Kimball v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank

33 N.Y. St. Rep. 870
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 8, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 870 (Kimball v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimball v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 870 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

Hatch, J.

When default was made in the payment of the note held by plaintiff, the legal title to the vessel became vested in plaintiff subject to be defeated only upon compliance with the conditions of the mortgage. Marsden v. Cornell, 62 N. Y., 215; Campbell v. Birch, 60 id., 218. At the time defendant took its mortgage from Sarah E. Kims she was then in default; the legal title was vested in plaintiff; all the interest she then had or could mortgage was an equity of redemption in the property; of this fact defendant had notice, as plaintiff's mortgage was duly recorded and by its terms informed defendant when the debt became due and payable. As to the vessel defendant possessed no property therein, as against plaintiff, could enforce no right which was not subject to the payment of plaintiff’s claim. The present question, however, relates not to the vessel but to her earnings. Ordinarily earnings are an incident of ownership and follow the title. Maclachlan’s Merchant Shipping, 99, and cases cited. In the case of a mortgagee of a ship out of possession, the mortgagor becomes entitled to receive the freight moneys, may collect the same and use them for his own benefit. This right in the mortgagor, however, may be intercepted by the mortgagee’s taking possession of the vessel at any time before the delivery of the cargo, in which event the latter becomes entitled to all the earnings of the voyage, subject to such expenses as are legally chargeable thereon. Liverpool Marine Credit Co. v. Wilson, 7 Ch. App. [872]*872Cas., 507; Cato v. Irving, 5 De Gex & Smale’s, 210; The Brig Wexford, 7 Fed. Rep., 681-682. The holder of a second mortgage occupies a different position; as stated by Sir W. M. James in Liverpool Marine Credit Co., supra, “ What is the position of a second mortgagee of á ship with respect'to the freight ? He has no legal right to take actual possession, and cannot therefore by his own act give himself that which is equivalent to possession. But as between himself and the mortgagor the equitable right of the second mortgagee is the same as the legal right of the first mortgagee. * * * But this is to be understood only as between the second mortgagee and the mortgagor. * * * The respective positions of the first and second mortgagees are essentially different, arising from the essential difference between a legal and an equitable title. The legal owner’s right is paramount, to every equitable charge not affecting his own conscience; the equitable owner, in the absence of special circumstances, takes subject to all equities prior in date to his own estate or charge.”

Upon these principles counsel for the respective parties reach divergent conclusions, it being claimed upon the part of plaintiff that the mortgagee had taken possession of the vessel, had made but a conditional release, and under the circumstances attendant thereon he became legally and equitably entitled to the moneys earned; that defendant could not by any act, based upon its mortgage, obtain a superior title to said moneys. Upon the part of defendant it is contended that when plaintiff released the possession of said vessel to the mortgagor, he placed the latter in the same position as though he had never seized, and thereafter relied upon the security of -the assignment taken in consideration of the release; that the assignment was inferior as a lien to its mortgage, as the latter was prior in point of time, and being possessed of the right to seize and take possession of the vessel by-virtue of the mortgage, it exercised such right, completed the voyage, delivered the cargo, received the earnings, and as plaintiff did not exercise its right of seizure during this time, defendant took title to the earnings.

There is no question but that plaintiff, in ¡November, 1875, seized and took into his possession the vessel. At this time the legal title was vested absolutely in him; he could tie her up, sell or navigate her, as he chose, and no person could complain or compel him to do other or different, except he pay the debt and charges legally due. Under these circumstances Mrs. ¡Nims applied for leave to run the vessel two round trips between Chicago and Buffalo. At this time she had no legal rights in the vessel, and she acquired none by virtue of any subsequent acts. Plaintiff, in consenting to this arrangement, imposed a condition that the earnings of the vessel for the trips should be his; he let her go to enable her to earn for his benefit. The surrender was not only conditional but limited; it was conditioned upon the payment of freight and limited in that it provided for only two round trips, when, under a fair interpretation of the arrangement, the vessel was to be returned to the actual possession of plaintiff.

When plaintiff released the vessel he surrendered no part of [873]*873Ills legal title, nor did he surrender possession, beyond such as was necessary for her navigation in order to earn for his benefit; this involved all the vessel could do, and it was not such a release from his control over the vessel as would have enabled the mortgagor to receive for his own benefit the freight money, had there been no assignment. The assignment neither detracted from plaintiff’s rights, nor did it add to those of the mortgagor; plaintiff was not bound by the assignment of the freights, for he could at any time have secured them by taking possession, and he could have prevented the voyage, as the assignment gave him no additional right to what he already possessed; consequently there was no consideration for it. The mortgagor’s possession was for a special and particular purpose; in carrying out that purpose he represented the plaintiff. At this time the debts secured by the two mortgages were due, plaintiff had the legal title; defendant simply had an equitable right or interest If the right of defendant to seize be conceded, its equitable right to enforce the claim upon which it founded the right to seize could, in the nature of things, only be against such rights as the mortgagor possessed therein at the time of seizure, and, as against plaintiff, she possessed no right to the freight moneys, either legal or equitable. By the seizure defendant did not acquire any greater right than it already possessed against the mortgagor, as it could acquire no greater right than she at the time had.

Within the authority heretofore cited, the seizure therefore gave defendant no additional rights to the moneys. This view proceeds upon the theory that the rights obtained by virtue of the assignment, executed at the time of the release, are outside of the questions involved. It consequently disposes of defendant's claim that its mortgage being prior in date to the assignment, therefore it possessed a superior lien. It is conceded that the expenses paid by defendant are a proper charge upon the moneys received.

If these views are correct, it follows that the judgment rendered is wrong; it is therefore reversed and a new trial ordered before another referee, costs to abide event.

Beckwith, Ok. J., and Titus, J., concur.

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Related

Marsden v. . Cornell
62 N.Y. 215 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.Y. St. Rep. 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-farmers-mechanics-bank-nysuperctnyc-1890.