Judges: Cochrane
Filed Date: 5/3/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an action in replevin to recover three heifers. The plaintiff claims title through a chattel mortgage executed to him by Francis Kinville ¡November 18, 1913. The defendant claims that he and not Kinville was the owner of said heifers at the time of the execution of the chattel mortgage by the latter.
This being a directed verdict it is the right of the defendant on .this appeal to have his testimony accepted as correctly stating the facts and to have such proper inferences drawn from the ■testimony as may be most favorable to himself.
Defendant was the owner of a farm and of eight cattle thereon. Kinville resided on said farm and defendent resided about eight miles therefrom. The defendant was not permitted to show the arrangement under which Kinville lived on the farm nor what other property he (the defendant) had thereon. The heifers originally belonged to one Fee, with whom Kin-ville had some talk about purchasing them. Kinville apparently did not have the money to pay for them and Fee was unwilling to let him have them on credit. Together they went to the defendant and what then occurred is told by the latter as follows: “I met Fee and Kinville on the street and they wanted me to buy these cattle, and I told them I did not want them, I had enough; this man Kinville called me one side and hung on for me to buy the cattle * * * and at last I told him I would buy the cattle and put them down on the farm with the rest of the cattle I had; then we went into the bank and signed this note. * * * I told him if he wanted those cattle at cost, if he paid the note they were his, and if not, they were mine.” Kinville and the defendant executed their note to the order of Fee for $116, the purchase price of the heifers, and the defendant told Fee to let Kinville have them. They were taken to the farm of defendant and put with his other
The learned county .judge directed a verdict against the defendant apparently for the reason that the foregoing arrangement as testified by the defendant constituted a conditional sale between him and Kinville which was void as to the subsequent chattel mortgage of the plaintiff because not filed as required by section 62 of the Personal Property Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 41; Laws of 1909, chap. 45) as follows: “Except as otherwise provided in this article, all conditions and reservations in a contract for the conditional sale of goods and chattels, accompanied by delivery of the thing contracted to be sold, to the effect that the ownership of such goods and chattels is to remain in the conditional vendor or in a person other than the conditional vendee, until they are paid for, or until the occurrence of a future event or contingency, shall be void as against subsequent purchasers, pledgees or mortgagees, in good faith, and as to them the sale shall be deemed absolute, unless such contract of sale, containing such conditions and reservations, or a true copy thereof, be filed as directed in this article, and "unless the other provisions of the Lien Law applicable to such contracts are duly complied with.”
The statute only applies to conditional sales “ accompanied by delivery of the thing contracted to be sold,” and in directing a verdict against the defendant the learned county judge necessarily held as a matter of law that the heifers had been delivered to Kinville. In Bouvier’s Law Dictionary (Vol. 1 [Eawle’s 3d rev.], p. 829) delivery is defined as being “ the transfer of the possession of a thing from one person to another.” The determination of this question involved an investigation of the relationship existing between Kinville and the defendant as to the farm of the latter on which the former was living and the property on said farm. Not until these facts were developed could it be properly determined who was in possession of the heifers in question or whether delivery of them had been made to Kinville. The record does not disclose whether Kinville was a tenant of the defendant on the farm or a servant or agent thereon. The defendant endeavored to establish this
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred, Kellogg, P. J., in result, except Howard, J., dissenting.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.