Findings of Fact.
Ben Johnson was a tenant farmer, and prior to December, 1908, had lived in Milam county. Batte & Baskin were dealers in horses and mules, and lived in Cameron, Milam county. They were acquainted with Johnson, and had sold him mules prior to October 15, 1909, for which he had paid them. In December, 1908, Johnson moved to the farm of Tarver-Henslee Company in Falls county, and continued to reside there to the time of the trial of this case. On October 15, 1909, Johnson purchased two mules from Batte & Baskin in the town of Cameron, and executed a mortgage thereon to secure the purchase money in the sum of $250. He immediately took the mules to his home in Falls county, where they re *500 mained to the time of the trial hereof, July 19, 1913. Batte & Baskin- recorded their mortgage in Milam county October 22, 1909. They did not know that Johnson- lived in Falls county at that time. On November 1, 1909, Johnson gave a mortgage on these same mules and other personal property to the Burlington State Bank. On January 3, 1910, Johnson gave a mortgage on these mules and other property to the Planters’ National Bank, which prior to the trial hereof was transferred to the Burlington State Bank. On October 7, 1910, Johnson gave a mortgage to the Marlin National Bank upon cotton described as follows: “Ten bales of cotton crop of 1910 now being picked and to be ginned at High Banks in Falls County. * * * Said property is owned by me in good faith and a perfect title, free from all liens whatsoever, and I agree to hold same in Falls county, Texas, where it is now located, free of all liens other than the one hereby granted, until the indebtedness hereinafter mentioned is paid in full.” This mortgage was recorded in Falls county, October 13, 1910. The mortgage to the Burlington State Bank and also the mortgage to the Planters’ National Bank each recited that the property therein described was free from all mortgages and other liens. Neither the Burlington State Bank nor the Planters’ National Bank had any ’ actual knowledge of the mortgage executed to Batte & Baskin at the time their mortgages were taken. By agreement of all parties hereto, the property mortgaged by Johnson was taken possession of and sold by the Burlington State Bank, and the proceeds held subject to disposition by final judgment herein. The trial court held that the mortgage of Batte & Baskin was superior to the mortgages given to the Burlington State Bank and to the Planters’ National Bank, and consequently gave judgment against the Burlington State Bank for the amount of Batte & Baskin’s debt, the evidence showing that the mules had been sold for more than enough to pay said debt.
Tarver-Henslee Company, subsequent to October 13, 1910, purchased from Johnson 12 bales of cotton of the value of $60 each. Johnson was a tenant on the farm of Tarver-Henslee Company during the year 1910, and they advanced him money to enable him to pick his cotton, and the court allowed this amount by virtue of their landlord’s lien, and gave judgment in favor of the Marlin National Bank against Tarver-Henslee Company for the balance, $370.15. From this judgment the Marlin National Bank and Tar-ver-Henslee Company have appealed.
Opinion.
“Good faith consists in an honest intention to abstain from taking an uneonscien-tious advantage of another, even through the forms or technicalities of law, together' with an absence of all information or belief of facts which would render the transaction un-conseientious.”
“Good faith, in general, means without notice, as well as for a valuable consideration.”
“A want of that caution and diligence which an ordinary man of ordinary prudence is accustomed to exercise in making purchases is, in judgment of law, a want of good faith.”
Words and Phrases, p. 3117.
“A mortgage in good faith means the same thing as a mortgage for a valuable consideration without notice.”
“No one can become a purchaser or a bona fide incumbrancer of property in good faith if he have notice of a pre-existing mortgage, although such mortgage may not be verified or recorded in accordance with the statute.”
“The expression ‘good faith,’ as used in the statute providing that a chattel mortgage shall cease to be valid against the creditors of the person making the same or mortgagees in good faith after the expiration of one year from following the same unless an affidavit of renewal is filed, is synonymous with ‘conscience.’ It embraces those obligations which are imposed upon one in dealing with property by the circumstances surrounding it at the time.”
Words and Phrases, p. 3119.
It may well be held that where a mortgage is recorded in the proper county, though it be not recorded “forthwith,” a subsequent mortgagee is under obligation to examine the record. If he does so, he will discover the existence of the mortgage, and therefore cannot be a mortgagee in good faith. If it is his duty to do so under the circumstances of the case in common fairness to others who may have taken a prior mortgage, and he fails to make such examination, this might well be held to show an absence of good faith. Such we take it is the effect of the decisions in this state, holding that a mortgage which is not forthwith recorded is nevertheless superior to a mortgage taken after the record of the prior mortgage. The Batte & Baskin mortgage was not of record in Palls county, where Johnson lived and where the property was situated, at the time of the execution of the subsequent mortgages. But this alone is not necessarily sufficient to show a want of good faith in the subsequent mortgagees. Johnson lived very near the line of Palls and Milam counties; he had previously lived in Milam county. It does not appear from the record what, if any, inquiry the subsequent mortgagees made as to when and where Johnson obtained the mules. The trial court held that the Batte & Baskin mortgage was superior to the subsequent mortgages, by reason of the fact that it was recorded in Milam county before the execution of the second mortgage. This record not having been made “forthwith,” such holding was error, for which this case must be reversed. As to whether the subsequent mortgages are superior to the Batte & Baskin mortgage will be made to depend in another trial upon whether or not the subsequent mortgagees were mortgagees in good faith. They were mortgagees for a valuable consideration and without actual notice, and therefore must be held to have been mortgagees in good faith, unless it is shown that the circumstances were such as required them to investigate the records of Milam county as to prior mortgages by Johnson.
The judgment of the trial court disposed of a number of parties other than those mentioned herein, from which no appeal has been taken, as to whom the judgment is affirmed.
For the reasons mentioned, the judgment' herein, in so far as it is in favor of Batte & Baskin against appellant Burlington State Bank, and in so far as it is in favor of the Marlin National Bank against Tarver-Hens-lee Company, will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Affirmed in part and in part reversed and remanded.
