12 S.D. 411 | S.D. | 1900
This is an action in claim and delivery. Verdict and judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals. To fully understand the questions presented, a brief statement of facts will be necessary. In 1891 the defendant, Israel Calkins, was the owner of a band of horses ranging in Custer county and vicinity. Some time during that year he sold and delivi rod the horses to one Levi W. Perkins, and executed to him the usual bill of sale therefor. Ptrkins, at about the time of his purchase, executed notes to the plaintiff bank for $2,600, and to secure the same executed a chattel mortgage on the band of horses so purchased by him of Calkins. In 1893 theée notes were renewed, and a new chattel mortgage executed, and delivered to the bank to secure the payment of the renewal notes. This chattel mortgage was not recorded until some time in 1895. In 1897, the bank, claiming that the sum secured by the chattel mortgage had not been paid, foreclosed the same by advertisement, and bid in. the property for less than the amount claimed to be due in the name of the bank, and it is
The-evidence in the case is quite voluminous, and it will not be necessary, in the view we take of the case, to reproduce any portion of it in this opinion. It will be sufficient to say that the defendant does not seem to question the fact that the plaintiff bank actually advanced to Perkins the amount of money which the chattel mortgage was given to secure. In the course of the trial the defendant introduced in evidence the judgment roll in the case of Calkins against Perkins. This was objected to on the grounds: (1) That the plaintiff bank was not a party to said action; (2) that neither the summons, complaint,- nor any other proceeding in the case of Calkins against Perkins was of record until long subsequent to the acquisition of the rights of the jilaintiff bank under its mortgage executed by Perkins in 1893; (3) that, as Calkins admils the sale and delivery of the property to Perkins, who retained the possession thereof subject to the bank’s mortgage until the foreclosure and sale of the property by the bank in 1897, the title of the bank is valid as against Calkins until vacated and set aside by a judgment of a court in an action against the bank. The court overruled the objections, and admitted the judgment roll, without passing upon its legal effect at that
The only question as to which we have had some doubt was as to the failure of Calkius to show that he had paid or tendered to Perkins, before this action was commenced, the amount that he was required to pay by the terms of the judgment; but as it did appear from the evidence that, subsequent tío the entry
If the mortgage in this case was executed in good faith, and for the purpose of securing a bona fide indebtedness due the mortgagee, the mere fact that the mortgagor, with the knowledge and consent of the mortgagee, sold some portion of the property, and applied the proceeds to his own use, does not necessarily render the mortgage void. In such a case the mortgagee might, in favor of creditors, subsequent purchasers, or other parties interested in the mortgaged property, be required to credit his mortgage security with the value of the property so sold by the mortgagor with his knowledge and consent. In other words, the mortgagee would be required to apply the value of the property so sold with his knowledge and consent to the reduction of his mortgage in a proper proceeding and under proper pleadings. Lane v. Starr, 1 S. D. 107, 45 N. W. 212. If this mortgage, in its inception, was executed in good faith to secure a valid subsisting indebtedness, and not for the purpose of hindering, delaying, or defrauding the creditors of the mortgagor, it does not neccessarily become fraudulent and void by reason of the failure of the mortgagee to require the mortgagor to pay over the proceeds of all sales of the property made by him to be applied upon the mortgage. As this court said in F. Meyer Boot & Shoe Co. v. C. Shenkberg Co., 11 S. D. 620: 80 N. W. 126; “The important question in this class of cases is, was the mort