Ellingboe v. Brakken

36 Minn. 156 | Minn. | 1886

Berry, J.

1. When a chattel mortgage is acknowledged, the certificate of acknowledgment entitles it to be read in evidence “in all courts of justice.” Gen. St. 1878, c, 73, § 67. A copy of such mortgage, when certified by the proper town clerk to be a true copy of the original on file in his office, is receivable in evidence in like manner and with like effect as the original mortgage, (Gen. St. 1878, c. 39, § 7;) that is to say, it is, under the statute first cited, entitled to be read in evidence “in all courts of justice.”

2. Where A. executes to B. a mortgage of personal property, G., not being a subsequent purchaser from or mortgagee of A., nor a creditor of A. who has laid hold of the mortgaged property by legal process, is not in position to object to the validity of the mortgage. As respects C., such mortgage is conclusive in favor of B.’s right as mortgagee, and according to the terms of the mortgage, to the prop*158erty of A. purporting to be covered by it. See Tolbert v. Horton, 31 Minn. 518, (18 N. W. Rep. 647.)

3. An action of “claim and delivery” is one for the recovery of specific property, and hence, to maintain it, a right to specific property must be alleged and shown. But when, as in the case at bar, the property sought to be recovered is a certain undivided fractional part of a certain specified quantity of property, uniform in quality and value, and susceptible of a fair and equal division by count, measurement or weight, (as, for instance, grain in bulk,) the description and proof of the property sought to be recovered, as such undivided fractional part, is sufficiently specific. Kaufmann v. Schilling, 58 Mo. 218; Sutherland v. Carter, 52 Mich. 171, (17 N. W. Rep. 780, and 18 N. W. Rep. 223;) Read v. Middleton, 62 Iowa, 317, (17 N. W. Rep. 532;) Stone v. Quaal, ante, p. 16. Under such a description in his writ an officer may properly seize such part of the whole quantity as is equal to the undivided fractional part claimed. It may be added that in the case at bar, upon the pleadings and defendant’s admission upon the trial, there seems to have been no serious controversy as to the right of plaintiff to the quantities of grain seized in this action, or their value, if he was entitled to his mortgagor’s share.

With reference to the issue as to a demand, we think one was established by the testimony of the defendant himself; and, if there be any doubt about this, the ground upon which he plants himself in his answer, being an absolute denial of any right, title, or interest in the plaintiff or his mortgagor in or to any part of the grain in controversy, dispenses with proof of any demand. Kellogg v. Olson, 31 Minn. 103, (24 N. W. Rep. 364.)

Upon the admissions in the pleadings, and upon the trial, and the unquestioned testimony, (largely that of the defendant himself,) we see no error in the direction given to the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff.

Order affirmed.