The action is in replevin to recover the possession of certain personal property claimed to belong to the plaintiff under a chattel mortgage made to him by the firm of Geraty & Ball, September 16, 1895, and duly filed in both ¡New York and Kings counties.
The defendants claimed title by purchase at a sale under a prior mortgage executed by said firm to the defendant Connery, August 27, 1895, and filed in-New York county on the following day. The cause has already been twice before the Appellate Term (28 Misc. Rep. 134; 32 id. 720), which, on the first appeal, held that the Connery mortgage was void as against creditors and subsequent mortgagees in good faith because not filed in Kings county, where one of the members of the firm resided. The court did not sustain the recovery then had, because not satisfied that the plaintiff, though a subsequent mortgagee, was one in good faith, within the meaning of the statute (L. 1833, ch. 279, §§ 1, 2). The plaintiff claims that he has since abundantly supplied this proof.
It appears that the plaintiff on June 15, 1895, indorsed a note for $1,500 for the accommodation of Geraty & Ball, under the following circumstances: Mr. Ball with Mr. Geraty called upon the plaintiff, who testified, “ Mr. Geraty had a note ready and wanted me to indorse it. I would not indorse the note because I had never drawn or indorsed a note before. They both promised me that if I would indorse the note, they would keep me harmless. Then Mr. Ball told me he would assign to me his half interest in the business. I said I didn’t want that; then they said they would give me a chattel mortgage * * * on the chattels in the
The question is whether the plaintiff became a'subsequent mortgagee in good faith, within the meaning of the statute. The defendants claim that the plaintiff was a mere holder of an antecedent debt, and that the giving of the mortgage to him, therefore, did not enable him to attack the non-filing of the Connery mortgage, the rule being that an unfiled chattel mortgage, valid as between the parties, is good as against a subsequent mortgage, which has been filed, but which was given to secure an antecedent debt. Doig v. Haverly, 92 Hun, 176; Cary v. White, 52 N. Y. 138; Jones v. Graham, 77 id. 628; Button v. Rathbone, Sard & Co., 126 id. 187. The obligation assumed by the plaintiff by his indorsement was a conditional one; he became liable to pay only-in case Geraty & Ball did not. They, to induce such indorsement, agreed to give him a mortgage in case he required one for his protection, and, finding he did need one, gave him the mortgage in suit, September 16, 1895; and Geraty & Ball, having failed to pay the note when it matured the month following, the plaintiff’s claim then ripened into an enforcible demand, because he was obliged to and did discharge the existing obligation.
The objection that the promise to execute the mortgage to the plaintiff was oral, and not enforcible under the statute of frauds.
On the second appeal (32 Misc. Rep. 720), the Appellate Term 'held that the submission of the issues was at variance with the rule laid down on the preceding appeal (28 Misc. Rep. 134); hence the third trial Avas necessitated. The third trial seems to have been conducted on the lines indicated by the Appellate Term, and, this being so, the plaintiff, on the facts as they now appear, is entitled to an affirmance of his judgment, Avith costs.
Freedman, P. J., and Gildersleeve, J., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.