9 S.D. 497 | S.D. | 1897
By virtue of a mortgage lien creating a special property in certain threshing machinery, consisting of an engine and separator, plaintiff commenced this action in claim and delivery to recover the immediate actual possession of said property in aid of a statutory foreclosure proceeding. Upon all the evidence introduced at the trial under the complaint and answer, which was a general denial, the court directed a verdict for the defendant; and this appeal is by plaintiff from a judgment accordingly entered, and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial.
As no question concerning the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict is presented, for the reason that the court’s ruling in denying a motion for a new trial was not assigned as error, we must consider that point established, and confine our inquiry to alleged errors of law occurring at the trial, and duly excepted to and assigned. Pierce v. Manning, 2 S. D. 517, 51 N. W. 332; Manufacturing Co. v. Galloway, 5 S
The contention is between mortgagees, and at the trial testimony was offered tending to prove the following facts, which, if essential and properly admitted in evidence, must, when viewed in the light above indicated, be regarded sufficient to sustain the verdict upon which respondent’s judgment was entered: On the 12th day of August, 1895, the mortgage upon which appellant relies was duly executed and delivered, in Mercer county, 111., and the mortgagors removed the property therein described from said county and state, with appellant’s knowledge and consent, prior to the recording of said instrument, and with the express understanding between the parties that said property was to be shipped to Minnehaha county, S. D., by the mortgagors, where another mortgage was to be executed and filed, in favor of appellant, upon said property, to secure the indebtedness mentioned in the former mortgage. On the 17th day of August, 1895, after the mortgagors, with the property in controversy, had reached their destination, and two days after appellant’s mortgage was recorded in the state of Illinois, said mortgagors executed and delivered to James Nisbet the mortgage which respondent, as assignor and owner, was seeking to foreclose when interrupted by this suit, and which was duly filed as provided by statute, in Minnehaha county, where the property was then situated, and thereafter kept by the mortgagors. As disclosed by his own testimony, appellant did not rely upon the security afforded by the Illinois mortgage, but entered into an agreement by which he permitted the mortgagors to ship the property into this state, with the
In order to constitute constructive notice under the laws of Illinois, appellant’s mortgage should have been recorded in Mercer county while the mortgagors were residents thereof, or in the county where the property was situated and kept at the time of recording, in case the mortgagors were nonresidents of that state. Rev. St. Ill. Chap. 95, § 4. Appellant, by permitting the property to be shipped to this state in the name of the mortgagors, and by withholding his mortgage from record, waived his legal right to priority over respondent’s mortgage, and subjected himself to the application of the equitable rule that, if one of two innocent parties must suffer by the act of a third, he who enables the third to occasion the loss must sustain it. Comp. Laws, § 4730. In the absence of the agreement above mentioned, had the property in dispute been removed from Mercer county, Ill., to this state, without appellant’s knowledge and consent, and after his mortgage had been recorded, a question of comity between states, not here involved, might arise, and be presented for our consideration and review. From a regardful examination of assignments of error based upon the theory of appellant’s counsel, and relating to the admission and rejection of evidence, we are convinced that the objections made are not available, and that the record con