North End Auto Park, Inc. v. PETRINGA TRUCKING CO. INC

150 N.E.2d 735, 337 Mass. 618, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 711
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 3, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 150 N.E.2d 735 (North End Auto Park, Inc. v. PETRINGA TRUCKING CO. INC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North End Auto Park, Inc. v. PETRINGA TRUCKING CO. INC, 150 N.E.2d 735, 337 Mass. 618, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 711 (Mass. 1958).

Opinion

Spalding, J.

This is a petition to enforce a garage keeper’s hen under G. L. c. 255, §§25 and 26. The case was submitted on a statement of agreed facts, amounting to a case stated.

The petitioner operates a public garage in Boston. During the period from August 1, 1955, to August 2, 1956, the respondents Mary Petringa and Petringa Trucking Co., Inc., were the owners of all of the motor vehicles (consisting of *619 trucks, trailers and tractors) on which a lien is claimed. In this period the petitioner stored the vehicles, supplied them with gasoline and oil, and repaired them. During part of this period (from August 1, 1955, to April 30, 1956) the respondents used all of the vehicles in their trucking business, taking them away each day from the petitioner’s garage with its knowledge and consent. On April 30, 1956, the petitioner refused to allow the respondents to remove the vehicles, and from that date to August 2, 1956, they remained in the uninterrupted possession of the petitioner under a claim of lien. On the latter date the vehicles were sold and the proceeds, under a stipulation executed by all of the interested parties, were placed in escrow, “pending judicial determination of the rights of the petitioner in . . . [the fund] under the claim of lien.”

As of April 30,1956, the unpaid balance due the petitioner in connection with the vehicles was as follows: for gasoline and oil $3,425.21; for repairs $464.47; for storage $2,250. These charges, amounting to $6,139.68 in the aggregate, were incurred during the period from August 1, 1955, to April 30, 1956.

After the commencement of the present proceedings both respondents were adjudicated bankrupts, and their trustees in bankruptcy were substituted as parties.

The trial judge ruled that for the period up to April 30, 1956, the petitioner had no lien because it did not retain uninterrupted possession of the trucks. He further ruled that by reason of the petitioner’s uninterrupted possession of the trucks for the period between April 30, 1956, and August 2, 1956, the petitioner was entitled to have its lien established in the amount of $750, the storage charges for three months. A report to the Appellate Division was dismissed and the petitioner appealed.

The petitioner is asserting a lien for storage, gasoline, oil, and repairs. The questions for decision are whether, for the period during which the vehicles were taken daily from the garage, any lien exists, and, if so, to which of the foregoing items it extends.

*620 1. Section 25 of c. 255 provides: "Persons maintaining public garages for the storage and care of motor vehicles brought to their premises or placed in their care by or with the consent of the owners thereof shall have a lien upon such motor vehicles for proper charges due them for the storage and care of the same.” At common law the garage keeper had no lien for storage and it is only by § 25 that he acquired/one. Flesher v. Handler, 303 Mass. 482, 484. In this respect he was in the same situation as the agistor or keeper of animals who likewise had no hen at common law but was given one by statute. St. 1878, c. 208, now G. L. c. 255, § 24. The agistor’s lien was construed by this court in Vinal v. Spofford, 139 Mass. 126, and since this decision is heavily relied on by the respondents and was to a considerable extent the basis for the opinion of the Appellate Division, it merits discussion. In that case the owner of a horse boarded it at the defendant's livery stable and had become indebted to the defendant for the horse’s board. The defendant, nevertheless, permitted the owner to take and use the horse every day. While this arrangement was in force, the owner, while in possession of the horse, sold it to the plaintiff, a bona fide purchaser. The plaintiff continued to board the horse at the defendant’s stable (the defendant having no knowledge of the sale), taking it out each day and returning it each night. On the failure of the former owner to pay the indebtedness for the board of the horse the defendant seized the horse while it was in the plaintiff’s possession away from the stable. The plaintiff brought replevin to recover the horse. It was held that the defendant’s lien was lost. It was said per Holmes, J., "Such a transaction would divest a common law Hen. . . . [¡The statute] gives no intimation that it uses the word ‘Hen’ in any different sense from that which is known to the common law. On the contrary, it in terms supposes that the animals in question have been placed in the care, that is to say, in the possession, of the party to whom the Hen is given. . . . To admit that it was intended to create a tacit hypothecation, Hke that enforced from necessity, but within narrow *621 limits, in the admiralty, would be to go in the face of the whole policy of our statutes, which always strive to secure public registration when possession is not given and retained, and which expressly provide for such registration when they in terms create a lien not depending on possession” (p. 130). What was said in Vinal v. Spofford concerning the lien there involved is equally applicable here. In other words the lien of the garage keeper like that of the keeper of animals essentially is a possessory lien and is divested by a complete and voluntary loss of possession. Restatement: Security, § 80.

It might appear at first blush that the principles discussed in Vinal v. Spofford militate against the existence of a hen in the case at bar for the period when the trucks were daily taken out of the garage. But as Mr. Justice Lummus said in § 85 of his treatise, The Law of Liens, “The common-law rule requiring continued possession in order to keep alive a lien must, in reason, be subject to some modification in the case of livery-stable keepers, just as it is in the case of innkeepers. While a complete voluntary loss of possession would doubtless defeat the hen . . . merely allowing the owner to take the animal for use during the day, with the expectation on the part of both parties that he was to be brought back to the stable when the temporary use has ended, according to the almost universal custom, must be held not to defeat the hen, at least as against the owner or persons having notice, or the statute giving the hen is of httle value.” This reasoning is equally apphcable to the garage keeper’s hen. While the precise question has never been decided by this court there are intimations which tend in the direction of the principle just stated. Thus in Perkins v. Boardman, 14 Gray, 481, 483, it was said, “A hen may perhaps be renewed by the return and restitution of the property; but in such case it will be subordinate to any intervening incumbrance to which the property in the mean time has become subject.” And concerning the closely analogous situation of a pledge it was said in Walker v. Staples, 5 Allen, 34, 35, that “the doctrine that possession *622 must be retained is held with reasonable qualifications.” There is nothing to the contrary in Vinal v. Spofford.

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E.2d 735, 337 Mass. 618, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-end-auto-park-inc-v-petringa-trucking-co-inc-mass-1958.