Siegel v. Rieser

97 Misc. 684
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 Misc. 684 (Siegel v. Rieser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siegel v. Rieser, 97 Misc. 684 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The defendant, on or about the 24th day of April, 1914, made a contract with the plaintiff for the conditional sale of certain chattels. The contract was. apparently made on a printed form and provided, among - other things, that the plaintiff has ordered “ the following mentioned goods.

“ A deposit is required on all orders. Restaurant fixtures and labor and material as per specifications hereto attached and plans approved. * * * Price Three Thousand Dollars. * * * Goods to be delivered and erected on the 25th day of May, 1915. * * *

" On failure to pay any note or cash instalment when same becomes- due, then all notes and instalments remaining unpaid shall immediately become due, and said Company shall be entitled to the immediate possession of the property herein described (and whereas a considerable portion of the above purchase price represents labor, time and expense in placing said fixtures in my premises which is entirely lost and of no value in the event that you retake the same, in the event of you so retaking said chattels as aforesaid all payments that may have been made by me prior to that time on account of the purchase price for said chattels, shall belong to you as liquidated damages for the use of the said chattels by me up to that time), and I do hereby expressly waive all benefits that I may have by reason of Chapter 418 of the Laws of [687]*6871897, and I agree that it shall not be necessary for you in the event of you retaking the said property after a default on my part to hold for thirty days or to sell same at public auction for my benefit, but upon such default said property shall belong to you absolutely without any right of redemption to me. * * *

“ The undersigned agrees to keep said chattels insured from loss by fire for not less than $3,000. from the delivery thereof until the principal sum herein is paid, the benefit to be payable to said Company, and in default thereof said Company may insure same at the cost of the undersigned. * '* *

“ It is agreed that the foregoing shall constitute a conditional sale of said chattels to the undersigned, and that there are no precedent or contemporaneous conditions not stated herein.”

Attached to the contract were the specifications for labor and material which show that the defendant was required to do considerable work to prepare the premises for the fixtures, including the erection of fireproof partition walls, columns, etc. The defendant complied with this contract and the plaintiff made payments of $1,580. On September fourteenth the defendant entered on the plaintiff’s premises and. assumed dominion over the fixtures. There is no direct evidence to this effect, but it would appear that the plaintiff either abandoned the premises or lost control of them before that time. On the twenty-fourth day of September the defendant entered into an agreement with the landlord of the premises by which he agreed that for and in consideration of the sum of $800 “ I * * * do hereby sell, assign, transfer and set over unto * * * party of the second part his heirs and assigns all my right, title and interest in and to certain chattels, fixtures and appurtenances which I have [688]*688heretofore installed and which are now in the basement of the premises known as NO. 116 Nassau Street, Manhattan, New York City to have and to hold forever.” The agreement provided that the sum of $800 was to be paid in instalments beginning on November 14, 1915, and the defendant agreed to make some alterations in the fixtures.

The defendant produced some testimony that thereafter, on November 10, 1915, the defendant herein had the fixtures sold at public auction and bought them in for the sum of $750. The evidence as to whether the plaintiff had received notice of this sale was controverted and the trial justice submitted to the jury only the question of whether such service was made. Both parties agreed that upon the coming in of this special verdict the trial justice should decide all other questions of law or fact. The jury decided that the plaintiff had received personal notice of this sale. The trial justice, however, decided that in spite of this fact the plaintiff was entitled, under section 65 of the Personal Property Law, to recover all the moneys paid by him on the contract. In his opinion he states1: Sale by private arrangement ten days after the retaking was premature and immediately subjected the vendor to liability to repay the instalments paid in by the" vendee under the contract. The form of a subsequent auction sale to another purchaser cannot avail the defendant.”

Under section 65 of the Personal Property Law wherever the vendor under a conditional contract of sale, or his successor in interest, retakes the articles sold they shall be retained for a period of thirty days from the time of such retaking, and during such period the vendee or his successor in interest may comply with the terms of such contract, and thereupon [689]*689receive such property. ’ ’ After the expiration of that period the vendor or his successor in interest may cause such articles to be sold at public auction. Unless such articles are so sold within thirty days after the expiration of this period, the vendee may recover “ the amount paid on such articles ” under the contract for the conditional sale thereof. Upon this appeal we must consider first, whether the contract was a conditional contract of sale within the meaning of this section; second, whether, if it was a conditional contract of sale, the vendee could waive the benefit of this section; third, whether the amount paid to the defendant under this contract was the ‘1 amount paid on such articles,” within the meaning of the section; fourth, whether the defendant has sold these articles at public auction not less than thirty days nor more than sixty days after he retook them.

There can be no question but that the contract in question, so far as it covers, the articles retaken, was a conditional contract of sale. It was, however, more than a conditional contract of sale; it covered “ restaurant fixtures and labor and materials as per specifications and plans attached to the contract.” The restaurant fixtures were chattels and under this contract they remained- chattels as between the parties. Moreover, they were apparently trade fixtures, and even, as against the landlord, they did not lose their character as chattels. The contract, however, included labor and material as per specifications and plans. This “labor and material ” was in a sense incidental to the sale of the chattels. They were furnished in order to prepare the premises to receive the fixtures, but they were labor and materials not applied to and incorporated into the chattels, but into the realty. Such labor and materials could not become the subject [690]*690of a conditional sale and could not be retaken. So far as the contract covered labor and materials not incorporated into the fixtures, it was, therefore, not' a contract of conditional sale. It is true that the contract itself provides “ it is agreed that the foregoing shall constitute a conditional sale of said chattels,” but the clear meaning of this clause is that the parties agreed, not that the contract was to be regarded only as a conditional sale of the chattels1, but merely that it should “ constitute a conditional sale of the chattels ” in so far as it applied to the chattels.

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Bluebook (online)
97 Misc. 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siegel-v-rieser-nyappterm-1916.