Mack v. . Phelan

92 N.Y. 20, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 112
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 92 N.Y. 20 (Mack v. . Phelan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mack v. . Phelan, 92 N.Y. 20, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 112 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The chattel mortgage from Crane to Hayward, included, among other articles, the three machines for the conversion of which this action is brought. They are *24 described in the mortgage by numbers and by other descriptive particulars, and the mortgage stated that the property was then in the possession of the mortgagor, in the upper mill known as the tow mill, in Eotterdam. The mortgagor, when the mortgage was executed, resided in the town of Eotterdam, and the machinery mortgaged was then in his flax mills in that town. The mortgage was dated November 11, 1871, and was-filed on the same day in the town clerk’s office of the town. It was given to secure the payment by Crane to Hayward of $6,000 with interest in one year from its date, the consideration being a loan of that amount made by Hayward to Crane at the date of the mortgage. The mortgagee, on the 14th of October, 1872, attempted to renew the mortgage by refiling - a copy thereof, with a statement indorsed ’thereon, exhibiting his interest in the property by virtue of the mortgage; but the copy was not an exact copy of the original mortgage, there being some slight variance between them. It was, however, accurate as to the statement of the debt for which the. mortgage was given, and of the property embraced in the mortgage, and the statement, which was signed by the mortgagee, correctly set forth the amount then due upon the mortgage. .The referee, however, having found that by reason of the fact that the alleged copy was not an exact transcript of the original mortgage, the refiling did not operate to renew it, this finding must be taken to be the law of the case, and cannot be questioned by the respondent upon this appeal.

The original defendant in the action was one of the firm of A. H. Hart & Co., and claimed title to the machinery in question under a purchase made by that firm from Crane in April, 1873, and one of the questions in the case is whether, at the time of such purchase, the firm of A. H. Hart & Co. had notice of the original mortgage, and that it was then a subsisting lien upon the property. By the third section of chapter 279, Laws of 1833, relating to the filing of chattel mortgages, it is provided that a mortgage filed 'under the first section of the act, shall cease to be valid as against the creditors of the person making the same, or against subsequent purchasers or mortgagees in good faith, *25 after the expiration of one year from the filing thereof, unless it is refiled, as provided in that section. The object of the statute, requiring mortgages of personal property to be filed, is the same as that of the registry acts respecting mortgages of real estate, viz.: to prevent imposition upon subsequent mortgagees and purchasers (Denio, J., Meech v. Patchin, 14 N. Y. 71), and if at the time of the purchase by Hart & Co. they had notice of the mortgage to Hayward, such notice stands in the place of filing, and their purchase would be subject to the lien of the mortgage. It appears by the evidence that immediately prior to the purchase of the machines by the firm of Hart & Co. their agent saw and read the original mortgage and the copy filed as a renewal in the town clerk’s office of Rotterdam, but was informed by the mortgagor that it did not cover the machines in question, and in support of the statement he refer-' red to the fact that the numbers on the machines which he was about to sell did not correspond with the numbers of the machines stated in the mortgage. The agent being satisfied with this information, without making further inquiry, or going to the mill to ascertain whether the machines covered by the mortgage were still there, concluded the purchase, Crane receiving for the machines $3,000 in cash and three other machines of the same general character as those described in the mortgage. There is no ground to impute any actual bad faith to Hart & Go. in the purchase of the property, nor is there any reason to question that they had no actual knowledge at the time that the machines purchased by them were covered by the mortgage. It appears that when the mortgage was taken by Hayward he examined the property, and there were at that time numbers upon the several machines, upon brass plates attached to them, corresponding with the numbers in the mortgage, but at the time of the purchase by Hart & Co. these numbers had been removed, and the only numbers then upon the machines were numbers which had been cast therein at the time they were made and which did correspond with the numbers mentioned in the bill of sale to the firm. How the numbers came to be changed does not distinctly appear, it *26 may be inferred, however, that it was done by Crane with the intention of defrauding the purchasers. But it was not essential to charge the purchasers with notice of the plaintiff’s mortgage that they should have actually known at the time of the purchase that the machines were those embraced in the mortgage. They had actual notice of the instrument executed to Hayward, and the paper filed as a copy of the mortgage although not accurate in every respect, was, in connection with the statement accompanying it, notice to them that the original mortgage between the parties was a subsisting security, and that the debt which it was given to secure was unpaid.

The statute which declares that unless a mortgage is refiled, it shall cease to be a lien as against subsequent purchasers, in good faith of the mortgaged property, does not relieve the purchaser who has actual notice of a mortgage, which at the time it was executed correctly described the property mortgaged, but the appearance of which, for purposes of deception, and without the fault of the mortgagee, has been changed by the mortgagor. The langúage of the third section of the statute in this respect is the same as the language of the first section, requiring the original filing of a chattel mortgage, and it could not be claimed that if the purchase had been made before the expiration of the year from the original filing, the lien of the mortgage was lost as against a purchaser upon whom such a fraud had been practiced. Hart & Go. were chargeable in law with notice of the mortgage and with the legal rights of the mortgagee thereunder, notwithstanding the deception, and they cannot transfer the loss resulting therefrom from themselves to the mortgagee, so long as they had actual notice of the "mortgage.

■ ■ In another view also the objection of want of notice cannot prevail. The purchasers purchased property of the same general description, aside from the numbers,' as that contained in the mortgage. Knowing of the mortgage and of the attempt to renew it, they were put upon inquiry, and this amounts to actual notice of the mortgage, unless they pursued the inquiry with diligence, and were unable thereby to ascertain the exist *27 ence of the lien. ( Williamson v. Brown, 15 N. Y. 354.) The purchasers in this case relied alone upon the statements of the mortgagor in respect to the lien. They did not see the machines purchased by them until after they had paid the purchase-money. They made no inquiry of the mortgagee, nor did they go to the mills where the mortgaged property was stated in the mortgage to be, to ascertain whether there were machines there corresponding to those described in the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.Y. 20, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mack-v-phelan-ny-1883.