297 N.W. 739 | Minn. | 1941
The subject matter of the instrument was a "Mueller Oil Furnace," sold in February, 1937, by plaintiff to the L. D. Eastman Furnace Company. The document is on a printed form and begins in terms of a promissory note of the Eastman company promising to pay plaintiff $210 (purchase price of the furnace) with interest "at the rate of ten per cent per annum from maturity date until paid." Then follows: "The express condition of the sale * * * for which the above note is given is such that the title, ownership and right of possession, does not pass from" plaintiff until the "note" is "fully paid."
The instrument was filed in the office of the city clerk of Minneapolis. Thereafter, defendant in good faith and for value purchased the furnace in ordinary course of business from stock on display by the Eastman company.
One ground of decision below was that filing of the instrument "with its uncertain, indefinite, doubtful description of the furnace" was not constructive notice to defendant of plaintiff's reserved title to the furnace. That conclusion is sound. So it is unnecessary to consider any other question.
A description in a recorded instrument is sufficient if it will enable third persons, aided by inquiries which the instrument itself reasonably suggests, to identify the property. Tolbert v. Horton,
Defendant was not party to the instrument. Between parties, inaccuracy or other deficiency may be tolerated. 10 Am. Jur., Chattel Mortgages, § 54. Further restricting consideration, it *234
should be emphasized that deficiency in the present case lies in incompleteness of description, rather than inaccuracy of what is shown. C. I. T. Corporation v. DeGraff Lbr. Co.
We have sustained somewhat deficient descriptions of both types. In Barrett v. Magner,
Because, by the terms of the mortgage, the property was to be left in possession of the mortgagors and the description furnished "means of identifying * * * about as fully as is ordinarily possible with that kind of property," a somewhat inadequate description of mortgaged household furniture was sustained in Adamson v. Horton,
It is significant that plaintiff, in all its transactions affecting the furnace, found it expedient, if not necessary, to identify it by serial number. That was the easy and accepted means of identification. It is patent that a motor vehicle, of which there are so many of the same model, should be as accurately described as possible. Necessity of accurate and complete description of an article such as a furnace is just as compelling where it is part of a retail stock offered for sale to the unsuspecting public. Then, *235 if ever, where each machine bears its own identifying serial number, the latter is an essential part of its description if instruments affecting title, recorded, are to be depended upon as constructive notice.
Order affirmed.