35 P. 264 | Or. | 1894
Opinion by
Our inquiry in this case is whether, upon the facts as disclosed, the time of filing, or the time of executing, such mortgages should determine their priority. The solution of this inquiry depends upon our statutes. Prior to eighteen hundred and sixty-two our statute, like those of several other states, declared, in substance, that every mortgage of chattels thereafter made should be absolutely void, except as to the parties, unless the possession of the thing mortgaged be delivered to and be retained by the mortgagee, or unless the mortgage be filed as prescribed: Statutes, 1855, § 18, p. 528. In the revision of the statute for the purpose of framing a code of civil procedure, this section was.repealed: Statutes of Oregon, p. 126. When the mortgages in question were executed and filed our statute provided that “ It shall be the duty of the county clerk, upon the presentation for that pur
So far as these provisions are concerned, there is nothing in them to indicate that filing or failing' to file a ehattel mortgage, where there is no change of possession of the property mortgaged, raises or removes any presumption of fraud, disputable or conclusive, which affects the validity of such mortgage as against creditors, subsequent purchasers, or mortgagees in good faith. But subdivision 40 of section 766 provides that “every sale of personal property, capable of immediate delivery to the purchaser, and every assignment of such property, by way of mortgage or security, or upon any condition whatever, unless the same be accompanied by an immediate delivery, and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession, creates a presumption of fraud as against the creditors of the seller or assignor, during his possession, or as against subsequent purchasers in good faith and for
The mortgage of the plaintiff was executed subsequent to, but on the same day as, the two mortgages of the defendant, but before they were filed. As the plaintiff had no actual notice of the existence of such mortgages, and the property remained in the possession of the mortgagor, in the absence of explanation, they were presumptively invalid as against the plaintiff. But if the defendant had succeeded in filing his mortgages before the execution of the plaintiff’s mortgage, no such presumption would have arisen affecting their validity. The
Under the circumstances first stated, the mortgage of the plaintiff would be entitled to priority over the mortgages of the defendant, not because it was first filed, but because those of the defendant were not filed when his was executed, and therefore were to be regarded as presumptively fraudulent against it; while under those last stated, the mortgages of the defendant would be entitled to priority over that of the plaintiff, because, being valid instruments, they impressed a lien on the property from the date of their execution, which, being prior to the execution of the plaintiff’s mortgage, conferred priority of right. As the case was brought and tried upon the theory that the priority of the mortgages in question was in be determined from the time of the filing, without Vegard to the time of their execution, the facts found, and the argument conceded, that the defendant’s mortgages were bona fide, or valid instruments. Considered as such, the defendant acquired a lien on the property by his mortgages, which was prior to that acquired by the plaintiff’s mortgage, and consequently he had a right to take the property covered by them, and, in so doing, did “not wrongfully take or convert to his own use the chattels mentioned in the complaint.” In view of these considerations, the case of Pittock v. Jordan, 19 Or. 8, 13 Pac. 510, which holds that a chattel mortgage given