Tyler v. Strang & Tioga Rail Road

21 Barb. 198, 1855 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 112
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 21 Barb. 198 (Tyler v. Strang & Tioga Rail Road) 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
Tyler v. Strang & Tioga Rail Road, 21 Barb. 198, 1855 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 112 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

By the Court, T. R. Strong, J.

The plaintiff gave in evidence, in support of his claim of title to the lumber in question, a contract between Eli C. Clark and Asaph Colborn, dated the first day of March, 1851, for the sale by the former to the latter, of certain lands in Tioga county, Pennsylvania, with the logs cut thereon—from which logs it was proved the lumber was manufactured; an assignment by Colborn of his interest in the contract to the plaintiff, dated the 3d day of April, 1851; and a bill of sale from Clark, dated the 5th day of January, 1852, of all his right, title and interest in the lumber to the plaintiff. The plaintiff also proved, that at the date of the contract between Clark and Colborn,. and until the 11th day of April, 1851, Clark had not any right to or possession of the lands or the logs, and that on that day he took a contract from one Colket, who was then the owner of the land and logs, for the sale thereof to him. The defendants claimed title in the defendant Strang to the lumber, under Colborn, by virtue of an attache [201]*201ment in a suit in favor of Strang and others against Colborn and another, in the court of common pleas of Tioga county aforesaid, levied the 22d day of ^October, 1851, and a sale under a judgment in that suit, in favor of the plaintiffs therein, the 17th day of November, 1852. They contended that the assignment by Colborn to the plaintiff, of the contract from Clark, was as collateral security for a debt, and a mortgage, and that it was, void as against Colborn’s creditors, as to the logs, because it was not filed, as required by law in respect to chattel mortgages, and because there was not a sufficient delivery of the logs or lumber to the plaintiff. Evidence was given by the defendants to sustain their claims, portions of which* evidence were objected to, and to the admission of which exceptions were taken.

The first question which I shall notice, arises upon the exception to the admission of parol evidence to prove the assign-' ment to the plaintiff, of the contract from Clark, a mortgage. I think the evidence was properly received. The case of Hodges v. The Tennessee Marine and Fire Insurance Company, in the court of appeals, (4 Selden, 416,) appears to be directly in point in favor of the admission of the evidence. That was an action upon a policy of insurance, by the assignee of the policy, and the plaintiff at the trial, in order to establish an insurable interest in the assignor at the time of the assignment, had been allowed, against an objection taken by the defendant, to prove by parol evidence, that a deed which had been given by the assignor, to the plaintiff, of the premises insured, absolute on its face, was given as collateral security for a debt, and intended to operate only as a mortgage. The court stated that the question was whether in equity the assignor might have a bill to redeem, against the plaintiff, notwithstanding the form of conveyance, and held that he might; that such evidence was admissible in equity to show that a deed was intended as a mortgage; and. therefore sustained the decision receiving the evidence. The action in that case was a strictly legal one; there was no allegation of fraud or mistake ; [202]*202and the plaintiff, the grantee in the deed, was permitted to give the evidence, in order to maintain the action. In the present case there would seem to be much greater propriety in allowing the evidence than in the case cited. Here it was not given by the defendants, who are not parties to the instrument, in support of the claims of creditors; and under the code a defendant is permitted, in a legal as well as an equitable action, to avail himself of all equitable matters in his defense. See also Truscott v. King, (2 Selden, 161.) It is proper to remark, that the evidence under consideration was not offered with a view to prove that the assignment of Oolborn to the plaintiff was . fraudulent as against Colborn’s creditors ; no such point was made at the trial.

If the assignment was a “ conveyance intended to operate as a mortgage,” it was necessary to its validity, in respect to the logs, as against the creditors of Oolborn, that it should be accompanied by an immediate delivery, and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the logs, or filed as a chattel mortgage. The charge of the justice in this respect, assuming that it appeared there was no such delivery or change of possession, was unexceptionable,

There was evidence that Strang had notice of the claims of the plaintiff under the assignment, the day before the lumber was attached, and the counsel for the plaintiff requested the justice to charge the jury that if Strang had actual notice of the plaintiff’s claim under the assignment, before the attachment was levied, such notice was equivalent to filing the mortgage, as against him and his partners, the plaintiffs in the attachment suit. The justice refused so to charge, and an. exception was taken. L think the refusal was correct. The statute (Laws of 1833, ch. 279, § 1,) makes such an instrument absolutely void as against the creditors of the mortgagor, and as against subsequent purchasers and mortgagees in good faith,” unless the instrument shall be filed as therein directed, in the case thereby provided for. Ho distinction is made by the statute between prior and subsequent creditors. It is not required [203]*203that the debt should have been contracted, or the property seized in good faith as to the mortgagee; the instrument is declared void in the case specified, as to all the creditors, without any qualification; and there is no ground upon which a qualification can be annexed by the court, by making a notice supply the place of filing. In respect to subsequent purchasers or mortgagees, they must, by the terms of the act, be such in good faith, which they cannot be if the purchase was made, or the mortgage was taken, with full notice; and hence it is settled as to them, that notice is equivalent to the filing of the instrument. (Sanger v. Eastwood, 19 Wend. 514. Gregory v. Thomas, 20 id. 17.)

The counsel for the plaintiff further requested the justice to charge, that if Clark did not own the logs at the date of his contract with Colborn, but acquired title to them before his sale to the plaintiff in January, 1852, the plaintiff acquired a valid title. This request was declined, and the jury were instructed that the purchase by Clark of Colket, in April, 1851, enured to the benefit of those claiming under the contract between Clark and Colborn, so long as the same remained valid and unrescinded. Both the request and the instruction appear to have been based on the assumption that the contract was one of present sale of the logs: and the position of the plaintiff was that it vested in the purchaser only such right as the seller had at the time; that there was no express warranty of title, and none would be implied, as Clark had not then possession of the logs ; and therefore Clark was not estopped from setting up a subsequently acquired title for his own benefit. This posisition was sound, if the assumption on which it was founded was correct. The principle on which a subsequent purchase of property by one who had previously assumed to sell it, enures to the benefit of his vendee, is that of estoppel, to avoid circuity of action, and is.applicable only to cases where the first sale was with warranty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Barb. 198, 1855 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-strang-tioga-rail-road-nysupct-1855.