Mortgage Securities Co. v. Pfaffmann

169 P. 1033, 177 Cal. 109, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 457
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1917
DocketL. A. No. 5320.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 169 P. 1033 (Mortgage Securities Co. v. Pfaffmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mortgage Securities Co. v. Pfaffmann, 169 P. 1033, 177 Cal. 109, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 457 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

The Chatts, husband and wife, executed to plaintiff a chattel mortgage on their automobile, the mortgagors retaining the possession and use thereof. They delivered their automobile to defendant to have repair work done thereon. He did this work and held possession of the automobile until payment for it was made. The Chatts violated the terms of their chattel mortgage contract with plaintiff. For this violation plaintiff was entitled to take possession of the automobile and to sell it. Its endeavor to do so was met by the refusal of the defendant to deliver the automobile until payment of his bill, he contending for his possessory lien on account of the work performed. This action was brought to determine the respective rights of the parties and the priorities of their liens. The trial court decreed that the possessory lien of the repairer was subordinate to the chattel mortgage lien of the plaintiff and gave judgment accordingly. From that judgment this appeal has followed.

No question arises over the validity of the chattel mortgage as such, or over the constructive notice by recordation which that recordation gave to the world. The controlling sections of our code upon the subject matter are, Civil Code, sections 3051, 3052, and 2897. Section 3051 declares: “A person who makes, alters, or repairs any article of personal property, at *110 the request of the owner, or legal possessor of the property, has a lien on the same for his reasonable charges for the balance due for such work done and materials furnished, and may retain possession of the same until the charges are paid.” Here it may be said that this consideration is not complicated, as respondent urges, by the fact that the Chatts were in default under their chattel mortgage at the time they delivered the automobile to defendant for repairs. They were still the legal possessors of the automobile, and their possession continued to be legal until the plaintiff exercised its rights under its mortgage and took unto itself that possession. Section 3052 authorizes a sale in due course of the property held under possessory lien. Section 2897 declares that “Other things being equal, different liens upon the same property have priority according to the time of their creation, except in cases of bottomry and respondentia.” The trial court and the court of appeal, not without warrant, held that the lien of the chattel mortgage had priority over the possessory lien of the repairer. Not without warrant, we say, for Wilson v. Donaldson, 121 Cal. 8, [66 Am. St. Rep. 17, 43 L. R. A. 524, 53 Pac. 404], lends strong support to this view. It was because this court was not satisfied with the reasoning and conclusion of Wilson v. Donaldson that a hearing before it was ordered. At the time when Wilson v. Donaldson was decided the law with which we are concerned was identically the same as it now is, the difference being that section 3051 at the time of the decision in Wilson v. Donaldson dealt only with the first class of lien-holders, those “who, while lawfully in possession of an article of personal property renders any service to the owner thereof, by labor or skill, employed for the protection, improvement, safekeeping or carriage thereof,” while section 3052 dealt with the second class of lien claimants, those “who make, alter, or improve any article of personal property, at the request of the owner, or legal possessor of the property. ’ ’ The change that has been made has only been to group both these classes with others in section 3051 and to provide in section 3052 for the identical enforcement of the liens of all of the classes described in section 3051. Wilson v. Donaldson, however, cites both section 3051 and 3052, though the lien which was there declared to exist was a lien of the first of the designated classes, that is to say, a lien depending upon possession *111 and owned by one lawfully in possession who had bestowed labor for the improvement of personal property, the labor there being the harvesting of grain, the grain itself being subject to the lien of a chattel mortgage prior in time. But while our law to-day in substance gives every member of the two classes an identical possessory lien for the value of the service rendered or the work performed, and gives them likewise identical remedies in the matter of the foreclosure of the lien, no such identity of origin exists in the case of the liens themselves. The latter class, those “who make, alter,. or repair any article of personal property, ’ ’ always and in the absence of statute or even in the absence of agreement, at common law had their lien. “By the general law, in the absence of any specific agreement, whenever a party has expended labor and skill in the improvement of a chattel bailed to him, he has a lien upon it.” (Jackson v. Cummins, 5 Mees. & W. 342.) The reasoning, and, indeed, the quotation, relied on in Wilson v. Donaldson has to do with an agistor’s lien, though it was not an agistor’s lien the court had before it in Wilson v. Donaldson. But an agistor, in the absence of a special agreement, had no lien at common law, and this is very clearly pointed out in the case cited, supra, where it is further said: “Now the case of an agistment does not fall within that principle [the principle of improving personal property], inasmuch as the agistor does not confer any additional value upon the article either by the exercise of any skill of his own or indirectly by means of any instrument in his possession.” Tet, obviously, this reasoning, perfectly sound in itself, has no application to the facts presented in Wilson v. Donaldson, where the lien by the court conceded to exist was not an agistor’s lien at all, but was clearly based upon the “improvement” of the personal property, if with propriety the harvesting of grain can be said to be an improvement. Therefore, under statutes creating agistor’s liens where questions of priority arose, all the reasoning which, as we shall see, goes to support the priority of the repairer’s lien was wholly absent. Thus it was said in supporting the superiority of the chattel mortgage lien over the agistor’s that it was not in the contemplation of the mortgagee that the mortgagor would put the horse or the cow into an agistor’s hands. Further, that when he did so the agistor by his service did not better or improve the chattel, and that as it was not therefore within *112 the contemplation of the mortgagee that his mortgagor should do this thing, and as the agistor had done nothing to improve the chattel, and as the general rule touching liens is that preference goes with priority, and as the mortgagor could not by any contract of his own with the agistor impair the mortgagee’s rights, such liens when created by statute, unless the statute itself spoke clearly to the contrary, were to be held subordinate to a pre-existing chattel mortgage lien.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P. 1033, 177 Cal. 109, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mortgage-securities-co-v-pfaffmann-cal-1917.