229 P. 818 | Okla. | 1924
The sole question for determination is the correctness of the action of the trial court in determining the priority of the lien of Antrim Lumber Company over the chattel mortgage of the Continental Gin Company, and involved in this determination is the incidental question of the effect of an agreement between the mortgagor and the mortgagee that the gin machinery should be deemed and considered personal property.
Upon the question of priority and notice the applicable provisions of Comp. Stat. 1921, are as follows:
"Sec. 7650. A mortgage of personal property is void as against creditors of the mortgagor, subsequent purchasers, and incumbrancers of the property, for value, unless the original, or an authenticated copy thereof be filed by depositing the same in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the property mortgaged, or any part thereof, is at such time situated."
"Sec. 7651. The filing of a mortgage of personal property, in conformity to the provisions of this article, operates as notice thereof to all subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers of so much of said property as is at the time mentioned in the preceding section located in the county or counties wherein such mortgage or authenticated copy thereof is filed: Provided, that when a mortgaged chattel is moved into this state, or from one county to another, any previous filing of the mortgage shall not operate as notice as against subsequent creditors, purchasers, mortgagees or incumrancers for a longer period than 120 days after such removal, but such mortgage must be refiled in the county to which the chattel is removed and in which it is permanently located."
These provisions of the statute have been considered and passed upon several times by this court, and the meaning and effect thereof are well settled by these decisions. In the case of Snodgrass v. J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company,
"Unquestionably the Legislature of this state had the authority to enact this statute, and our only duty is to construe the statute as we find it. We can find no fault with the wisdom of the Legislature in requiring the mortgagee of personal property to look after his property three times a year in order to protect his lien."
In the case of First National Bank of Vinita v. Guess et al.,
"Where it is expressly provided by the statute that upon the removal of the mortgaged goods from the town or county where the mortgage was first filed, the mortgage must be refiled in the county to which the mortgaged property is removed within a fixed time, and the mortgagee neglects to have the mortgage refiled within the statutory period, this omission destroys the effect of the original registration as constructive notice."
While both of the cases above cited were based upon removal of property from one county to another within the state and failure of the mortgagee to refile his mortgage or an authenticated copy thereof in the county to which the mortgaged property had beeen removed, the rule announced in these cases is applicable to the removal of mortgaged property from without the state to a point within the state, where the mortgagee fails to comply with the requirements of section 7651, supra. This has been determined by this court in the recent case of Arnold et al. v. Wittie et al.,
"It is contended that, because the mortgage under which the defendant seeks to hold the car was executed within the 120-day period after the property was permanently located in Greer county, the mortgage was void as against the claims of the plaintiffs, but we think the time of the execution of the mortgage is not controlling. With the expiration of the 120-day period the Kansas registration ceased to be constructice notice, and thereafter plaintiffs were in the position of the holder of an unrecorded chattel mortgage. The defendant, after the 120 days in which the defendant had constructive notice of plaintiff's claim had expired, took possession in good faith and with the consent of the vendee, to foreclose its mortgage. We think that was a rightful possession, and not in violation of any of the rights of the plaintiffs, and being in the rightful possession as a mortgagee without notice, its right of possession was superior to that of the plaintiffs."
One of the facts, stipulated by the parties in this case in the agreed statement, reads as follows:
"The Continental Gin Company and T.R. Collett, trustee, on the 30th day of June, 1920, knew that the plant at Marysville. Cooke county, Tex., was being dismantled and moved to Krebs, Pittsburg county, Okla.
No effort was thereafter made to protect its lien by filing a certified copy of the Cooke county mortgage in Pittsburg county until March 21, 1921. At the date of filing the materialman's lien in the office of the court clerk of Pittsburg county by Antrim Lumber Company, the 120-day period within which the Continental Gin Company and T.R. Collett could have preserved the lien of the Cooke county mortgage and its effect as constructive notice had long since expired. The same is true as to the maturity of the indebtedness and default in the mortgage of the Bank of Krebs. Therefore, the filing of the Cooke county mortgage in Pittsburg county on March 21, 1921, could not operate to revive the expired lien nor relate back as constructive notice to the subsequent mortgagee and materialman whose rights as against the property matured at a time when there was no constructive notice to any one of the prior rights of the Continental Gin Company. Likewise, the new mortgage taken by the Continental Gin Company upon this property in Pittsburg county, February 4, 1921, was ineffective for any purpose in so far as the rights of the Bank of Krebs and Antrim Lumber Company are concerned.
Therefore the judgment of the trial coart determining the priority of the various liens against this property was correct, and must be sustained unless it can be said that the gin machinery covered by the mortgage of T.R. Collett, as trustee for the Continental Gin Company, was personal property so that the same could not be included in and covered by the materialman's lien of Antrim Lumber Company, and the real estate mortgage of the Bank of Krebs.
In support of its contention that the gin machinery was personal property plaintiff in error has cited and quoted from a number of authorities from other jurisdictions. There authorities, if based upon statutes similar to our own, would be persuasive in support of the rule contended for in this case if it were not for the fact that the law of this state has been determined by statutory enactment, and by the construction placed thereon by this court.
Real property is defined by section 8395, Comp. Stat. 1921, which reads as follows:
"Real or immovable property consists of: First, land. Second, that which affixed to land. Third, that which is incidental or appurtenant to land. Fourth, that which is immovable by law."
Section 8399 reads:
"Every kind of property that is not real is personal."
Section 8397 reads:
"A thing is deemed to be affixed to land when it is attached to it by roots, as in the case of trees, vines or shrubs, or imbedded in it as in the case of walls, or permanently resting upon it, as in the case of buildings, or permanently attached to what is thus permanent, as by means of cement, plaster, nails, bolts, or screws."
In support of this contention that this machinery is to be deemed and considered personal property, plaintiff in error cites several cases from this court, but an examination of these cases discloses that they are easily distinguishable in their facts from the instant case. In Lawton Pressed Brick
Tile Company et al. v. Ross-Kellar Triple *194
Pressure Brick Mch. Co. et al.,
In Tolle v. Vandenburg,
In the case of Continental Gin Company v. DeBord,
In the case of Murray Company v. Chickasha Cotton Oil Company et al.,
In the DeBord Case, supra, the following significant language is used:
"While it is ordinarily true that buildings attached to the soil and machinery placed therein which are affixed to the buildings become a part of the real estate, as held by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma Territory in Great Western Mfg. Co. v. Bathgate et al.,
In the instant case there was no conditional sales contract reserving title to the Continental Gin Company until the purchase price of the machinery was fully paid. The transaction between the Gin Company and Sims passed the title without reservation to Sims and the Gin Company took a mortgage back through its trustee to secure the payment of the money due it. In the mortgage which was executed by Sims at that time, and following the description or the property, occurs this language:
"All of the aforesaid property is personal property, and is to be located in Cooke county, Tex., upon the following described real estate."
In order for this language to constitute constructive notice to subsequent purchasers or incumbrancers of the gin machinery, as fixtures or appurtenances to realty, of the agreement between the original parties that it should be personal property, if it could do so at all, it was necessary that the instrument containing this clause, or a duly authenticated copy thereof, should be filed in the county to which the property was afterwards removed within 120 days from the date of its relocation. This it is admitted was not done.
It is, therefore, concluded that the contention of the Continental Gin Company that the gin machinery, after it was placed in the gin house at Krebs for the purpose of being used as a gin, constituted personal property and was therefore not subject to the materialman's lien nor to the real estate mortgage of the bank, cannot be sustained.
The judgment and decree of the trial court should be in all things affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.