47 Mich. 537 | Mich. | 1882
Murphy sued Botsford for a balance claimed to be unpaid on a promissory note made by the latter to the former on the 5th of August, 1878, for $650.88 with interest at 10- per cent, payable six months after date. At the time of giving the note and as part of the same transaction Botsford gave Murphy a chattel mortgage on a stock of groceries and other store articles to secure it. This mortgage was in the usual form of such instruments and, by the power of sale, it expressly provided that in case a sale should be necessary it should be at public auction after the like notice required by law for constables’ sales, and it also confined the exercise of the power to so much of the property as such a sale should disclose to be necessary to sell to pay the debt, interest and reasonable expenses. By the plain provisions of the mortgage the specific mode of the sale was to be the means through which to liquidate the value of the
On the trial Botsford claimed that Murphy was bound to apply on the note the actual value of the property disposed of at private sale. But Murphy contended on the contrary that he was only chargeable with what the property would have brought at just such a sale as the mortgage called for, and the circuit judge gave the case to the jury in substantial accordance with that view.
This was error. By their agreement in the mortgage as already explained the parties had provided a definite rule of action for their mutual guidance and protection and it contemplated, as we have seen, that the value of the mortgaged chattels so far as disposed of should be ascertained by sale in the very way described and that the quantity of the property to be appropriated should be defined through the same process. And when Murphy set aside this term of the agreement he repudiated the contract method for getting at the auction price or valuation and disclosing how much of the chattels it was necessary to sell. So far as the stipulation was made to confine him to a specific mode of disposal he rejected it and broke it, and then asked to have it applied as fully for his advantage as though he had kept it. It was not his province to contemn and violate the agreement in one breath, and in the next proceed to shelter himself under it and hold Botsford to it.
He could not treat the provision as rescinded in respect to himself or in respect to the obligation it imposed upon him, and at the same time as in force for his benefit as against the other party to it. Having refused to carry into execution the stipulation for raising a criterion of auction value he remitted Botsford to the right to demand the value according to the only existing criterion, that of the market. The effect was to give Botsford an election to have the amount ascertained as in other cases where there is no specific agreement in force to regulate the subject. The jury
The judgment should be reversed with costs and a new trial granted.