111 Neb. 441 | Neb. | 1923
This is an action brought by the First National Bank of Bridgeport, the plaintiff below and appellant here, against the First National Bank of Hartington and the First National Bank of Coleridge, appellees here and defendants below. It is alleged in the petition that on the 20th day of Jan
Undoubtedly one may bail stock and personal property to another for the latter to use in running a farm or any other business without becoming liable to the loss of the same through its unauthorized conveyance by the bailee. McGinley v. Brechtel, 4 Neb. (Unof.) 552; McClelland v. Scroggin, 35 Neb. 536. If there is no absolute or conditional
Such being the case, the defendants who took mortgages-on the property described and afterward seized and sold it under such mortgages were required to prove, in order to successfully defend upon the' doctrine of estoppel, the existence of facts in connection with the holding of Shaffer,, other than that of mere possession, sufficient to mislead them in the exercise of ordinary care as to the true ownership, and also that they relied upon said facts. The mere giving over of the possession of the live stock and farm equipment to the lessee upon his farm was not enough toestop Dunlap from claiming the personalty when he learned that said lessee had fraudulently mortgaged the same to a third party, unless Dunlap did something or omitted to do-something in connection therewith to mislead such third person as to its rightful ownership. No one can transfer a better title than he has. No presumption exists that a mortgagor owns the property covered by his mortgage, as between a party to the mortgage and a stranger. Brooknau v. Clark, 58 Neb. 610; Rocky Mountain Fuel Co. v. Sparling Coal Co., 26 Colo. App. 260. The doctrine that that one of two innocent parties-must suffer for the wrong of a third, who made the wrong possible by parting with the possession of a chattel, operates only to protect the person who exercises-ordinary caution in taking a lien upon that chattel. The bank or the individual trusts as much or -more in lending money upon chattels without careful investigation as to their title, as does the owner of such chattels in lending-them to another for safe keeping or for mutual profit; Chism v. Woods, Hardin (Ky.) 531, 3 Am. Dec. 740.
It must be borne in mind, as the evidence discloses, that defendants well knew that farm owners and lessors were in the habit of furnishing stock and machinery to the tenant farmers who became their lessees. With this in view, and conceding for the purposes of argument that the personal property in question belonged to Dunlap and was
All of these things in conjunction, perhaps some of them singly, would be sufficient, in the opinion of the court, to justify the submission of the case to the jury on the theory of estoppel, if it were shown in addition that because of them the defendants acted in lending their money and taking the mortgages as security. But it does not so appear from the evidence. None of the things mentioned were matters of inducement. Defendants made their'loans to Shaffer because he had the property in his possession and handled it as his own on the farm. They did not take the trouble to look into the matter of ownership. They simply assumed that the property belonged to him. Though they knew that he was a renter occupying Dunlap’s farm, and though Dunlap was easy to find and to be inquired of, they went ahead in apparent carelessness. Beste, the cashier of the Hartington bank, said that he attached no particular importance to the fact that Shaffer had given a small mortgage to Sorenson for machinery bought of the latter, and another to the garage man for an automobile. He acted because of the possession of the chattels by Shaffer. The Coleridge bank was content to loan on the corn because it was on the place occupied by Shaffer and in his possession. Neither defendant offered proof that it knew when it loaned that Dunlap had access to the daily report of mortgages, or that he had permitted Shaffer to list the property for taxation as his, or that Dunlap had failed to list it, or that Dunlap had any knowledge that Shaffer was making any mortgages.
In the rule relied upon by the defendants, Merchants-Mechanics First Nat. Bank v. Cavers Elevator Co., 105 Neb. 321, it is stated, following Grant v. Cropsey, 8 Neb. 205: “Where one by his words or conduct wilfully causes another to believe in the existence' of a certain state of things, and induces him to act on that belief so as to alter his own previous position, the former is concluded from averring against the latter a different state of things as existing
We hold, therefore, that the trial court was in error in. submitting the case to the jury on the estoppel theory.
The court also erred, as pointed out in appellant’s brief,, in giving its instruction No. 2, to the effect that the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove every material allegation of its petition by a preponderance of the evidence. The stipulation made by the parties on trial relieved the plaintiff of a considerable part of this burden, namely, the burden of showing that the defendants sqld the property and that the value of the same was as set forth in exhibit 1. We think this was prejudicial, though doubtless a mere oversight likely to happen in the hurry of the trial.
We disagree with the appellant that the exclusive ownership of the property was conclusively established in the plaintiff. The trial court properly submitted the question to the jury. There was enough in the letters and the actions, of Dunlap to abundantly justify such submission.
Since the judgment must be reversed for the reasons, stated, it seems unnecessary to consider the other assignments of error.
Reversed and remanded.