In re League Bookbinding Co.

226 F. Supp. 775, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7569
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 13, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 226 F. Supp. 775 (In re League Bookbinding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re League Bookbinding Co., 226 F. Supp. 775, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7569 (S.D.N.Y. 1964).

Opinion

WEINFELD, District Judge.

This is a petition to review an order of the Referee in Bankruptcy which held void a chattel mortgage upon the bankrupt’s property as against the trustee in bankruptcy. The essential facts are not in dispute. The chattel mortgage was executed on April 27, 1959 but was not filed in the Office of the Register of New York County until July 6,1961. The petition in bankruptcy was filed on August 3, 1962. There are creditors whose claims arose between the date of the execution and delivery of the chattel mortgage and the date of its filing, none of whom had notice of the mortgage.1

The petitioner concedes, as indeed he must, that under the New York Lien Law in effect at the time of the delivery of the mortgage it was void as against creditors during the more than two years that it was unfiled. He contends, however, that under an amendment to section 230 of the New York Lien Law, which became effective on October 1, 1960 (hereafter considered), the mortgage must be deemed created and valid as of the date of its filing and hence is superior to the lien of the trustee.

Under New York law,2 both before and subsequent to the 1960 amendment, a chattel mortgage, unaccompanied by an immediate delivery and actual change of possession of the chattel, is absolutely void as against creditors of the mortgagor, subsequent good faith purchasers and mortgagees for value unless filed.3 Prior to the 1960 amendment, no time was prescribed for the filing of the mortgage. The New York courts held, however, that the instrument had to be filed within a reasonable time after its execution and delivery; what was a reasonable time presented a question of fact to be determined upon all the circumstances in each case.4 Simple contract creditors were among those as against whom an unfiled chattel mortgage was condemned as void whether their claims antedated or arose subsequent to the execution of the unfiled instrument.5 If, however, their claims arose after the chattel mortgage had been filed, even though unseasonably, the mortgage was valid as against them, since they were on notice by virtue of the filing.6

The invalidity of an unfiled or an unseasonably filed chattel mortgage as against a simple contract creditor is in sharp contrast with the more limited protection given to creditors of a buyer in possession of goods under an unfiled or an unseasonably filed conditional sales agreement. New York State has long recognized the distinction, and different [777]*777statutes got ern.7 Thus, under New York law, a conditional sales instrument is void only as to creditors without notice of its existence and who acquired a lien by levy or attachment before the instrument is filed. As to creditors who have not perfected liens, the condition, or the retention of title, remains valid.8 This basic distinction between the vulnerability of an unfiled chattel mortgage and an unfiled conditional sales agreement at the instance of creditors, although criticized,9 reflects New York State policy which, as long as it is in force,10 may not be ignored by the courts.11

When there is no creditor, whose claim arose between the date of execution and the date of filing of a chattel mortgage, and who under section 230 of the New York Lien Law, as it read prior to its 1960 amendment (or under a provision of like tenor), would have the right to void the mortgage, the trustee may not attack it.12 Conversely, when there is an existing creditor who can set the transaction aside, the trustee may void the chattel mortgage under section 70(c) of the Bankruptcy Act.13 Since in the instant case there are creditors whose claims arose between the date of execution of the chattel mortgage and the date of filing more than two years later, it is clear that the trustee would have succeeded, prior to the 1960 amendment to section 230,14 in his attack upon the validity of the mortgage. The petitioner, however, urges that the amendment wrought a substantial change in the existing law and compels a contrary result.

So far as here material, the first sentence of the amendment leaves existing law substantially unchanged, except that it provides for the filing of a chattel mortgage “within ten days after the making thereof.” Thus, instead of a variable reasonable time to be determined, case by case, the law now specifies the period of filing. The amendment then continues with the following:

“Filing thereafter [10 days] shall be valid; but in that event, except as between the parties, the mortgage shall be deemed to be created by the mortgagor as of the time of such filing, without relation back, as against all persons not having notice of such mortgage.”

The petitioner invokes this provision to support his contention that his chattel mortgage is now immune against the trustee’s challenge despite the fact that it remained unfiled from April 27, 1959 to July 6,1961. He does not dispute that at no time up to October 1, 1960, the effective date of the amendment, or up [778]*778to the date of the filing of the chattel mortgage thereafter, on July 6, 1961, could he have resisted the trustee’s attack upon it. However, he argues that by reason of the amendment quoted above, the chattel mortgage must be deemed to have been created on the date of its filing and that the trustee’s lien which arose on August 3, 1962, when the bankruptcy petition was filed, is subordinate to the lien of the chattel mortgage. He emphasizes the words “the mortgage shall be deemed to be created by the mortgagor as of the time of such filing * * He contends that despite the late filing, a new mortgage is created when filed and that it follows, in the instance of such new mortgage, there can be no such thing as an intervening creditor. The substance of his position is that prior to the amendment, since the trustee succeeded to the rights of intervening creditors, the chattel mortgage was void by reason of untimely filing and the trustee could always set it aside; that the quoted language was intended to remove the invalidity once the mortgage was filed (even beyond this ten-day period) and that the amendment applies the same principle which protects the rights of a conditional vendor against the trustee whose lien arises subsequent to the late filing of a conditional bill of sale — in fine, that the purpose of the amendment was to conform the law relating to late filings of chattel mortgages to the law of conditional sales contracts.

It may be that the sentence in question is not a model of clarity.15 There is little, if any, legislative history to give guidance. But whatever the possible ambiguity of the language quoted above, it hardly bespeaks a legislative purpose to abolish the long established difference between the legal consequences of the late filing of a chattel mortgage and a conditional sales agreement. Since New York legislation has not only. treated them differently, but in “noticeably different language,” 16 it would require a clear indication of a legislative purpose to depart from the traditional difference in treatment of each. And if such had been the purpose, it would have been a simple matter to effect the change which petitioner suggests by bringing the statutes into conformity.

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226 F. Supp. 775, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-league-bookbinding-co-nysd-1964.