Brackett v. . Harvey

91 N.Y. 214, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 27
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 91 N.Y. 214 (Brackett v. . Harvey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brackett v. . Harvey, 91 N.Y. 214, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 27 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The two mortgages, assailed by the assignee in bankruptcy were not void on their face, and as a legal conclusion from their express terms. Beading them, as both parties do, in connection with the original agreement of sale, and as steps in its performance, they permitted but three things, to one of which the other two were merely incidental, which differed from the ordinary stipulations of a chattel mortgage. The mortgagors were left at liberty to sell and dispose of the mortgaged property, but upon a condition involved in their covenant, that they would apply the proceeds of such sales to the payment of the debt which the mortgage secured. As subsidiary to this general provision, the two others may be fairly gathered from the agreements taken together : that the mortgagors might sell on credit, taking good business paper having sixty to ninety days to run, and which paper the mortgagee would accept and apply on the debt; and that the mortgagors might use a part of the avails of the sales to replenish and freshen their stock, but if they did,' the substituted property was to be placed, by monthly renewals of the mortgages, in the room and stead of that which was sold to procure it. If we state these latter stipulations somewhat differently from the version of them given by the appellant, we are yet convinced that no other or wider statement of them is a just inference from the provisions of the original contract.

*221 Three cases decided in this court in rapid succession held • that a chattel mortgage was not per se void because of a provision contained in it allowing the mortgagor to sell the mortgaged property, but accounting to the mortgagee for the proceeds, and applying them to the mortgage debt. (Ford v. Williams, 24 N. Y. 359; Conkling v. Shelley, 28 id. 360; Miller v. Lockwood, 32 id. 293.) These cases went upon the ground that such sale and application of proceeds is the normal and proper purpose of a chattel mortgage, and within the precise boundaries of its lawful operation and effect. It does no more than to substitute the mortgagor as the agent of the mortgagee to do exactly what the latter had the right to do, and what it was his privilege and his duty to accomplish. It devotes, as it should, the mortgaged property to the payment of the mortgage debt. 0 And the further doctrine of one of these cases, that under such a stipulation the proceeds realized by the agent are to be deemed realized by the principal, and as against an adverse lien, are to be applied on the mortgage debt even though not actually paid over (Conkling v. Shelley, supra), shows how impossible it is that any fraud, or injury to others, can be imputed to the agreement. If the mortgagor sells, and actually pays over the whole proceeds, nobody is harmed, for that only has happened which is the proper and lawful operation of the mortgage. If, on the other hand, such proceeds have not been paid over, the adverse lien is still unharmed, for, as against it, such proceeds are deemed paid over and applied in reduction of the mortgage debt, although as between mortgagor and mortgagee the debt remains, and is still unpaid. The effect we have thus given to the stipulation under discussion has received the approval of the Federal court, in a case where the whole subject was deemed open, and the true rule at liberty to be sought out, unhindered by decisions tiften conflicting and said to be impossible to reconcile. (Robinson v. Elliott 22 Wall. 524.) While holding that provisions which allow the mortgagor to sell for his own benefit are necessarily fraudulent, since they strip the mortgage of its whole force as a security to the holder, and *222 ■make it merely a shield to the debtor, the court carefully qualified its judgment by adding that such results did not follow where the sales were to be for the benefit of the mortgagee, and their proceeds to be paid over to him. Hor does the recent case in our own court of Southard v. Benner (72 N. Y. 424) question this doctrine. In that case there was no agreement to sell for the benefit of the mortgagee, and apply the proceeds to the debt. The trial judge charged that if the mortgagees knew of the sales, but supposed the.money was to be applied on the debt, there was no fraud in law; and the decision went upon the ground that the jury had found, and there was evidence to justify it, that the mortgagor was permitted, by the conscious assent and agreement of the mortgagee, to sell the property as he .pleased for his own benefit, precisely as if the mortgage had no existence. We see no reason to doubt that on their face the mortgages here assailed were valid unless the two incidental or subsidiary facts operated to modify the result. The first of these was the implied permission to sell for good business paper, running sixty or ninety days, which paper the mortgagee was to take and apply on the debt. This stipulation is an inference from the provision of the contract by which Harvey agreed to accept such business paper as cash. Ho express liberty to sell the mortgaged property on credit was given, and the only proper inference of such liberty to be drawn as it respects sales of the mortgaged property is that which we have stated. It was thus a provision in entire harmony with the covenant to apply all sales to the mortgage debt. If the sales were for cash, that was to be paid over; if on a credit of sixty or ninety days secured by good business paper, that was to be at once taken as cash and applied as cash. Ho permission to sell in any other way was given or can be inferred from the contract, and that actually given made the paper permitted to be taken cash as between the parties, to be at once applied upon the debt. We do not see how such a provision can be said to affect injuriously the rights of other creditors. It can only become dangerous by straining it beyond any just inference, and construing it to be a general per *223 mission to sell on credit without limitation. The second incidental fact is the implied permission to use proceeds for replenishing the stock; the goods bought to be substituted in the mortgage for those sold. This again is an inference from the stipulation in the original contract for monthly renewals. These could only be necessary to bring in after-acquired property, and permission to acquire it with proceeds of sales is perhaps a just'inference, but then only upon condition that the substituted property be brought in and subjected to the mortgage lien. Thus understood it provides only for a shifting of the lien from one piece of property to another taken in exchange. In no respect did it permit any thing mortgaged to escape the mortgage. If it did not turn into cash or paper, which reduced the mortgage debt, it turned into other property, which became itself the subject of the mortgage lien. We think, therefore, that on the face of the papers, giving them a fair and just construction, there was nothing which constrains us to deem them fraudulent in law.

But the contention of the assignee does not stop with the inferences to be drawn from the papers themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.Y. 214, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brackett-v-harvey-ny-1883.