39 Neb. 343 | Neb. | 1894
During the summer of 1890 the York National Bank, of the city of York, in York county, Nebraska, loaned $4,000 to Henry F. Anthony with which to buy flaxseed. The money was advanced at different times in sums of $1,000, Anthony giving the bank a note for each thousand when advanced and a chattel mortgage calling for a thousand bushels of flaxseed. The flaxseed, covered by four mortgages, was commingled in one bin. Some time prior to February 11, 1892, the notes of Anthony remaining unpaid, the bank discovered that the bin contained not 4,000 bushels of flaxseed, but about 2,000 bushels, and on said date procured Anthony to confess judgment in its favor on the first one of said four notes for $1,000, caused an execution to be issued on said judgment and placed in the
For the purposes of this opinion we shall disregard the finding of the district court, that the York National Bank had no actual notice of the mortgages held by the Farmers & Merchants Bank on the grain levied upon, and assume that, at and before the York National Bank caused the grain in controversy to be levied upon, that bank did have actual knowledge that Anthony had pledged it, by the. mortgages in suit, to the Farmers & Merchants Bank, to secure money borrowed from it by him and used in the purchase of the grain mortgaged. The correctness of the decree of the district court is assailed here on two grounds:
1. That although copies of appellant’s mortgages had not been filed in the office of the county clerk of York county at the time of the seizure of the grain on the execution, yet the York National Bank, having actual knowledge of the existence of said mortgages, could not, and did not, by the seizure of the mortgaged grain on execution, acquire a lien thereon superior to the lien created by the mortgages. No claim is made here that appellant was ever in possession of the grain covered by these mortgages, nor that the York National Bank was not in fact a creditor of the mortgagor, Anthony. We have, then, the clear ques
Section 14, chapter 32, Compiled Statutes, 1893, provides : “ Every mortgage, or conveyance intended to operate as a mortgage, of goods and chattels hereafter made, which shall not be accompanied by an immediate delivery,' and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things mortgaged, shall be absolutely void as against the creditors of the mortgagor and as against subsequent purchasers and mortgagees in good faith, unless’ the mortgage, or a true copy thereof, shall be filed in the office of the county clerk,” etc. By this law, then, a chattel mortgage, when the same, or a copy thereof, is not filed in the clerk’s office, and no actual change of possession of the mortgaged property has occurred and continues, is absolutely void as against the creditors of the mortgagor. Whether a creditor has knowledge of such a mortgage is immaterial. So far as he and his rights are concerned, such a mortgage does not exist. The term “creditor” in this statute means a judgment, execution, or attachment creditor ; that is, a creditor who is using the courts of law and their processes for the collection of his debt.
Statutes in all essential respects the same as ours exist in the states of New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Michigan, and Minnesota, and have been before those courts for construction, and the writer is not aware of any decision which holds that under such a statute as this, knowledge on the part of a creditor that his debtor had executed a chattel mortgage, which mortgage, or a copy thereof, had not been filed, and under which no change of possession of the things mortgaged had occurred, precludes the creditor from seizing, on execution, the property described in the mortgage of his debtor. Such is the doctrine in New Jersey.
As opposed to the views expressed by the above authori
The decree of the district court, giving the York National Bank a lien on the grain superior to the lien of the Farmers & Merchants Bank, by virtue of its unfiled mortgages, was right.
2. Counsel for appellant also contend that the decree appealed from is erroneous, in that it did not compel the York National Bank to credit its judgment with the value of the flaxseed pledged to secure the payment of the note on which the judgment was confessed. The court found, however, that the debt owing by Anthony to the York National Bank and unpaid was more than $4,000; that all the flaxseed covered by all the mortgages was pledged to pay this entire debt, and that the value of all the flaxseed did not exceed $1,500. This finding is supported by the evi
The decree appealed from must be affirmed and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.