10 S.E. 902 | N.C. | 1890
The plaintiffs allege, in substance, that in February, 1888, Dunn Kitchen were engaged, in the county of Hertford, in getting railroad ties for market, and while so engaged the plaintiffs made advances to them in money and supplies to a large amount; that on the 13th day *38 of February, 1888, "said Dunn Kitchen were indebted to said Britt Lawrence in the sum of $132.26, balance on said supplies," for which they executed their promissory note, in words and figures as follows:
"$132.26. WINTON, N.C. February, 13, 1888.
"We promise to pay Lawrence Britt, out of the proceeds of certain railroad ties we now have in Hertford County, amounting to about forty-two hundred, the sum of one hundred and thirty-two 26/100 dollars, with interest thereon from December 3d 1887, to be paid as follows: First deducting eighteen hundred ties for O. H. Perry from the first amount hauled, then we will pay Lawrence Britt, out of the remainder, at the rate of ten cents a piece for all delivered to (11) transportation until they are paid in full, and authorize the purchaser to retain said amount for them.
"Witness our hands, this the 13th day of February, 1888.
"Witness: DUNN KITCHEN. "R. W. WINBORNE."
The said paper-writing was duly proved and registered in Hertford County on the 14th of February, 1888, and "thereafter Dunn Kitchen did not cut and hew any more ties in said county, and said 4,200 ties were all that they had in said county at that time; that about the 1st of April, 1888, Dunn Kitchen delivered 800 ties for transportation, and left the remainder in the woods where they were cut; that about June 1st, 1888, Dunn Kitchen abandoned the State, or kept themselves concealed therein to avoid service of summons, and with intent to defraud their creditors; and thereupon J. J. Jordan and S. J. Holloman, upon whose lands the ties were cut, sued out an attachment against them, and, under proceedings therein, the remainder of said ties, about 3,400, were sold at public sale, and the defendant Harrell became the purchaser; the ties so purchased were those owned by Dunn Kitchen, in Hertford County, at the time of the execution by them of the said paper-writing, and embraced within its provisions; the defendants J. P. Harrell and A. C. Vann hauled to a point on the banks of the Chowan River, for transportation, 2,000 or more of the ties. No part of said note has ever been paid, and the plaintiffs allege that they have an equitable lien to have said ties subjected to the payment thereof. Dunn Kitchen are totally insolvent, as is also Harrell, who is threatening to sell and remove said ties, and, if permitted to do so, the plaintiffs will sustain irreparable loss. Harrell purchased with full knowledge of the claim of plaintiffs, and they ask that he be restrained," c. (12) A restraining order was issued, and the defendants filed thereafter the following demurrer: *39
"The defendants demur to the plaintiffs' complaint in this action, because it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that —
"1. It does not appear that the plaintiffs have any lien, equitable or otherwise, upon the railroad ties described in the complaint.
"2. It does not appear that the defendants, or either of them, are under any legal obligation whatever to the plaintiffs."
Judgment was rendered sustaining the demurrer, and the plaintiffs appealed. The sole question presented in this case is, Was the paper executed by Dunn Kitchen a chattel mortgage? Was it sufficient to constitute a lien, legal or equitable, in favor of the plaintiffs against a purchaser at a sale made by the Sheriff under execution?
Whether the instrument, in itself, is a mortgage, is a question of law to be determined by the Court. Comron v. Standland,
In the case before us there is nothing in the paper to indicate that Lawrence Britt shall "have a lien" upon the railroad ties. Nothing found therein imports a conveyance of the title to the ties. No authority is given to sell the property upon default of payment, or in any way to dispose of or control it. There is nothing to bring it within the definition of a legal mortgage. Jones on Chattel Mortgages, § 1, et seq.
But it is insisted that it is an equitable assignment or appropriation of the ties to the payment of this debt, and the purchaser at the Sheriff's sale had notice. We do not think it can be so (13) considered. It was only a promise by Dunn Kitchen to pay money, with the additional promise that they would pay it "out of the proceeds" of the ties.
While "no particular form is necessary to constitute a mortgage," yet the words must "clearly indicate the creation of a lien, specify the debt to secure which it is given, and upon the satisfaction of which the lien is to be discharged and the property upon which it is to take effect." "The statement that the creditor is to have a lien, and that on default he may take possession and sell, * * * sufficiently discloses the intent." Harris
v. Jones,
A debtor says to his creditor: "I will send cotton which I have in my gin to my commission merchant and pay your debt out of its proceeds, or I will authorize him to retain it for you." The debtor sends the cotton off and sells it, or it is seized under execution and sold by the Sheriff. Would the creditor, in such a case, even though he had registered thepromises of his debtor, have a right, in law or equity, to follow the property and have it applied to the payment of his debt? However it might be as between the parties, one making the promises and the other relying on them, in the absence of any charge or circumstances of fraud or collusion to cheat the debtor, as to third persons, such an agreement could, in no sense, be regarded or treated as a mortgage of the cotton.
The plaintiffs say: "This lien was not divested by the attachment in favor of Jordan and Holloman and the sale thereunder to the defendant," and for this, the case of Lake v. Doud,
There is no allegation or pretence of any combination and collusion between the execution creditors, the purchasers at the Sheriff's sale, and the debtors in the present case, to cheat and defraud the plaintiffs, and the case is unlike that of Lake v. Doud.
The plaintiffs had nothing in addition to their note but the promises of Dunn Kitchen that they would pay "out of the proceeds of certain railroad ties," c., and "authorize the purchaser to retain" the amount of their debts for them; and these promises, without a transfer of the title to the ties, as security, were worth no more, it seems, than the promise to pay the money.
Affirmed.
Cited: Grier v. Weldon,