29 S.E. 408 | N.C. | 1898
The defendant Strain, in 1884, executed a mortgage on two horses to Burch, which was registered. Subsequently in 1888 Burch gave Strain the following paper-writing: "This is to certify that I, A. P. Burch, grant H. Q. Strain the privilege to exchange one bay mare and one bay horse (which I, A. P. Burch, hold a mortgage on) for two black mules, which shall stand in the place of the above mentioned horses as security. 4 August, 1888. A. P. Burch. (Seal.)" This was not registered. Thereafter in 1890 Strain executed a mortgage on these two black mules to the plaintiff, and the mortgage was duly registered.
This action was brought to recover the mules in order to sell them and apply the proceeds to the debt secured by plaintiff's mortgage. Burch interpleaded and claimed them under his mortgage on the horse and mare and his agreement with the mortgagor, above set out, that the mules received in exchange for the horse and mare should be substituted in their stead. There was a conflict of evidence whether the plaintiff had notice of this agreement between Burch and Strain, and his Honor told the jury that if the plaintiff knew of this agreement (285) between Burch and Strain when he took the mortgage on the mules, the claim of Burch was superior to his, and that the agreement need not have been registered, but that if he took the mules without notice of such agreement, then the plaintiff's claim was superior. The plaintiff excepted, and this raises the point which is decisive of the case.
The agreement between the mortgagor and mortgagee was good as between themselves and enforcible in equity, but it was not a mortgage. Parties cannot thus, by side agreements between themselves, substitute from time to time other property for that described in the mortgage and claim a lien on it in preference to "creditors and purchasers for value." Code, sec. 1254. To do this would destroy the whole purpose and tenor of our registration laws and restore the evils they were enacted to prevent. Sharpe v. Pearce,
Hubbard v. Winborne,
The learned counsel for the defendant ingeniously argued, further, that in the exchange of the horse and mare for the two mules by the permission of the mortgagee Burch, the mortgagor Strain was acting as agent for Burch, who thus in fact became the purchaser and received the title. If we concede that this was so, Strain took possession of them and the agreement provides that they should "stand in place of the horses *175
as security" — that is, that Strain should have a clear title to them (as he would have had to the horses) upon payment of the mortgage debt. This made it a conditional sale and invalid as to creditors and purchasers for a valuable consideration without registration; The Code, sec. 1275, which places such sales on same basis as mortgages, and hence "no notice, however full or formal, would supply the want of registration."Brem v. McDowell,
We have already said that as between the parties (if rights of third persons had not intervened) the mortgagee by virtue of his agreement could compel the application of the property received in exchange for the mortgaged property to his debt, and it may be, though we need not pass upon the question, that if, without a mortgagee's consent, other property is received in exchange for the mortgaged property, he might follow up and subject the fund or substitute property before third parties have acquired any rights in respect thereto.
Error.
Cited: Gorrell v. Alspaugh, post, 562; Harris v. Lumber Co.,