant Gilbert, who, in connection with the defendant Snape, was, as I think may be inferred from the case, the real owner of the judgment. so recovered in the name of Palmer, “ That the mortgage of McNally had been cancelled by operation of law, by the mortgagee (Atkins) buying the vessel, and that he would be sure of his money.” Gilbert, in his testimony at the trial, differed from McAdam somewhat as to this. He said that McAdam told him that Baxter pretended to have a claim against the vessel,—“ a mortgage or an assignment of a mortgage.” He also testified that he paid the note on which the judgment had been recovered, to Mr. Palmer, for counsel-fees, but there was a balance coming to him (Gilbert) upon it.

Cushing subsequently sold the sloop under the execution, and at the sale it, was struck off to one Hamel, for $150.

When the sale took place, or where, does not appear; but the bill of sale to Hamel bears date February 14,1859. On the same day Hamel, who acted in the purchase merely as the agent of the defendants, also executed to them a bill of sale of the sloop, and under which, it seems, they took possession of her. It may be here remarked that Hamel, when examined at the trial, testified that Baxter told him he claimed, under a mortgage signed by McNally, and given to him (Baxter) before Atkins took the sloop back; that this interview took place between the 6th and 12th of February, after the sale, but before he got the transfer-papers from Cushing. He also adds, that the money he paid for the vessel he got from Gilbert. Having thus shown in detail the proceedings and circumstances "under which the defendants claim to have acquired a valid title to the sloop, I will now pass to the adverse claim of the plaintiff.

After the levy had been made out in the fore part of February, 1859, Baxter placed the McNally mortgage in the hands of his attorney, Mr. Ryer, with power to collect it, who, after giving previous public notice of intention to sell the vessel, sold her under the power contained in the mortgage. The sale took place on February 12, 1859, within about twenty feet of the sloop, and she was struck off for the plaintiff, as purchaser, for $175. Baxter then executed to the plaintiff, who is his son, a [100]*100proper bill of sale of the vessel, in accordance with the authority vested in him as assignee of the mortgage, and on the 15th of February the plaintiff demanded possession of the sloop from the defendants, and upon their refusal to surrender her, this action was brought to recover her value, which was proven to be $400.

Upon the case thus shown, the justice who tried the cause gave judgment for the defendants with costs, on the ground, as stated by him, “ that as against the execution-title, under which the defendants claimed, it should appear that the assignment of the McNally mortgage to the plaintiff was recorded as the law required, or that the defendants knew of its existence before they purchased, to entitle the plaintiff to recover,” and this determination has been affirmed by 'the Marine Court at general term. Upon the argument before us we were not referred to any statute or rule of law requiring assignments of chattel mortgages to be recorded, nor do we know any such. The only provision on the subject of chattel mortgages is to be found in 3 Rev. Stat., 5 ed., 222, which, at section 9, declares that any such instrument not accompanied by an immediate delivery, and followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things mortgaged, shall be absolutely void, as against the creditors of the mortgagor, and as against subsequent purchasers and mortgagees in good faith, unless the mortgage, or a copy thereof, be filed, as directed in the succeeding section.

Apply this to the case in hand, the mortgage made by McNally would have been void as to his creditors, because it had not been so filed. But the execution was against Atkins, the mortgagee, and not against McNally, and therefore the statute in this respect is not applicable to the claim the defendants set up. But it is urged that the defendants did not believe that the mortgage existed at the time they purchased, but, on the contrary, were advised, and, it is contended, properly so, that it became merged in the bill of sale from McNally to Atkins; and the justice having been-of opinion that the evidence showed they had no knowledge of the assignment to Baxter, they must be regarded as purchasers in good faith, without notice of the existence of the McNally mortgage.

My first answer to this is, that the opinion of the justice is quite immaterial, as we can only deal with the final determina[101]*101tion of the Marine Court at general term, and they have not furnished us with any reasons for their judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Abb. Pr. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-v-gilbert-nyctcompl-1861.