National Park Bank v. Goddard

9 Misc. 626, 30 N.Y.S. 417, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 207
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Misc. 626 (National Park Bank v. Goddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Park Bank v. Goddard, 9 Misc. 626, 30 N.Y.S. 417, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 207 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Patterson, J.

By the agreed statement setting forth all the facts to be considered by the court in deciding this cause, it appears that the plaintiff sues to procure an adjudication of the rights of various claimants to a fund now in the hands of •a receiver of this court, and which fund consists of the proceeds of certain manufactured garments which were sold by the receiver under an order of the court. Various claims to the goods were urged by many parties, among them the plaintiff and such of the defendants as are now before the court, and whose names appear in the statement referred to. The plaintiff claims under an attachment, judgment and execution against the [628]*628property of Levy Brothers. The'defendants now before the court claim by title revested in them to goods sold and delivered by them to Levy Brothers, the sale having been procured to be made by fraudulent representations of Levy Brothers, and the defendants having rescinded the sales and elected to treat them as null. It also appears that the sheriff of the city of New York levied upon the property which the defendants had sold to Levy Brothers, such levy being under the attachment in the plaintiff’s action against that firm. This levy under the attachment was made before the defen dants elected to rescind the sales. While the goods were in the sheriff’s possession under the attachment, the defendants brought actions of replevin and issued process to the cor,oner, who seized the manufactured goods for the making of which, in part, the defendants’ merchandise had been used. There were altogether some fifty actions of replevin brought, and thereupon this suit was. instituted for the express purpose of having an adjudication by this court as to 'the rights of the parties to all those actions in and to the goods. Interlocutory proceedings were had in this action by which the receiver of the merchandise was appointed, and he was instructed to sell the property and to hold the proceeds subject to the order of the court. The actions in replevin were enjoined, and the various defendants have come into court with their answers, setting up their claims and insisting upon their rights to the fund, the subject of the litigation. It further appears by the agreed statement of facts that the goods sold by the defendants to Levy Brothers were made up, with other goods, into garments, and the defendants now urge that, by reason of the changed form into which their merchandise has been put, and the impossibility of separating that merchandise from the garments without destroying its value, they are entitled to the proceeds of sale of all the goods, on the principle which applies to cases of accretion and confusion of property. In passing upon these claims, it is apparent at the outset that when the attachment issued in the plaintiff’s action against Levy Brothers the defendants in that action had an interest in all the merchandise which could be levied upon and held [629]*629by the sheriff, and also that as the property was situated at the time the defendants’ replevin actions were begun, it then being in the custody of the sheriff, and hence in the custody of the law, those actions of replevin were not maintainable, and possession of the goods could not be lawfully obtained by the defendants under the replevin suits. Wise v. Grant, 140 N. Y. 593. As the matter stood, therefore, when the actions in replevin were begun, which was subsequent to the levy under the attachment, the sheriff had a lien upon the merchandise, and the plaintiffs in the replevin actions could not recover the goods. But, notwithstanding that condition of things, when the defendants now before the court elected to rescind the sales, as they did by their demands on the sheriff and the institution of replevin actions (Moller v. Tuska, 87 N. Y. 166 ; Powers v. Benedict, 88 id. 605), the lien of the sheriff was displaced in favor of the original title of the sellers of the goods; so that when the present action was begun this plaintiff and the defendants now claiming were standing before the court, the former on an alleged right as a lienor creditor, the latter with a title revested in them to the merchandise, but prohibited from taking possession by reason of the statute, which, in consequence only of the particular situation of the property, deprived them of the substantial right to reduce it to actual possession. These are the claims, and that is the condition in which they come before the court, and they must be regarded with reference to the equitable rights of the parties, for it is exactly the aspect in which the plaintiff by bringing this suit has chosen to put the matter, and in which it asks the judgment of the court. It seems to me, therefore, that the question of legal right to possession, as predicated only upon the defendants’ claims under the actions of replevin, is not to control in the disposition of the cause, and that although the actions of replevin were not maintainable, and the property could not be taken from the possession of the sheriff in actions of replevin, yet as the lien of the sheriff was displaced by the rescission, and the title was revested by the act of rescission, the defendants have shown an equitable [630]*630title which can be protected and enforced in this action, for that would seem to be the necessary effect of the extinction of whatever lien existed in favor of the plaintiff by reason of the sheriff’s possession; so that although these actions of replevin were futile as remedies, they, nevertheless, were effectual as evidences of the intent and determination on the part of the defendants to rescind the contracts of sale, and for the purpose of the restoration of title of the goods to themselves. It seems to me they, therefore, stand as having paramount claims in a court of equity to their particular goods, and consequently to their proceeds, now in the custody of the officer of the court. This follows from their being the real owners of the goods, and while under ordinary circumstances the sheriff would not be enjoined from proceeding under an execution, yet the plaintiff having brought the whole controversy into court, it may be disposed of as justice and equity dictate. It is claimed, however, by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that the only remedy open to the defendants, upon the state of "facts disclosed by the submitted record, was in trover against the sheriff. That such action would lie, I think, is clear, and I also concur in the argument that nothing in the pleadings in this cause, or in any of the papers now before the court, can turn the defendants’ claims into technical actions of conversion against the sheriff or the plaintiff. But I apprehend that the subject-matter of this action does not come before the court upon a question of pleading, nor are these claims to be disposed of otherwise than according to the equities as they appear by the concession of all the respective parties. They have been brought before the court by the act of the plaintiff in instituting the suit, and in so doing it has shown that the lien of its process upon the goods has been superseded, and it has also shown that the clear title of the defendants to their goods has been restored, and it would be unjust for the plaintiff to insist that the defendants should be deprived of their equitable rights when the plaintiff itself has n,o superior equitable claim to have the proceeds of the goods applied to the payment of [631]*631its debt. A court of equity will not aid in applying the property of a third party to the payment of the debt of a stranger, and while the defendants gain nothing by their replevin suits they may stand here on their ownership.

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Related

National Park Bank of New York v. Goddard
34 N.Y.S. 1144 (New York Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Misc. 626, 30 N.Y.S. 417, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-park-bank-v-goddard-nysupct-1894.