Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Puritan Laundry, Inc.

111 A. 149, 95 Conn. 172, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 20, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 111 A. 149 (Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Puritan Laundry, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Puritan Laundry, Inc., 111 A. 149, 95 Conn. 172, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 78 (Colo. 1920).

Opinion

Gager, J.

Under our statute authorizing retention of possession by a mortgagor of personal property of the several kinds described in the statute, and to which property in question belongs, it is required that the the mortgage shall contain “a particular description of such personal property.” General Statutes, § 5206. The description in the mortgage in this action was “all machinery, tools and equipment located on said premises used in connection with the laundry business conducted by the grantor.” The trial court held that this was too general and indefinite a description to secure the protection of the chattel mortgage as against attaching creditors and bona fide purchasers. This ruling is justified by Gaylor v. Harding, 37 Conn. 508, and Herman v. Deming, 44 Conn. 124, and is not in fact questioned by the plaintiff. While, therefore, this question is not before us, reference must be made to it because the questions presented are based primarily upon the assumption that this ruling was correct, and that the plaintiff stands in no other position than it would be in if the statute were not in existence.

The appellant claims that the mortgage as to the tools, machinery and equipment involved in this appeal, by reason of the generality of its description, is invalid as between the mortgagor and the mortgagee. Directly the contrary was held by the court in Gaylor v. Harding, supra, a case, up to a certain point, indistinguishable from the present. We quote from page 516 as follows: '' None of the property in dispute is particularly described in the mortgage deed, nor enumerated in the schedule thereto attached. The deed was, however, duly recorded, and general words of descrip *180 tion are used which, as between the parties, would embrace and convey all the machinery. After a description of the real estate the deed goes on to say, ‘together with all the machinery, tools and implements contained in said buildings; also all machinery, tools and implements which may from time to time be added to or substituted for those now in use upon said premises and in said building.’ ” This is, also, the general rule as between the parties. 11 Corpus Juris, p. 456, § 78. Neither did retention of possession of the mortgaged personalty make the mortgage invalid as between the parties. The doctrine of the effect of retention of possession by the vendor or mortgagor of personal property, never was applied, or intended to be applied, so as to render a sale or a mortgage of personal property, otherwise valid, invalid as between the parties. The doctrine is solely for the protection of attaching creditors and bona fide purchasers. In all our cases where it is said that retention of possession renders a sale or mortgage void, this result is always affirmed with reference to the rights of such creditors or purchasers, and never as to the rights of the original parties as between themselves. All the discussions are based upon the assumption of a contract good between the parties and as to all others except creditors and bona fide purchasers. Gaylor v. Harding, 37 Conn. 508; Price v. Heubler, 63 Conn. 374, 28 Atl. 524; Swift v. Thompson, 9 Conn. 63; and this principle is recognized and applied in Sanford v. DeForest, 85 Conn. 694, 84 Atl. 111. See also Patten v. Smith, 5 Conn. 196.

Did the case of the defendant Pratt Company rest upon a priority claimed by reason of an attachment of. the mortgaged personal property while it was still in the hands of the' mortgagor and nothing more, it may be conceded that the claimed priority over the mortgagee would be made out, But the Pratt Com *181 pany’s situation is controlled by quite other factors than those so far referred to. It appears from the statement of facts that about six months after the mortgage was given by the Puritan Company, the Pratt Company, desiring to purchase the mortgaged property from the Puritan Company, mortgagor, and to remove the property to its own place of business, entered into a contract of conditional sale with the Puritan Company by which the Puritan Company agreed to sell the property to the Pratt Company, title to pass to the Pratt Company when payments had been made .in the manner, provided in the contract to the amount of $10,600 with interest thereon. "While the contract was in form one of renting and hiring, it was rightly regarded by the parties as a conditional sale. In re Wilcox & Howe Co., 70 Conn. 220, 228, 39 Atl. 163; Hine v. Roberts, 48 Conn; 267. The Puritan Company, apparently desiring to protect the Trust Company, mortgagee, and also to protect itself from liability to the Trust Company as maker of the notes secured by the mortgage, before executing the contract of conditional sale notified the defendant Pratt Company of the facts as to the mortgage, with the result that the following clause was made part of the contract of conditional sale, to wit: “Said machinery is subject to a mortgage to the Hartford Trust Company for the sum of $7,000, which, in addition to the payments to be made to the said party of the first part [The Puritan Company], by the said party of the second part [The Pratt Company] as herein contemplated, said party of the second part hereby assumes and agrees to pay, as part consideration hereof.” The contract then specifically provides for the payment of a portion of the so-called weekly rent to the Trust Company on account of the mortgage debt referred to. Under this contract the Pratt Company became a purchaser of the *182 property, conditional of course, not only with full notice of the plaintiff’s interest therein and therefore not as a bona fide purchaser, but as a purchaser undertaking by this express contract to assume and pay the Trust Company’s claim as part of the purchase price of the property involved in the transaction. By undertaking this obligation the Pratt Company not only undertook to pay the plaintiff, but by so doing to pay and discharge the obligation of the Puritan Company evidenced by the mortgage, and therefore made the contract immediately and directly for the benefit and advantage of the Puritan Company as a method of discharging the secured debt of the Puritan Company to the plaintiff. After this undertaking and delivery of this property under this contract, the Pratt Company cannot be heard to say that' it is not bound by the terms of this agreement. The Pratt Company is not a purchaser in good faith. Neither lack of particularity in the description, nor retention of possession by the Puritan Company, have caused or permitted any fraud upon the Pratt Company considered as a purchaser, and to allow its present claim would enable it to work a fraud upon both the Puritan Company and the plaintiff. Such allowance would enable the Pratt Company to take and hold possession of the property at the same time that it repudiated its express obligation to pay, made in the very contract under which it holds. We think the Pratt Company as purchaser is by its contract clearly estopped from disputing the validity of this mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 149, 95 Conn. 172, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-connecticut-trust-co-v-puritan-laundry-inc-conn-1920.