132 Minn. 364 | Minn. | 1916
Plaintiff gave to defendant Willson a mortgage on a span of horses to secure two notes of $200 each, one payable December 1, 1913, and the other payable December 1, 1914. About November 1, 1913, plaintiff paid said defendant $275, to be applied, first, in payment of a note of $34.50, the balance on the two mortgage notes. Both $200 notes were surrendered and a new note taken for the balance, which was $173. Plaintiff claims that it was agreed that the money and the new note were given and received in payment of the mortgage notes and in satisfaction of the mortgage. On maturity of the $173 note, defendant Willson, treating it as a note secured by the chattel mortgage, caused the mortgage to be foreclosed by sale made by defendant Anderson, as sheriff, and the mortgaged property was sold to another. This action is for conversion. The jury found for plaintiff.
Defendant would have us regard this transaction as merely a promise to release the mortgage, and not as á release of it. The jury might well find that there was a present discharge of the debt, and, incidentally, of the mortgage.
Order affirmed.