Citation Numbers: 108 N.Y.S. 773
Judges: Giederseeeve
Filed Date: 2/7/1908
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The defendant Kuhn purchased from plaintiff certain household furniture, and as security for the payment of the purchase price he executed and delivered to plaintiff a chattel-
The goods .were stored in the name of Kuhn, and Dochtermann had no knowledge of the chattel mortgage, except such constructive knowledge as arose from the fact that the mortgage was duly filed in the register’s office. Kuhn was not served with process, and has not appeared in the action. The rule is that where the chattels have been removed by the mortgagor to a storage company, without the consent of the mortgagee, after the default of the former and a demand on the part of the latter, and an action to foreclose the lien of the mortgage is brought against the storage company in the Municipal Court, the mortgagor should be made a party defendant, since he has a right of redemption, which may have a substantial value, although he has lost all title and right of possession by his' default, and he should also be made a party for the protection of other interests, so that he may be bound by the judgment. Fishel v. Hamilton Storage Co., 42 Misc. Rep. 532, 86 N. Y. Supp. 196. However, the objection of nonjoinder was not raised, either by demurrer or answer, nor was it in any way presented to the trial court, but is raised for the first time ón appeal. It must, therefore, be deemed to be waived. The mere fact that necessary parties are not before the court upon the trial of the action does not oust the court of jurisdiction, as far as such persons are concerned who were made parties to the action, and the only effect of such omission is that the judgment is not binding upon the party who has been omitted. Keyes v. Ellensohn, 82 Hun, 13, 30 N. Y. Supp. 1035, affirmed 144 N. Y. 700, 39 N. E. 857.
The defense of the defendants warehousemen is based upon section 2, c. 608, p. 1776, of the Laws of 1902 (since repealed by chapter 732, p. 1706, of the Laws of 1907), which, so far as applicable, provides as follows:
“A warehouseman shall have a lien upon goods stored with him for storage. * * * Such lien of a warehouseman shall be prior and superior to the lien of a chattel mortgage, * * * where the chattel mortgage is not made in the name of the depositor * * * and the warehouseman has not actual knowledge of the chattel mortgage.”
The inference to be drawn from the wording of the statute seems to be that actual knowledge is essential when the chattel mortgage is not made in the name of the depositor, and where no constructive knowledge of such mortgage on the part of the warehouseman can be predicated on the facts. In the case at bar the chattel mortgage was, as we have seen, made in the name of the depositor—i. e., Kuhn—and the warehousemen had that constructive knowledge of such mortgage that arises from the fact that the same was duly filed in the register’s office.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.