Cla-Mil East Holding Corp. v Medallion Funding Corp.

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Cla-Mil E. Holding Corp. v Medallion Funding Corp. 2006 NY Slip Op 01046 [6 NY3d 375] February 9, 2006 Rosenblatt, J. Court of Appeals Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law ยง 431. As corrected through Wednesday, May 03, 2006

[*1] Cla-Mil East Holding Corp., Also Known as Clamil East Holding Corp., Appellant,
v
Medallion Funding Corp. et al., Respondents.

Argued January 11, 2006; decided February 9, 2006

Cla-Mil E. Holding Corp. v Medallion Funding Corp., 16 AD3d 194, affirmed.

{**6 NY3d at 377} OPINION OF THE COURT

Rosenblatt, J.

A secured creditor, Medallion Funding Corp., obtained a court order directing the [*2]New York City marshal to recover collateral located on property belonging to Cla-Mil East Holding Corp. Cla-Mil, the judgment debtor's landlord, has alleged that the marshal negligently damaged its real estate, and has sued Medallion and its law firm under a variety of theories. The only one it seriously argues here is that it was entitled to reimbursement{**6 NY3d at 378} under UCC 9-604 (d).[FN*] We must now decide whether Medallion's court-ordered use of the marshal, rather than self-help, insulates it from Cla-Mil's claim. We hold that it does.

The present dispute began when a tenant of Cla-Mil's who had operated a laundromat on his leased space defaulted on his rent. About the same time, the tenant defaulted on payments he owed Medallion, which had provided him with a loan to purchase the laundry equipment, including large washers and dryers. The loan was secured by the equipment itself as collateral. Cla-Mil evicted the tenant. Medallion then obtained a judgment against its debtor (the tenant) and an ex parte order from Supreme Court, based on that judgment, directing the city marshal to recover possession of the collateral.

Pursuant to the Supreme Court decree and without notice to Cla-Mil, the marshal broke the landlord's seal on the premises (which, perhaps ironically, had also been placed there by the city marshals) and removed the washers, dryers and associated equipment. To accomplish the removal, the marshal severed air vents, unplugged power lines, and disconnected hot and cold water pipes.

Cla-Mil has sued Medallion and its law firm, alleging that the damage to the premises was caused by the marshal's negligence in performing these disconnections. Cla-Mil alleged trespass, abuse of process and negligence. Supreme Court denied Medallion's motion for summary judgment and granted Cla-Mil partial summary judgment on the question of liability, reasoning in part that Medallion had an obligation to notify Cla-Mil before sending the marshal to repossess the collateral. The Appellate Division reversed and granted summary judgment in Medallion's favor. We now affirm.

UCC 9-604 (d) specifies that "[a] secured party that removes collateral shall promptly reimburse" the owner of real property damaged by the removal (other than the debtor). Here, the party that "remove[d] collateral" was not the secured party, nor any employee, contractor, or agent of the secured party. The New York City marshals are government officers appointed by the Mayor (CCA 1601), neutral and free of any conflict of interest concerning the removal of collateral (CCA 1601-a [2] [a]), and subject to [*3]discipline by appropriate authorities (id.).{**6 NY3d at 379} Marshals do not owe allegiance to or take orders from the secured creditors whose collateral they recover; rather, they act under the direction of a court, as the marshal did here.

The marshal's actual and legal independence from the secured party suggests to us that the UCC reference to a "secured party that removes collateral" does not include secured parties who arrange for marshals to remove collateral under court order. Policy reasons support a distinction between marshals and secured parties, and we see no reason to conflate their identities under the UCC. If the marshal here damaged the real property, as Cla-Mil alleges, Cla-Mil should have brought an action against the marshal, rather than against Medallion. Indeed, marshals are bonded for just that purpose (see CCA 1604), and the Legislature has expressly authorized such actions in the New York City Civil Court (CCA 1605). We see no link between Medallion and the marshal sufficient to make Medallion liable for the marshal's alleged negligence.

Furthermore, we reject Cla-Mil's claims to the extent they allege any direct wrongdoing by Medallion. Medallion obtained a judgment against the debtor, returned to court to get an order executing the judgment, and brought the order to a marshal to carry out the execution. At each stage, Medallion avoided self-help and appropriately relied on the legal system to recover its collateral with no breach of peace. Far from abusing legal process, Medallion submitted to legal authority at every step. Such conduct is consistent with public policy disfavoring parties taking matters into their own hands.

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.

Chief Judge Kaye and Judges G.B. Smith, Ciparick, Graffeo, Read and R.S. Smith concur.

Order affirmed, with costs. Footnotes

Footnote *: The Appellate Division correctly awarded Kramer & Shapiro, P.C. summary judgment. The firm acted properly in seeking a court order on behalf of its client.

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