140 Mo. App. 88 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is a suit in conversion. Defendant recovered and plaintiff appeals. It appears the plaintiff mortgagee held a chattel mortgage executed by one, James Carr, on two mules. The mortgage was dated September 30, 1903, in Schuyler county, Missouri, and recorded April 15, 1904, in Scotland county, Missouri.' After the mortgage was recorded, Carr, the mortgagor, removed to Knox county, Missouri, and in August, 1904, sold the mules to defendant, a dealer, who resold them to other parties. Carr, the mortgagor, having absconded, plaintiff mortgagee instituted this suit against the defendant, purchaser of the mules, seeking to recover as for their conversion. The jury found the issues for the defendant. Plaintiff prosecutes the appeal, complaining of errors in the instructions given by the court. In the view we have taken of the case, it will be unnecessary to examine .the alleged errors in instructions for the reason we believe the description of the property contained in the mortgage is insufficient as a matter of law. That is, that all the relevant recitals appearing in the mortgage, when taken together, are insufficient to suggest an inquiry which would lead to the identity of the mules in question.
Touching upon the facts in the record, it appears that the plaintiff resides in Schuyler county. On September 30, 1903, at his farm in that county, he sold to James Carr a span of mules; and on the same day, Carr executed to him a chattel mortgage thereon, securing his note of even date therewith, by which he promised to pay plaintiff $335, twelve months after date. The entire description of the mules contained in 'the mortgage, is as follows: “One black mare mule, six years old, with mealy nose; one bay mare mule, six years
The question for decision is: Are the words “one black mare mule, six years old, with mealy nose; one bay mare mule, six years old,” when considered together with other pertinent recitals in the mortgage before us, sufficient to suggest an inquiry which would lead a third party to identify the animals referred to? Now as before stated, there is no word contained in this mortgage as to where these animals were located nor in whose possession they could be found. The mortgage seems to have been executed and dated in Schuyler county. It was recorded in Scotland county, and the sale of the mules to defendant was made in Knox county. The fact that the sale was made to 'defendant in Knox county may be eliminated from the consideration of the case entirely for the reason that the mortgage having been recorded in Scotland county, if otherwise sufficient, imparted notice to the defendant, ir
Mr. Jones in his work on Chattel Mortgages (5 Ed.), sec. 54a, says: “A description which, without stating the location of the property, would be regarded as too indefinite and uncertain, may be rendered sufficiently definite and certain by making the mortgage itself indicate where the property may be found on inquiry. A mortgage on ‘one span of colts, three years old, one gray, one bay,’ with no reference to ownership, location or anything else which would enable third parties by inquiry to identify the property, is invalid for insufficiency of description. The description would be sufficient if it had stated that the property was in the mortgagor’s possession in a certain county. But merely reciting the mortgagor’s place of residence, and providing for the place of sale in case of foreclosure, does not cure the indefiniteness of the description.”
In Bozeman v. Fields, 44 Mo. App. 432, 435, this court held a description as follows: “Two iron gray mares, three and four years old respectively,” to be insufficient as a matter of law and declared that such a description could only be sustained where something further appeared in the mortgage itself pointing the location or possession of the property. The rule announced in that and other cases is that where a defective description is aided by the terms of the mortgage, showing the location of the property or the particular possession thereof, then, and not until then, can parol proof be resorted to for the purpose of further identification. That such other facts of identification must ap
Touching the general proposition that the description in the mortgage before us is insufficient, see the following cases: Rhutasel v. Stephens, 68 Iowa 627; Warner v. Wilson, 73 Iowa 719; Barr v. Cannon, 69 Iowa.20; Young v. Bank of Princeton, 97 Mo. App. 576; Randall v. Buchanan, 61 Mo. App. 445; Chandler v. West, 37 Mo. App. 631; State Bank, etc., v. Pelt, 99 Iowa 532, 68 N. W. 816, 61 Am. St. 253; Jones on Chattel Mortgages (5 Ed.), sec. 54a. What has been said on the question of sufficiency of description in the mortgage seems to be in line with the authorities in this State. Under the rule of these authorities, the mortgage is certainly insufficient in law. The case of Bank v. Ragsdale, 158 Mo. 668, 680, is not in point, for there the description said the cattle were “feeding cattle now on feed in Audrain county, Missouri.” The otherwise defective description was clearly aided in that case by reference to the facts that the cattle were feeding cattle and then on feed in Audrain county. Be this as it may, it seems were the question open, it might be reasoned on sound principle that upon a purchaser finding a span of mules answering the description in this mortgage in the possession of a man by the name of James Carr who was recited to be the mortgagor, he ought, in justice, to be required to make some pertinent inquiries with respect thereto before proceeding to purchase the same. We believe it entirely proper to remark that the coincidence of a span of mules, such as described in the mortgage, should suggest a reasonable inquiry in that behalf. ■ On principle, it is sound law that James Carr ought to be presumed the owner of the mules from the mere fact of having mortgaged
The judgment will therefore be affirmed. It is so ordered.