Isidore Cherno, Trustee-Appellant v. Dutch American Mercantile Corporation, Creditor-Appellee. In the Matter of Itemlab, Inc., Bankrupt

353 F.2d 147, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4009
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1965
Docket29812_1
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 353 F.2d 147 (Isidore Cherno, Trustee-Appellant v. Dutch American Mercantile Corporation, Creditor-Appellee. In the Matter of Itemlab, Inc., Bankrupt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Isidore Cherno, Trustee-Appellant v. Dutch American Mercantile Corporation, Creditor-Appellee. In the Matter of Itemlab, Inc., Bankrupt, 353 F.2d 147, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4009 (2d Cir. 1965).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:

The Trustee in Bankruptcy appeals from a judgment of the District Court which reversed an order by the Referee in Bankruptcy which rejected the claim of the appellee, Dutch American Mercantile Corporation, that it was a preferred lien creditor as an equitable assignee or equitable lienor or as the beneficiary of a constructive trust. We reverse the judgment below and let stand the order of the Referee.

On October 23, 1959, Blanmill Realty Corp. loaned $87,000 to Itemlab, Inc., evidenced by Itemlab’s note in that amount and secured by a chattel mortgage, which was duly filed in the office of the Town Clerk of the Town of North Hempstead, New York, in compliance with the provisions of § 230 of the New York Lien Law. Thereafter, when Item-lab was in default on its note to Blanmill and in need of additional cash, Itemlab, Blanmill and Dutch American entered into a written subordination agreement which provided that Dutch American would loan Itemlab $50,000, on its note to Dutch American in that amount, with the express understanding that Blanmill’s claim against Itemlab “shall * * * be subject and subordinate in lien to the lien of said note for $50,000,” and that “no part of the indebtedness * * * shall be paid [to Blanmill] until all sums due and owing to Dutch American Mercantile Corp. shall have been paid and disposed of.” Dutch American took no chattel mortgage from the bankrupt to secure its loan nor did it request or receive an assignment of Blanmill’s note or chattel mortgage, nor was the subordination agreement filed or recorded.

Itemlab defaulted on its note, and Dutch American commenced an action to recover the amount due. While that case was pending,. Blanmill, as a part of a scheme to get additional cash for Item-lab, executed and filed a satisfaction of the chattel mortgage in spite of the fact that no part of the mortgage debt had ever been paid. At the same time that the satisfaction of mortgage was filed, and in furtherance of the scheme, a new chattel mortgage on the same property was made to secure a note for a loan in the amount of $47,300 and delivered to an innocent lender, the 18th Avenue Land Corp., which recorded it. The loan by 18th Avenue was made in reliance upon the fact that there was no record encumbrance upon the chattels at the time the loan was consummated. Dutch American had no knowledge of this transaction and was not a party to it; moreover, the 18th Avenue Land Corp. had no notice or knowledge of Dutch American’s interest in the matter, actual or constructive, or that Blanmill’s release of *150 Itemlab’s mortgage to it was in any way violative of an agreement with Dutch American. Itemlab was insolvent at the time it gave the chattel mortgage to 18th Avenue Land Corp., and, in the subsequent bankruptcy proceedings, the trustee succeeded in having this chattel mortgage declared invalid. 1 The 18th Avenue Land Corp. is, therefore, an ordinary creditor of the debtor in bankruptcy.

The Referee denied Dutch American’s petition for an order declaring it to have a first lien on the proceeds from the sale of the chattels mortgaged to Blanmill, but the District Court reversed the Referee’s order. The Referee merely assumed arguendo that Dutch American held an equitable assignment of the Blanmill chattel mortgage, but decided that because it had not been filed, it did not have priority over the claims of the common creditors in bankruptcy. The District Court concluded there was, in fact and law, an equitable assignment, that the law of New York did not require Dutch American to record it and therefore upheld the appellee’s claim of priority in the proceeds from the sale.

The judgment of the District Court and the position of the appellee in defending that judgment on this appeal take the position (a) that the subordination agreement operated as an equitable assignment of Blanmill’s mortgage on the chattels, which thereby became security for the Dutch American bare note from Itemlab, Inc., and (b) that Blanmill’s execution and filing in the Town Clerk’s records of a satisfaction of that mortgage did not release or destroy the mortgage as security for Dutch American’s note, even though innocent third persons had been misled to their damage by Dutch American’s failure to file or record the subordination agreement as a claimed assignment.

In holding that the subordination agreement operated to create an equitable assignment, the court below principally relied upon National Live Stock Bank of Chicago v. First National Bank of Geneseo, 203 U.S. 296, 27 S.Ct. 79, 51 L.Ed. 192 (1906). In that case First National was assignee under a written assignment of a note, secured by a chattel mortgage on cattle. This assignment was not recorded. The assignor-mortgagee thereafter improperly executed and recorded a release of the mortgage, though the debt had not been paid to the assignee. In reliance on the apparent unencumbered state of the cattle, and without knowledge of the assignment to First National, National Live Stock made a loan to the owner of the cattle, secured by a mortgage on the herd. These transactions took place in Kansas. Later the owner, who was in default on the loans, removed the cattle to Oklahoma. Both banks claimed the right to the cattle. The decision of the Court in favor of First National, as assignee of the initial mortgage note, held, (1) that the assignment of a note by a chattel mortgagee transferred the mortgage with it and (2) that the federal courts must look to state law to see if that assignment must be recorded. The present case is distinguishable from National Live Stock Bank because the subordination agreement does not include any assignment to Dutch American of the note from Itemlab to Blanmill or of the mortgage securing it. 2 *151 The essence of the rule that declares that an assignment of the debt also transfers the chattel mortgage is that the security cannot exist apart from the debt for which it is given. Thus, the proposition that Dutch American received an equitable assignment must find support in the express terms of the subordination agreement or the proposition fails.

Blanmill agreed to do no more than defer its claim until the Dutch American note was paid with interest. Absent a manifestation of intent to make an assignment of the chattel mortgage by the terms of the agreement or otherwise, a subordination agreement does not constitute an equitable assignment of the security. In re Dodge-Freedman Poultry Company, 148 F.Supp. 647, 650-651 (D.C.N.H.1956), affirmed without opinion, 244 F.2d 314 (1st Cir. 1957).

The appellee argues that it is not at all necessary that the subordination agreement contain words of assignment because, it claims, a subordination agreement in itself and of its own force creates an equitable lien or a constructive trust. In support of this proposition the appellee relies upon an article in 70 Yale Law Journal 376 at 395 (1961), the following portion of which it quotes:

■'‘Probably the most misunderstood conceptual element of subordination agreements concerns the question of the necessity of including an assignment of the subordinated debt in the agreement. * * * In all of the subordination cases, except Matter of Goodman-Kinstler Cigar Co. [32 Am.Bankr.R.

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353 F.2d 147, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isidore-cherno-trustee-appellant-v-dutch-american-mercantile-corporation-ca2-1965.