Court Opinion

ID: 6580233
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:37:41.990526+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:15.173002
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court tvas delivered by
Royoe, J.
The plaintiff sold the bay mare described in the report to the Meros on the 19th of Sept. 1872, and reserved a lien thereon to secure the payment of the purchase money. This lien was evidenced by a stipulation contained in a note that was given by said Meros to the plaintiff for the price that was agreed to be paid for said mare. No record was ever made of this note in the town clerk’s office in the town where the parties to the contract then resided.
Soon after the sale of the bay mare to the Meros, they became desirous of exchanging her with one Dane for the gray mare for which a recovery is sought in this suit. Dane knew that the *26plaintiff had a lien upon that bay mare, and declined making the exchange without the plaintiff’s consent. Thereupon the plain-tiff was applied to, and it was agreed between him, the Meros, and Dane, that the Meros might make the exchange, and that the lien of the plaintiff on the bay mare should be discharged, and that the lien which he had had on the bay mare should be transferred, and attach to the gray mare taken in exchange for her. It has been repeatedly held in. this State,' where the vendor of personal property reserved a lien upon it at the time of the sale, and the property was exchanged for other property by the consent of the vendor, with the understanding and agreement between the vendor and vendee that the vendor’s original lien should attach to the property exchanged for, that such a lien could be enforced. So that as between the plaintiff and the Meros, the plaintiff had a valid lien upon the gray mare. The defendant claims that the plaintiff’s lien cannot prevail against his title as a purchaser, for the reason that there was no such written memorandum witnessing such lien recorded in the town clerk’s office, as is required by No. 63 of the Acts of 1870, and the act amendatory thereof (No. 51) passed in 1872. The statute of 1870 provided that no lien reserved on personal property sold conditionally and passing into the hands of the conditional purchaser, should be valid against attaching creditors or subsequent purchasers, unless a written memorandum, signed by the purchaser, witnessing such lien and the sum due thereon, should be recorded in the town clerk’s office as required by that statute. The only amendment made to that statute by the statute of 1872 that is material to the present inquiry, was the addition of the words, “ without notice,” after the word “ purchasers ” ; and it is claimed by the plaintiff that these words have a retroactive effect. But we understand that a statute amending a prior one by declaring that it shall be amended so as to read in a given manner, has no retroactive effect. The portion of the amended statute, which is merely copied without change, is not to be considered as repealed and again enacted, but to have been the law ; and the new parts are not to be taken to have been the law prior to the passage of the amended statute. The new provisions are to be understood as enacted at the time *27the amended statute went into effect. Ely et als. v. Holton, 15 N. Y. 595; Sedgw. on Construction of Stat. & Const. Law. 160; Bay v. Gage, 36 Barb. 447.
The statute of 1872 was in force at the time the defendant acquired his title ; and the fact found by the referee, that the defendant knew that the plaintiff had a lien upon the property before he purchased it, is conclusive.
Actual notice has the same effect in determining the right of precedence between persons claiming under different titles from the same party, as a record regularly made would have.
Judgment affirmed.