Peter Barrett Manufacturing Co. v. Ronk

105 N.E. 811, 212 N.Y. 90, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 848
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 105 N.E. 811 (Peter Barrett Manufacturing Co. v. Ronk) 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
Peter Barrett Manufacturing Co. v. Ronk, 105 N.E. 811, 212 N.Y. 90, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 848 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Collin, J.

The action is to foreclose a chattel mortgage upon a market truck and was instituted under *93 article fourth of title 3 of the Municipal Court Act of New York city. (Laws of 1902, ch. 580.) The truck was manufactured and was delivered by the plaintiff in the month of July, 1909, to one Van Ronk, who executed to the plaintiff the chattel mortgage here under foreclosure, dated July 23, 1909, upon it. The mortgage was filed August 6, 1909, and was duly refiled. The defendant Wheeler was a livery stable keeper. On July 31, 1909, Van Ronk took to the stable of Wheeler, to be boarded and kept by him, seven horses, four trucks and harnesses, at the agreed price of $25.00 per month for each horse. At a time in dispute between the parties, the truck in question was delivered tó Wheeler to be stored by him. About December 8, 1910, the plaintiff, by virtue of the chattel mortgage, demanded the possession of the truck of Wheeler, who refused it under his claim of a lien under section 183 of the Lien Law (L. 1909, ch. 38; Cons. Laws, ch. 33) in the amount of $404.53 on account of boarding the horses and storing all the trucks and other articles of Van Ronk. This action was then begun. The Municipal Court adjudged a lien in Wheeler’s favor upon the truck" for $336.23 and its foreclosure. The Appellate Division reversed the judgment of the Municipal Court and ordered a judgment foreclosing the chattel mortgage as a first and superior lien.

The section 183 is: íe A person keeping a lively stable, or boarding stable for animals, or pasturing or boarding one or more animals, or who in connection therewith keeps or stores any wagon, truck, cart, carriage, vehicle or harness, has a lien dependent upon the possession upon each animal kept, pastured or boarded by him, and upon any wagon, truck, cart, carriage, vehicle or harness, of any kind or description, stored or kept provided an express or implied agreement is made with the owners thereof, whether such owner be a mortgagor remaining in possession or otherwise, for the sum due him for the care, keeping, boarding or pasturing of the animal, or *94 for the keeping or storing of any wagon, truck, cart, carriage, vehicle and harness, under the agreement, and may detain the animal or wagon, truck, cart, carriage, vehicle, and harness accordingly, until such sum is paid.” If our decision as to the validity and superiority of the claim of Wheeler • depended upon the date of his receipt of the truck, or that of the delivery of the chattel mortgage to the plaintiff, we would he unable to consider this appeal, because the record and the briefs of counsel present evidence and facts concerning those dates which permit conflicting inferences and our review is limited to questions of law. (Constitution, art. 6, sec. 9.) The judgment appealed from must be sustained, however, upon a ground independent of the time of either of those occurrences. The truck was not delivered to Wheeler until after Van Ronk had received it from and delivered to the plaintiff the mortgage upon it. In this state a chattel mortgage is a present transfer of the title to the property mortgaged by it, defeasible by the payment of the sum ,or instrument it is given to secure. In default of performance by the mortgagor the title of the mortgagee becomes absolute, the mortgagor, however, possessing the equity of redemption. (Bragelman v. Daue, 69 N. Y. 69; Casserly v. Witherbee, 119 N. Y. 522; Briggs v. Oliver, 68 N. Y. 336.) By virtue of the present mortgage the plaintiff became the owner of the truck and Van Ronk, the mortgagor, had not thereafter the right or power to create a lien for storing or keeping the truck or other property, to the prejudice of the rights of the plaintiff, except as authorized or permitted by the section 183. At common law an agistor had no lien on the animals pastured or kept by him except through a special agreement therefor, which the mortgagor of them had not the authority to make. He is not the agent of the owner for that purpose. (Bissell v. Pearce, 28 N. Y. 252; Grinnell v. Cook, 3 Hill, 485; Jackson v. Kasseall, 30 Hun, 231; Howes v. Newcomb, 146 Mass. 76; Sargent v. *95 Usher, 55 N. H. 287; McGhee v. Edwards, 87 Term. 506; Whitlock Machine Co. v. Holway, 92 Me. 414; Charles v. Neigelsen, 15 Ill. App. 17; Wright v. Sherman, 17 L. R. A. 792.) A lien of a livery stable keeper' or an agistor is the creature of a statute, and it is one of the characteristics of contractual or statutory liens that they are subordinate to all prior existing rights in the property, while common-law liens which arise, upon considerations of justice and policy, by operation of law, attach, as a general rule, to the property itself without any reference to ownership, and override all other rights in the property.

The section 183 was in force when the plaintiff took its mortgage and, in so far as it touches the mortgage or the rights of plaintiff under it, it controls them. (Corning v. Ashley, 51 Hun, 483; affd. on opinion below, 121 N. Y. 700.) It provides, in effect, for the purpose of this discussion, that Wheeler, having, in connection with boarding the horses, kept the truck in question, had a lien, dependent upon the possession, upon the truck cc provided an express or implied agreement is made with the owners thereof, whether such owner be a mortgagor remaining in possession or otherwise for the sum due him for the * * keeping """ of the animal, or for the keeping or storing of any wagon, truck, cart, carriage, vehicle and harness, under the agreement * * The section is in derogation of the common law and must be strictly construed. (Howes v. Newcomb, 146 Mass. 76; Ingalls v. Vance, 61 Vt. 582; Lewis’ Sutherland Stat. Const. [2d ed.] sects. 573, 574, 575.) Under the section Van Bonk had authority to-enter into an agreement with Wheeler for the storing and caring of the truck by Wheeler at an agreed charge or in the absence of any agreement in relation to the charge at a reasonable charge therefor. And such agreement and its performance would uphold the lien created by the section for the amount of such fixed or reasonable charge. The section *96 did not, however, authorize the mortgagor to enter into any agreement for the storing and caring of the truck which would give rise to or uphold a lien upon it for the charges for keeping and caring for the horses and the other articles. Those were the property of Van Bonk. The legislature did not intend and the section does not enact that Van Bonk and Wheeler could enter into any agreement whereby the plaintiff’s property could be appropriated without its authority or consent in payment of Van Bonk’s liability arising from the keeping of his property as to which the plaintiff was an entire stranger. The section so enacting would be a prolific source of fraud and spoliation. Wheeler’s lien upon the truck was for the sum alone due him for keeping and. storing the truck.

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Bluebook (online)
105 N.E. 811, 212 N.Y. 90, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-barrett-manufacturing-co-v-ronk-ny-1914.