43 S.W. 872 | Tex. | 1898
In this cause the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third Supreme Judicial District has certified to us the following questions and explanatory statement:
"This suit was brought October 6, 1896, by Lansing Wagon Works, a corporation doing business in Lansing, Michigan, against appellants, R.S. Bowen and B.H. Pittman, on certain promissory notes executed by Bowen to the company and to foreclose a lien on certain wagons.
"There was an agreement between plaintiff and defendant Bowen, as shown by letter of the plaintiff to defendant, dated February 22, 1896, endorsed by defendant March 2, 1896, by which the latter accepted the terms of the contract that the company would ship to defendant at Waco, Texas, wagons, and that all wagons so shipped were to remain the property of plaintiff, until he, Bowen, settled for them, as follows: Upon the arrival of the goods, defendant, Bowen, was to give plaintiff his note for the purchase price of the wagons, and when he sold any of the wagons, he was to forward to plaintiff his customers' notes, to be held by it as collateral security for the purchase price. The notes sued on were given by defendant for wagons shipped to him by plaintiff, pursuant to the foregoing agreement, and the wagons upon which plaintiff sought to foreclose the lien were wagons shipped under the agreement. Not having been sold by Bowen, these wagons had not been settled for as provided in the agreement, and they were consequently the property of the plaintiff. It was agreed that the amount due at the time of trial *388 on notes of defendant Bowen to plaintiff was $984 principal and interest, and $98.40 attorney's fees, for which the suit was brought. The contract between plaintiff and defendant Bowen was never authenticated, deposited with the clerk, or registered as a chattel mortgage.
"Bowen was engaged in the business of buying and selling by retail, wagons, buggies, surreys, phaetons, harness, cultivators, plows, and a general implement business in the City of Waco, McLennan County, and was so engaged when he procured the wagons in question in this suit; and it was understood between him and plaintiff, at the time the contract between them was made and at the time he got possession of the wagons, that they were to be by defendant Bowen daily exposed for sale in the said business at retail and to sell them in the usual course of business; and he did keep them in his stock, and daily exposed and offered them for sale by retail in Waco, from the time he received them until they were turned over to the trustee under the trust deed hereinafter mentioned. The wagons involved in this suit were wagons delivered to Bowen under his contract with plaintiff, and these he exposed for sale, as stated, with other stock in trade. Neither the trustees nor the beneficiaries under the trust deed had any notice of plaintiff's rights under the contract until this suit was brought.
"On the 14th day of September, 1896, Bowen made, executed and delivered a certain deed of trust to Perry Jennings, as trustee, of McLennan County, conveying all the property in question in this suit upon which plaintiff seeks to establish and foreclose a lien, as well as other property, for the purpose of securing certain creditors named in Class "A" in the payment of their pre-existing debts, due and owing them by Bowen, and also in Class "B", the creditors in Class "A" to be preferred to those named in Class "B"; providing that the trustee should sell the property and pay the creditors named, and stipulating that when the debts were paid, if there was sufficient of the property to do so and all expenses of executing the trust, the residue of the same, or its proceeds, should be delivered to him, Bowen. Perry Jennings immediately, on the same day, took possession of the property mentioned in the instrument and proceeded to execute the same immediately, and the creditors beneficiary as named in Class "A", except one, before suit duly accepted the benefits of the deed; after which Jennings refused longer to act as trustee and resigned. Whereupon the County Judge of McLennan County, as provided in the deed, duly appointed B.H. Pittman, of McLennan County, trustee to execute the trust, as substitute trustee; and he thereupon immediately took possession of the goods mortgaged by the trust deed, and proceeded to execute and carry out its provisions.
"On the day of its execution the deed of trust was deposited with the County Clerk, and filed and registered in the office of the County Clerk of McLennan County, Texas, as directed by law in case of filing, depositing and registering chattel mortgages.
"It was proved that the goods mortgaged by the deed of trust were *389 not of value more than sufficient to pay the expenses necessary to be expended in carrying out the trust and to pay the creditors who had accepted its terms as named in Class "A". The wagons mentioned in plaintiff's petition were, at the time the suit was filed, in the possession of the trustee Pittman, in Waco, and were by him by consent of plaintiff sold, and the proceeds of the sale, $426, were held by him subject to the decision in this case.
"The court below, trying the case without a jury, found the facts substantially as stated above, and decided that the legal effect of the contract between plaintiff and defendant Bowen was to create a lien in favor of plaintiff against the wagons in the hands of Bowen, and that inasmuch as he could not convey a greater right thereto than he possessed, and that the conveyance made by him by the trust deed was subject to plaintiff's lien; that as neither the trustee, nor the beneficiaries under the deed of trust had paid any consideration therefor, but simply accepted the same as security for pre-existing debts, surrendering no rights which they therefore held at the time of the conveyance, the rights of the parties thereunder were subject to plaintiff's lien. The court ordered judgment for plaintiff for the amount of its debt, $1082.40, and that Pittman pay into the registry of the court, for the benefit of plaintiff, the proceeds of the sales made by him, the $426 which was directed to be paid to plaintiff. Judgment was accordingly so rendered, and the defendants have appealed.
"We propound the following questions to the Supreme Court, arising in this cause, which is now pending in this court:
"Does section 17 of the assignment law of 1879, declaring that 'every mortgage, deed of trust, or other form of lien, attempted to be given by the owner of any stock of goods, wares or merchandise, daily exposed to sale in parcels in the regular course of business of such merchandise and contemplating a continuance of possession of said goods, and control of said business by sale of said goods by said owner shall be deemed fraudulent and void,' apply to the lien asserted by the plaintiff, and should it be enforced in this case? Sayles' Rev. Stats., 65; Rev. Stats., 1895, art. 2548.
"If the court holds that the article of the statute referred to does not apply, then in view of the fact that plaintiff did not have its contract deposited, filed and registered, as in case of chattel mortgages, as required by statute (Sayles' Rev. Stats., 3190a; Rev. Stats., 1895, art. 3327), should the trust deed securing a lien to the creditors named therein before suit, prevail over the contract of plaintiff, so far as to enforce the rights of the lien creditors accepting under the deed of trust, there being no notice to them or the trustees of plaintiff's claim at the time the deed of trust was executed and accepted? To protect such creditors, must they have paid a valuable consideration for their mortgage lien at the time of its execution, in addition to their pre-existing debts? Or does the fact that they are lien creditors to secure pre-existing debts, give them protection against plaintiff's claim, they having no *390 legal notice of the same at the time when or before their lien was created and duly deposited, filed and registered?"
At the time of and after the passage of sec. 17 of the assignment law of 1879, above quoted (Rev. Stats., 1895, art. 2548), the transaction in this case would not have been considered a "mortgage, deed of trust or other form of lien attempted to be given by the owner," within its purview. We are of the opinion that the language and scope of this severe provision was not intended, by the subsequent enactment in 1885 of what is now articles 2549 and 3327, Rev. Stats., 1895, which reads as follows: "All reservations of the title to or property in chattels as security for the purchase money thereof shall be held to be chattel mortgages, and shall, when possession is delivered to the vendee, be void as to creditors and bona fide purchasers, unless such reservations be in writing and registered as required of chattel mortgages; provided, that nothing in this article shall be construed to contravene the landlord and tenants act," to be extended so as to include the transaction before us which is a reservation by the vendor and not any "form of lien attempted to be given by the owner." We therefore answer the first question certified in the negative, without passing upon the question whether a mortgage given upon specific articles which could not be reasonably held to be the "stock of goods" is affected by said sec. 17.
In order to answer the second group of questions above certified we must determine whether the parties secured by the trust deed were "creditors" within the meaning of art. 3327 above quoted, which must be construed in connection with art. 3328, which reads as follows: "Every chattel mortgage, deed of trust or other instrument of writing intended to operate as a mortgage of or lien upon personal property which shall not be accompanied by an immediate delivery, and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the property mortgaged or pledged by such instrument, shall be absolutely void as against the creditors of the mortgagor or person making the same, and as against subsequent purchasers and mortgagees or lienholders in good faith, unless such instrument or a true copy thereof shall be forthwith deposited with and filed in the office of the county clerk of the county where the property shall then be situated, or if the mortgagor or person making the same be a resident of this State, then of the county of which he shall at the time be a resident." This article divides the persons who are to be protected against the unrecorded instrument into two classes, (1) "creditors" and (2) "subsequent purchasers and mortgagees or lienholders in good faith." "Creditors" as here used has been generally held to mean persons whose claims have been fixed by some legal process as liens upon the property (Brothers v. Mundell,
The second class of persons protected by the statute as above stated are "subsequent purchasers and mortgagees or lienholders in good faith." The word "purchasers" has been generally held to include mortgagees and holders of claims secured by trust deed, and while this holding was originally probably based upon the ground that by such instruments in other states the legal title passed, still we are of opinion that when our statute used the same well understood words it was intended that it should receive the same construction as elsewhere. This view is strengthened by the fact that the statute adds the words "mortgagees or lienbolders," which insures such construction. As said in Overstreet v. Manning,