33 Mo. App. 631 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
This is an action of replevin brought for the recovery of two horses. The suit originated before a justice of the peace at Kansas City, was tried anew on appeal before the circuit court of Jackson county, where plaintiffs had judgment and defendant appeals to this court.
For the purpose of an understanding of the points decided here, it is sufficient now to say that plaintiffs’ claim is based on an alleged chattel mortgage made to them as mortgagees on July 11, 1885, by one L. M. Hendron in Leavenworth county, Kansas, to secure a debt of one hundred and fifty dollars which said Hendron owed to plaintiffs. When the mortgage was executed plaintiffs and Hendron, the mortgagor, all resided in Leavenworth county, Kansas, and, as already stated, the mortgage was there executed, and it would seem the same was recorded in the office of the register of deeds for said Leavenworth county on July 13, 1885. The mortgage, however, was never acknowledged by said Hendron. Plaintiffs found the horses in the possession of defendant Arnold, at Kansas City, Mo.,
At the trial of the cause before the court sitting as a jury, at the close- of plaintiffs’ evidence, the defendant asked the court to declare that under the testimony offered plaintiffs could not recover. The refusal to so declare the law raises the question now here for review.
Did the mortgage, read in evidence, entitle the plaintiffs to the possession of these horses, of course admitting that they made a case in other respects ? We think not.
The effect of this instrument under the Missouri statute would be wholly nugatory except as to the parties thereto. “No mortgage * * * of personal property * * * shall be valid against any other person than the parties thereto, unless possession of the mortgaged property be delivered to and retained by the mortgagee * * * or unless the mortgage * * * be acknowledged, or proved, and recorded in the county in which the mortgagor resides in such manner as conveyances of lands are by law directed to be acknowledged or proved and recorded.” R. S., sec. 2503.
Now, is this instrument to be measured by the requirements of this statute, or is it to be determined by the requirements of a Kansas statute, or shall its effect be controlled by the common law? It is clear that its efficacy is not in this case to be determined by the Kansas statute, because there was no evidence offered at the trial as to what the Kansas statute may be on the subject, and it is too well settled in this state to require citation of authorities that the courts of Missouri will not take judicial notice of the laws of another state, that they must be proved as other facts. Defendant’s counsel claims that, as there is no evidence
This case has been several times approvingly cited by the appellate courts of this state and may now be considered as settled, at least we are under a constitutional obligation to follow it. Now the territory embraced within the boundaries of the state of Kansas was never subject to English laws. It formed no part of the English dominions, but was, immediately before its acquisition by the United States government, subject to the French, and prior thereto to the Spanish laws. Under the foregoing rule, then, we are not authorized, in the absence of proof of its statute laws, to presume that the principles of the common law prevail in the state of Kansas, but will presume, in the absence of such proof, that the law of the lex loci contractus is the same as the lex fori, and accordingly determine the effect to be given the so-called mortgage, read in evidence, in the
And being so determined by the laws of Missouri this mortgage, not being acknowledged as such laws provide, is void as against bona-fide creditors or subsequent purchasers for value. There is some evidence here tending to show that defendant Arnold may be a purchaser such as to claim the benefit of this statute.
As it seems, then, the cause .'was tried below on an entire misconception of the law governing the case, we think it hardly fair to simply reverse the cause, but will reverse and remand, so that both parties may again have an opportunity to submit the controversy on the theory of the law here announced. Judgment reversed and cause remanded.