Hernandez v. European Auto Collision, Inc.
Decision Date | 29 June 1973 |
Docket Number | No. 406,Docket 72-1977.,406 |
Citation | 487 F.2d 378 |
Parties | Siegfried HERNANDEZ, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. EUROPEAN AUTO COLLISION, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees. The Attorney General of the State of New York, Intervenor-Appellee, Auto Body Craftsmen's Guild, Inc., Intervenor-Appellee. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Second Circuit |
Kalman Finkel, New York City (The Legal Aid Society, Civil Appeals Bureau, New York City, on the brief), and John E. Kirklin, New York City, for plaintiff-appellant.
Louis J. Lefkowitz, Atty. Gen. of N. Y., pro se intervenor-appellee.
Before LUMBARD and TIMBERS, Circuit Judges, and WYZANSKI, District Judge.*
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied September 7, 1973.
This case involves a challenge under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to Sections 184, 201, 202 and 204 of the New York Lien Law, McKinney's Consol. Laws, c. 33.
Those sections provide:
Plaintiff was the owner of a Volkswagen automobile. He filed against three defendants—a corporation operating a garage and repair shop, its president, and a New York licensed auctioneer—a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment against the statute, an injunction against defendants, and damages from them.
The District Court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a cause of action, on the ground that the challenged statute as allegedly here applied was not unconstitutional. The following are the allegations of the complaint, which, in effect, has been held to be demurrable.
February 10, 1972 plaintiff's car suffered damage in a collision. The following day plaintiff asked the corporate defendant's employee, whose first name is Marcel, to tow the car to its garage and to estimate the cost of repair, but not to repair until plaintiff's insurance company had estimated the damage and until the corporate defendant had made contact with plaintiff.
February 24 Marcel asked plaintiff if the corporation should repair. Plaintiff replied negatively because the insurer had not yet appraised.
Later plaintiff secured from the garage corporation an estimate (dated February 18) that repairs would cost $1545.58.
In March, Marcel telephoned plaintiff that his car had been repaired, and asked if he wanted to pick it up. Plaintiff replied that he had not authorized repairs.
Subsequently, representatives of plaintiff's insurer reported to plaintiff that the fair cost of repairs was $750 and that the garage had erroneously charged for parts which were neither damaged nor replaced.
April 7 defendant president of the garage company wrote, and April 13 plaintiff received, a letter to plaintiff that $950 was due the company for repair and $235 for storage, and that if plaintiff did not pay his bill and pick up the car, defendant company would sell the car pursuant to the statutory procedure with respect to foreclosing a garageman's lien.
April 13 plaintiff wrote to defendant company for an itemization.
April 17 defendant company wrote plaintiff that unless he paid his alleged indebtedness of $1311.50 by April 28, his car would be sold on May 19 at public auction under the direction of defendant auctioneer, pursuant to sections 201-204 of the New York Lien Law. The letter attached a partial itemization, including $950 for repairs. Presumably, the balance of the $1311.50 was for storage.
At plaintiff's solicitation, an Assistant Attorney General of New York, and The Legal Aid Society then futilely sought to mediate the dispute.
May 12 plaintiff filed in the District Court a complaint pleading substantially, if unnecessarily verbosely, the aforesaid allegations. Relying on the court's jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3), he sought threefold relief: a declaratory judgment that, as here applied, Sections 184, 200-202, and 204 of the New York Lien Law violated the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, a permanent injunction against the enforcement of those statutory provisions, and compensatory and punitive damages. He prayed for a three-judge district court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2281, 2284.
The Attorney General of New York and the Auto Body Craftsmen's Guild petitioned the District Court to intervene as defendants. The Court granted a temporary injunction effective only until it determined the case, allowed the petition for intervention, denied plaintiff's request for a three-judge court on the ground that the complaint did not name a state officer as defendant, and ultimately dismissed the complaint because the court regarded the Constitution as not requiring notice and opportunity to be heard on the amount claimed as a debt as a condition preliminary to sale under the statutory procedure.
Plaintiff moved this Court for an order staying the defendants' sale of his car pending appellate hearing. Circuit Judge Kaufman denied the stay.
We are informed that, following Circuit Judge Kaufman's denial of a stay, the auctioneer actually sold the car.
We now come to the questions of law presented by the District Court's dismissal of the complaint.
Clearly the District Judge correctly determined that a three-judge court was not appropriate in this case, because, as he noted, none of the defendants is a state officer. There is no reason for us to say more than has been well said already by Judge Costantino on this point.
We next consider whether plaintiff has standing to attack those provisions of Section 184 of the New York Lien Law which allow a garageman to detain until he is paid his storage and his repair charges as well. Plaintiff admits that he told the garageman to pick up his car. Hence he voluntarily incurred at least some storage charges. Indeed, his car became subject to reasonable storage charges and to any common law lien, as well as to a statutory lien for those amounts. More important for present purposes, plaintiff, up to the time he filed his complaint, never asked to have the car back, nor tendered the amount of reasonable storage charges. Accordingly, he is in no position to challenge the statutory lien, even if it were true, which we do not suggest is the case, that the garageman was demanding excessive storage, as well as repair charges. Plaintiff's challenge to the detention provisions of the New York Lien Law is, therefore, moot. Consequently, we do not rule upon the constitutionality of Section 184 of the New York Lien Law.
The situation is different with respect to plaintiff's challenge to the sale provisions of the New York Lien...
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