138 Iowa 131 | Iowa | 1908
On January 8, 1904, J. W. Stepanek executed and delivered to H. S. Green a chattel mortgage on one hundred head of three-year old steers to secure the payment of his promissory note for $4,000, due April 8, 1904. Soon after the first-named date Green transferred the note to the Central Trust Company of Illinois as collateral security for the payment of his own debt to said company. The mortgage was duly recorded, but no record of its assignment to the appellant was ever made. After said assignment had been made to the appellant, Green pretending still to be the owner of the note and mortgage, Stepanek paid him thereon the sum of $200, and made and delivered to him another promissory note for $3,800 in renewal of the note first mentioned, and secured the same by another mortgage upon the same property. Green then went to the office of the recorder of the county and canceled upon the record the first mortgage, and thereafter, and before the last-mentioned note became due, transferred it to the Merchants’ National Bank of Omaha, which claims to have received it in due course and for a valuable consideration. On April 9, 1904, plaintiff began this action in equity, averring the making of the note and mortgage by Stepanek to Green and the assignment of the said security by Green to itself, and further alleging that Stepanek had wrongfully sold two car loads of the mort
But, on the other hand, how easy it is for the assignee of the notes or debts to protect himself. He can, by having the mortgage assigned on the margin of the record, protect himself against all possible fraud on part of the mortgagee, and leave the evidence of his rights in such a condition as that it must inevitably be seen by any one looking for incumbrances. Or, if not thus, he may take his assignment in the ordinary form and have it duly acknowledged and recorded, and thus give notice of his interest in the security to third persons. . . . Some of the States, for instance, after providing a general law upon the subjects of mortgages and conveyances, expressly require assignments of mortgages*135 to be recorded. Our law, by using general terms, well defined and understood, obviates the necessity of more specific legislation. And in view of this legislation, why should the assignee of a mortgagee be exempt from the duty of placing upon record that which evidences his title to the right or interest thus purchased ? He need not do it for the perfection of his right as against the assignor or vendor, but for his own protection against third persons the necessity arises. . . . A secret or clandestine assignment, whether by parol or upon the instrument itself, or by the transfer of a debt, however honest of purpose, is liable as against third persons to untold abuse. They ought, therefore, to be made a matter of record. The spirit, if not the very letter, of our recording law, requires it. Such a requirement can work no possible hardship, while the contrary can only be attended with evil, and that continually.
In the McClure case, supra, the court applies the well-settled rule “ that when one of two innocent parties must suffer by the wrongful act of a third person, he must suffer who placed or left it in the power of such third person to do the wrong.” In Daws v. Craig, supra, we said: “ The negligence and failure of the plaintiff to have the assignment of the mortgage recorded has been the primary cause of this controversy, and we think the burden to have the defendant’s mortgage set aside should have been assumed by her.” It would be difficult to formulate any plausible ground for saying that these reasons, the soundness of which we have so often approved as applied to assignments of mortgages upon real estate, are not equally persuasive as applied to mortgages upon personal property. The statute provides that no unrecorded sale or mortgage of personal property where the possession is retained by the vendor or mortgagor is valid against existing creditors or subsequent purchasers. Code, Section 2906.
The appellant’s contention is based solely upon precedents which have not had the. approval of this court, and are not, we think, in harmony with the trend of the later authorities. We are satisfied that the rule we have heretofore adopted is supported by the better reason and the greater equity, and we are content to reaffirm the position taken in the Farmer case. The controversy is one of those
II. The result of the conclusion reached in the first paragraph renders unnecessary further consideration of the points made in the argument for the appellant. There has been submitted with this ease a motion by the appellee to dismiss the appeal and a motion to strike the appellant’s abstract and to affirm the judgment below, based on several grounds therein stated. The various assignments involve no questions which are not already well settled, and we shall not take the time to enter upon their discussion further than to say we think none of the objections are well taken, and the motions are each overruled.
We find no sufficient reason for* disturbing the judgment of the district court. The costs for one-third of the printing of the record and arguments in this court will be taxed to the appellee, and all other costs to the appellant.— Affirmed.