67 Vt. 57 | Vt. | 1894
It appears that the defendant as principal, and one Moses Spear as surety, on the thirteenth day of October, 1884, gave the plaintiff their promissory note. On the twenty-fifth day of November, 1884, the defendant was adjudged an insolvent debtor, and obtained his discharge. On the eighth day of April, 1885?, the defendant and said Spear renewed the. note thus given to the plaintiff by giving a new
The defendant claims that the plaintiff adopted the acts of Spear and the assignee in procuring a renewal of the note, and that it is chargeable with knowledge of the representations make by them in so doing. We do not so hold. Spear and the assignee were not acting for the plaintiff; they were not the agents of the plaintiff. Spear was acting for himself and for his own interest, and the assignee only answered an inquiry made by the defendant. It was for Spear’s interest to have the defendant remain liable on the original debt, and he procured the defendant to renew the note for his own benefit, not for the benefit of the plaintiff. The plaintiff did not take any steps toward having the defendant renew the note; it was renewed by the defendant from time to time at the suggestion of Spear. When the defendant was adjudged an insolvent person and obtained his dis
It is claimed that the mortgage does not contain a sufficient description of the property, and that 'no lien was-thereby created,upon any of the property sued for. The property sued for is described in the mortgage as follows :
“All growing grass on my home place, except sufficient for ten tons of hay ; all the growing crops, except what the law exempts, on said home farm ; and all the farming tools on said premises.”
In Parker v. Chase and Buck, 62 Vt. 206, it is said :
“While a description need not be enough to enable one to find the property without inquiry, it must be such as to indicate the line of inquiry and furnish the basis of identification.”
Applying this rule, we think the description of the grass, and crops is sufficient, as between the parties. The defendant described-the grass in his mortgage as growing on his-home place, and the crops as growing on his home farm. He must have known the location of his home place and his home farm; and, if he did, he knew that a portion of his grass and other crops was.mortgaged, and he was not labor
The crops are described as “all the growing crops, except what the law exempts, on said home farm,” and it is-contended that, inasmuch as all growing crops are exempt from attachment and levy upon execution, no crops are mortgaged. Such a construction would render the mortgage, so far as it relates to crops, meaningless, and ought not to be given, if the language used admits of any other
It is claimed that the mortgage, so far as it relates to grass and crops, is void, because it contains no provision for .separating the mortgaged from the unmortgaged portion. As between the parties, chattel mortgages need not contain a specific and particular description of the .several articles by which to identify them from other like articles of the mortgagor. Gurney v. Davis, sufra; Cobbey on Chattel Mortgages, s. 69 ; Cull v. Gray, 37 N. H. 428. A mortgage of one-third of twenty-one acres of growing wheat, situate in a certain place, means an undivided third of such wheat, and is a sufficiently particular description. Zehner v. Aultman, 74 Ind. 24. The holding in Senis v. Mead, 29 Kan. 88, and Potts v. Newell, 22 Minn. 561, is to the same effect. A mortgage of “fifty thousand pounds of cotton, to be produced during the present year,” on described premises, sufficiently describes the property. Robinson v. Mauldin, 11 Ala. 977.
When the defendant had appropriated to his own use sufficient grass to make ten tons of hay, and the number 01 bushels of potatoes, wheat, corn and oats, exempt from attachment and levy upon execution, he knew that the balance of the hay and crops were holden as security for the payment
The pro forma judgment is reversed, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff to recover $J 03.yy and its costs.