Newell v. Warner

44 Barb. 258, 1865 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 69
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 44 Barb. 258 (Newell v. Warner) 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
Newell v. Warner, 44 Barb. 258, 1865 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 69 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court, Johnson, J.

The property in question which was taken by the defendant, on the execution, and to [262]*262•which the plaintiff claims title, consists of a piano, brussels carpets, sofas, damask curtains, and various other articles of household furniture belonging to a well and expensively furnished house, of the value of over $500.

The plaintiff claims title by virtue of a chattel mortgage executed to her, by Cheney, the judgment debtor, against whom the execution was issued. The clause in the mortgage constituting the sale and transfer is in these words: I do hereby sell, transfer and assign to the said Esther M. He well the property described in the annexed schedule, marked A, except such articles as are by law exempt from levy and sale under execution.” It is shown by the evidence that this shedule A, which was annexed to the mortgage* and formed part of it, contained all the household furniture, and all the personal property of which the mortgagor was possessed, and embraced the articles in question.

The defendant’s counsel, amongst other things, asked' for a nonsuit, in due time, on the ground that the mortgage was so uncertain in its description of the property attempted to be sold to the plaintiff that it was void and conveyed no title. He also asked the court to direct the jury to find a verdict for the defendant, on substantially the same ground. Both requests were denied and exceptions taken.

A chattel mortgage is an executed sale of property, which vests the title in the mortgagee until the terms upon which it may be defeated are complied with. And like all other sales of property, if the thing or things designed to be sold be not pointed out, described or identified, in some way, so that they can be distinguished and taken by the purchaser, without any further act, on the part of the seller, no title vests in such purchaser. The general rule is that the sale is not completed, so as to pass the property, so long as any thing remains to be done to identify it, or discriminate it from other things. (1 Parsons on Cont. 441. Chitty on Cont. 376.) The rule is well stated by Comstock, J. who delivered the opinion of the court in Kimberly v. Patchin, [263]*263(19 N. Y. Rep. 330.) At page 332 the learned judge says : “It is a rule asserted in many legal authorities, but which may quite as fitly be called a rule of reason and -logic as bf law, that in order to an executed sale so as to transfer a title from one party to another, the thing sold must be ascertained. This is a self evident truth when applied to those subjects of property which are distinguishable by their physical attributes from all other things and are therefore capable of exact identification. No person can be said to own a house or a picture, unless he is able to identify the chattel or specify what house, or what picture it is that belongs to him.” The rule is different where a definite portion or quantity is sold, from a larger quantity of property, like grain, one part of which can not be identified or distinguished from another part, and the intention of the parties is.to pass the title, as was held in the case above cited. The articles attempted to be sold by the mortgage, are all articles capable of being identified and distinguished by their physical attributes or characteristics. But how many, -and which of them, became the property of the plaintiff upon the execution and delivery of the mortgage P The instrument does not profess to convey all, but a part only. Which part does it transfer, and which reserve ? In respect to the common articles of household furniture, it would be exceedingly difficult, and it seems to me Utterly impossible, for any one to designate which passed to the plaintiff, and which were reserved to mortgagor. The mortgage does not specify nor furnish any means of selection, and the statute of exemption affords no criterion by which they could be distinguished. There has been no delivery by the mortgagors, and nothing whatever done by either party to the mortgage, by way of separation, or identification, of what was mortgaged or intended to be, and what was reserved from the sale.

But it has been held that a mortgage of all the property of a particular description in a certain store, is sufficiently [264]*264definite to transfer the title to such property then on hand, (Gardner v. McEwen, (19 N. Y. Rep. 123.)

And in respect to property sold or mortgaged by a schedule, with an exception similar to that contained in the mortgage in question, I am of the opinion that it is sufficiently definite and certain as to all the articles enumerated in the schedule, which necessarily or presumptively do not fall within the exception, to transfer the title to the purchaser or mortgagee. There are many articles of personal property in the schedule attached to the mortgage and forming a part of it, which presumptively, and in ordinary cases, clearly, would not come within the category of property exempt from levy and sale under execution. And this is obviously the case in respect to several of the articles taken by the defendant upon the execution. It is held in the case last above cited * that a chattel mortgage may be good to transfer the title to a portion of the property contained in it, although void as to other portions it assumes to transfer: The- mortgage in question was not therefore void, but valid at least as to a portion of the property in question, and the request to non-suit and to direct a verdict on the ground specified, was properly denied.

The defendant's counsel also made a similar request for a nonsuit and direction to the jury to find a verdict on the ground that a copy of the mortgage had not been filed in successive years previous to the levy, within the time prescribed by statute. The mortgage was first filed February 23, 1858. A copy was filed with statement February 17, 1859; another copy and statement was filed January 30, 1860.. The next copy was filed with statement January 12, 1861. The.next was filed January 8, 1862, and the last was filed January 9, 1863.

The statute provides that every mortgage filed in pursuance thereof, shall cease to he valid as against the creditors of the person making the same, after the expiration of one year from the filing thereof, unless within thirty days [265]*265next preceding the expiration of the said term of one year a true copy of such mortgage together with a statement exhibiting the interest of the mortgagee in the property thereby claimed by him, by virtue thereof, shall again be filed. The time for this filing, as the court I think correctly held, relates to the first filing of the mortgage, and is limited to a period of thirty days previous to the expiration of the term of one year from such first filing. A filing before the commencement of the thirty days would obviously be just as nugatory as one after the expiration of that time. And I have no doubt that where a mortgage is sought to be kept on foot through a number of years, there must be successive filings annually, of the copies and statements, or the mortgage will cease to be valid as against creditors, and subsequent mortgagees and purchasers in good faith of the mortgagor. This was held in Nitchie v. Townsend, (2 Sand. 299.) The language of the statute may pierhaj)s be satisfied with the filing of one copy only, in such a case, as contended for by the plaintiff’s counsel; but its obvious spirit, policy and meaning, would not.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Barb. 258, 1865 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newell-v-warner-nysupct-1865.