67 Mo. App. 475 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
The case may be stated in thiswise: On May 25, 1895, William Sutter, being indebted to plaintiff by note in the sum of $135, executed to plaintiff a chattel mortgage covering six barrels of
There was a trial resulting in judgment for plaintiff from which defendant appealed.
The pivotal question in the case is, whether the plaintiff is entitled to the possession of said barrel of brandy number 14. This question was submitted to the jury under an instruction (plaintiff’s number 1) which declared that if they found from the evidence that the package described as number 14 was one of the same identical packages described in the chattel mortgage as one of the barrels of apple brandy not yet gauged, or numbered, that they would find for plaintiff as to such package, unless they further found that plaintiff permitted said Sutter to sell a portion of the mortgaged brandy, and that said Sutter, with the knowledge of plaintiff, applied part of the said brandy to the payment of his debts, but that the permitting of Morrin-Powers é Company to retain part of the proceeds of the sale of two packages as an inducement to making the sale and disposal thereof, so that plaintijf might receive the balance to apply on the mortgage debt, then the allowing the said Morrin-Powers Mercantile Company to retaina small portion of the proceeds in the manner above
The defendant’s second instruction was amended by the court on its own motion so as to make it consistent in enunciation with that of plaintiff already referred to.
It is the now well settled rule in this jurisdiction that a mortgage to be effectual must point out the subject-matter of it, so that third persons, by its aid, together with the aid of such inquiries as it suggests,, may identify the property covered by it. Boeger v. Langenberg, 42 Mo. App. 7; Jennings v. Sparkman, 39 Mo. App. 671; Chandler v. West, 37 Mo. App. 631; Hughes v. Menefee, 29 Mo. App. 204; Bank v. Metcalf, 29 Mo. App. 394; Stonebraker v. Ford, 81 Mo. 532. And it is equally well settled that in legal proceedings, when the inquiry is, as here, whether particular property was intended to be embraced in such instrument, parol evidence is admissible to aid the descriptive terms employed. Boeger v. Langenberg, supra; Campbell v. Allen, 38 Mo. App. 27; State v. Cabanne, 14 Mo. App. 294; Bank v. Jennings, 18 Mo. App. 651.
In the present case, the mortgage was given in evidence without objection. The plaintiff followed this up with evidence, to which also no objection was interposed, tending to show that the barrel of brandy number 14 in dispute was one of the two ungauged and unnumbered barrels which Sutter had in the store, and described in the mortgage at the time of its execution. Considerable evidence pro and'con was introduced on this issue. The identity of the property was, by this instruction, fairly left to the jury to determine under the evidence.
But the defendant strenuously insists that the qualifying part of said instruction, which, for convenience of reference, we have italicized, is erroneous.
The evidence disclosed by the record tends to prove that Sutter was endeavoring to make sale of the mortgaged property and that finally he succeeded in selling two barrels of it to Morrin-Powers Mercantile Company, provided the said company were allowed to deduct from the purchase price the sum of $6.20 due them by said Sutter, and to this the plaintiff consented. The remainder of such purchase price was paid to plaintiff and credited on the mortgage note. This small amount may well have been allowed Sutter, as plaintiff contends, as a commission for making the sale; but whether it was so allowed or not, we discover in the transaction no such evidence of fraud or collusion as would justify us in declaring the mortgage void on that account. We do not think the plaintiff’s instruction is fairly subject to the objection which the defendant urges against it.
The defendant further contends that the plaintiff, having permitted the mortgaged property to remain in
It is further objected in the defendant’s printed argument that the said mortgage is void on its face, because it provided that in addition to securing the debt therein specially mentioned, also “any other indebtedness of the said William Sutter to said bank.” What has been said in the preceding paragraph is equally applicable to this objection and the latter must .be disposed of in the same way.
It follows, therefore, that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.