In re Roseboom

253 F. 136, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 3, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 253 F. 136 (In re Roseboom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.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 Roseboom, 253 F. 136, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282 (N.D.N.Y. 1918).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] April 29, 1916, one Willard Teetsel, of Walton, N. Y., was justly indebted to one Galusha G. McNamara in the sum of $3,199.40, the purchase price of certain goods and chattels described in the mortgage hereafter referred to, and on which day McNamara sold Teetsel the said personal property, consisting of goods and fixtures in a store, a horse and delivery wagon, a harness, and a pair of sleighs. The schedule of mortgaged property included the following:

“Together with any and all other property that'may be substituted for the above-named property, and at any and all times hereafter, in said store, precisely the same as if the property there in the store at any time hereafter was specifically mentioned and described herein, and it is treated and regarded the goods subsequently hereto placed in the store as a substitute for the goods now therein are to he treated the same as if specifically described herein, first party to keep the goods insured for three thousand dollars, as interest of parties appear.”

The interest and $500 of the principal was to be paid annually. If default was made and continued for 60 days, then the entire sum, at McNamara’s election, was to become due. The mortgage contained a power on default to take and sell the property to satisfy the debt, or any balance, and also a clause authorizing McNamara to take the property if at any time he deemed himself unsafe. The mortgage.in form sold and transferred the property to McNamara, but it was a security for such indebtedness. This mortgage was kept good by filing and refiling under the chattel mortgage law of the state of New York. This was a retail store, and Teetsel took possession and continued the business, selling from and replenishing the stock in the usual manner customary in such stores and in such a business, and as contemplated by the mortgage.

June 9, 1917, Teetsel, by written hill of sale, sold the business and all the property in the store, and the other property, to the now bankrupt, George W. Roseboom, who agreed to pay therefor $7,073. This bill of sale contained the following:

“And whereas, there is a mortgage upon said property now hold by (ialuslm <í. McNamara upon which there is unpaid twenty-six hundred nlnety-niue dollars and forty cents, with interest thereon from April 29th, 1!>L7, which amount has been deducted from the aforesaid purchase price, and the second party hereby covenants and agrees to pay the same as a part of the purchase price according to the terms of said mortgage, which is §500 of principal and interest annually with right to pay faster if the mortgagee so desires. And I further covenant that the goods are free and clear from, all lions or incumbrances except as aforesaid and that the title is perfect in me and I have good right and full power to sell the same.”

Roseboom took possession and continued the business, selling and replacing to some extent, but made default in his payments. Teetsel [138]*138had and has no creditors. Roseboom has creditors and is a bankrupt. Roseboom had full knowledge of the mortgage and of its terms and conditions.

Some days before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy McNamara, deeming himself insecure and unsafe, with the consent of Roseboom, took possession of and took away from the store a large quantity of this mortgaged property, as much as he deemed necessary to satisfy the balance due on his mortgage, which was about $2,600 or $2,700. Roseboom claimed he was solvent, and an attempt was made to effect an arrangement by which the property should he returned to the store, and some of it was returned; hut it almost immediately developed that Roseboom had, at least, largely underestimated his indebtedness, and in fact had largely misrepresented it. Thereupon the attempted arrangement was repudiated by McNamara, as he had the right to do, and he repossessed himself of some, and perhaps most, of the property so taken by him. ‘

Then, in June, 1918, a petition in bankruptcy was filed, and application to this court made for the appointment of a receiver. The facts not fully or properly appearing, this court not only appointed a receiver, but directed McNamara to return to the receiver the property so taken by him on his mortgage, which he did. The receiver was authorized to continue the business. Further facts having been brought to the attention of this court, an order was made enjoining further action by such receiver, and requiring the said receiver and bankrupt to show cause why the property actually taken by the mortgagee prior to the filing of such petition in bankruptcy should not be returned to him for disposition under the mortgage and lien of McNamara.

It is clear from the terms of the mortgage given by Teetsel to McNamara, and later assumed by Roseboom, with full knowledge of all its terms, that it was contemplated Teetsel should sell goods in the usual course of business, and purchase other goods and replace those so sold, and that the lien of such mortgage should attach to such goods so subsequently acquired by Teetsel for replacement. This mortgage and lien was perfectly good as between the parties, and, while Teetsel could not mortgage goods he did not then own, the agreement was good in equity, and created an equitable lien on the subsequently acquired property, good as against Teetsel and Roseboom when the latter purchased the property and assumed the mortgage. Even if void as to the creditors of Teetsel, he had none. The lien was not void as to Roseboom or his creditors. Roseboom was not and is not an innocent purchaser in good faith and for value. He knowingly took the property subject to the lien, and the equitable lien of McNamara was perfected by actual possession taken by him prior to the bankruptcy proceedings. There was no fraud in the transaction. Plainly and unquestionably this was an agreement between Teetsel and McNamara, and later an understanding between Roseboom and McNamara that goods sold should be replaced, and that McNamara should have a lien on all the goods for the balance of his mortgage debt.

[139]*139This was not valid so as to birid property purchased by Roseboom after he took possession, as against his creditors (Kribbs v. Alford, 120 N. Y. 519, 525, 24 N. E. 811), hut was valid to bind, as against Roseboom and his creditors, the property actually owned by Teetscl when he gave the mortgage, and create a lien on that which Teetsel subsequently purchased and put in the store in replacement of those sold by him, so far as reduced to the possession of the mortgagee prior to the bankruptcy. Kribbs v. Alford, supra; McCaffrey v. Woodin, 65 N. Y. 459, 22 Am. Rep. 644; Wisner v. Ocumpaugh, 71 N. Y. 113; Coats v. Donnell, 94 N. Y. 168-177; Titusville Iron Co. v. The City of New York, 207 N. Y. 203, 100 N. E. 806. In this last case it is held:

"Mortgages or contracts pledging- subsequently acquired property, though void at law, will nevertheless be enforced in equity as between mortgagor and mortgagee as agreements to give liens, and also ar, against purchasers with, notice. But it is settled law in tins state [it. XJ that they will not be enforced as against creditors.”

The bankruptcy court is a court of equity, and proceeds on equitable principles.

[2] The trustee of a bankrupt, in the absence of fraud, takes the property in the same plight and condition, and subject to the same liens and equities, as when the bankrupt held it. Thompson v.

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Bluebook (online)
253 F. 136, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-roseboom-nynd-1918.