Court Opinion

ID: 7352044
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-26 02:40:23.081259+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:27.624179
License: Public Domain

JENKS, P. J.
Under plaintiff’s execution for $319.23 the sheriff levied upon certain lumber consigned to the defendant, but in possession of the Long Island Railroad as common carrier, which asserted a carrier’s lien upon the lumber for $405.99. At the auction sale under the levy the lumber was struck down to a representative of the carrier upon a bid of $406.99. The carrier refused to complete its purchase because the sheriff would not credit the amount of its lien upon_ its bid, but insisted upon a cash payment of the entire sum. Some time thereafter the carrier moved at Special Term to vacate the sale and for a resale. This appeal is taken by the plaintiff from the order that granted such motion.
The mover’s affidavits show that the carrier’s representative at the time of sale" and prior to the bidding informed the sheriff conducting the sale, and the bystanders, of the amount of the charges due his principal for freight, and then said that he would simply bid a sum sufficient to protect that lien. And such affidavits further show that lumber was not worth “anything more than” the amount of the said bid. It appears that the advertisement of sale contained this description:
“All the leviable right, title and interest that the Hoboken Planing Mill Company and Walter S. Taylor had in and to two ear loads of lumber now located,” etc.
And the affidavits in opposition show that at the opening of the sale the sheriff announced to the bystanders, including the representative of the carrier then present, that the freight charges must be paid before the lumber could be removed, and that the representative of the common carrier then said that if the carrier became the purchaser it would not have to pay, but that the deputy sheriff, neither then nor at any time, informed such representative or agreed that the sheriff would turn over the lumber to the carrier, if a purchaser, in satisfaction of the carrier’s said claim.
The learned Special Term was of opinion that a “mistake” was apparent upon the face of the papers, without the bid was made upon a misapprehension, and that therefore justice required the relief prayed for. But the sale was not for the benefit of the carrier, but under the execution issued for satisfaction of the judgment.
[1] And the sale was expressly represented to be of whatever right, title, or interest the judgment debtor had in the lumber. But that right, title, and interest, as it appears, was subordinate to the carrier’s lien. Campbell v. Conner, 70 N. Y. 424.
[2, 3] And this purchaser had actual notice of its own lien as a carrier. It matters not what the purchaser thought it had the right to do as a purchaser perforce of its status as a carrier, or that it saw fit to announce its intentions as a purchaser in pursuance of its supposed rights as a carrier. The sheriff was bound to sell for cash. Rowe v. Granger, 118 App. Div. 459, 103 N. Y. Supp. 439; Holmes v. Richmond, 19 Hun, 634. The mistake was unilateral and one of law, unavailable to the purchaser in derogation of its contract obligation arising from that purchase. See Continental Insurance Co. v. Reeve, 135 App. Div. 737, 119 N. Y. Supp. 901; Benedict v. Jones, "18 Hun, 527.
The order must be reversed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur.