250 N.W. 806 | Minn. | 1933
Defendant Flynn Motor Company appears to be only a nominal party. The real controversy being between plaintiff and defendant Charles H. Flynn, the latter will be referred to for convenience as though he were the only defendant. He claims under a real estate mortgage and its foreclosure. Plaintiff takes position upon a later chattel mortgage in terms covering the property in question. The issues submitted to the jury were: (1) Whether the property had become part of the realty as fixtures and remained so until after plaintiff's mortgage was given in 1926; and (2) whether plaintiff had waived its right to claim under the chattel mortgage because of the abortive levy on the property hereinafter considered. In March, 1932, plaintiff procured judgment for $1,194.32 on the then past due debt secured by its chattel mortgage. Execution issued, and the property in issue was levied upon. But defendant speedily served a notice of claim thereto. Plaintiff did not secure the sheriff against that claim by bond as permitted by statute, and the levy was thereupon released and the goods not sold.
1. The court instructed the jury that, while there was no waiver as matter of law, the levy, notwithstanding its release, "is a fact which you may take into consideration along with all of the other evidence in the case to determine whether or not by making the levy and then releasing it the bank thereby intended to waive any further lien on the property by virtue of the chattel mortgage. If it once determined to do that and the parties acted upon that assumption, then the bank could not later on change its attitude and assert its claim under the mortgage." There being no other fact to suggest waiver, it was error to submit the issue to the jury if the levy itself was not evidence of waiver. Such an error is prejudicial and requires a new trial. Bowers v. C. M. St. P. Ry. Co.
2. On the question generally whether such a levy by a chattel mortgagee upon the mortgaged property is an election of remedies and a waiver of rights under the mortgage, there is divergence of *104
authority. Among the cases for the affirmative are Evans v. Warren,
In Dyckman v. Sevatson,
With us the mortgagee of chattels has the legal title. But there remains in the mortgagor a very real interest in the nature of an equity of redemption, which is subject to attachment or levy. 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 8358 and 9431. It is argued that the divergence of authority already noted is due to the fact that in the states where a levy by a mortgagee upon the mortgaged chattels *105 is held a waiver, it is because there, as here, he has the legal title and the levy amounts to an election that the title, notwithstanding the mortgage, remains in the mortgagor or his assigns. In those states where the negative view is taken, it is said by counsel that the mortgagee has only a lien on the property, the legal title remaining in the mortgagor.
There is another view, which in our judgment requires decision as matter of law, that in this case the abortive levy was neither waiver nor evidence of waiver. Plain it is that, while plaintiff instituted a procedure which, carried to conclusion, would have constituted waiver, that procedure was stopped far short of its usual conclusion. It was abandoned upon the assertion of defendant's claim, so it was not a final choice of remedy. There is no suggestion that defendant changed his position because of the levy or that he was otherwise prejudiced thereby. In Kremer v. Lewis,
The purpose of the doctrine of election of remedies is not to prevent recourse to any remedy but to prevent double redress for a single wrong. That the final and determinative character of the choice must appear in order to constitute election is undoubted. Marcus v. National Council,
It may be that statutory changes since the decision in Dyckman v. Sevatson,
There is more necessity and hence more authority for strictness in finding an election between rights than there is for a similar choice between remedies. Plaintiff's choice, if any, was between rights as well as remedies, so it is subject to the more strict rule. But in applying the latter, the original basis of the whole doctrine of election, both in its strict and liberal applications, must be kept *107 in view. The rationale of a rule of law is as much the indispensable measure of its application as compass and sextant are necessary guides of navigation. No more in the one case than in the other is the proper destination surely to be reached if dependable direction-finding instruments be discarded.
3. The doctrine of election, of Roman origin (1 Pomeroy, Equity [3 ed.] § 463), is in our law but an application of the equitable maxim that he who seeks equity must do equity (id. § 395). In spreading from its original field of inconsistent gifts into that of alternative rights and remedies generally, it has come naturally and properly to be regarded as "an application of the law of estoppel." 9 R.C.L. 957.
Putting aside the cases where any affirmative act indicating a choice (e. g. submission generally to the jurisdiction of a court) is of necessity held an irrevocable election, it is a safe premise that a party should not be bound by an election unless he has pursued the chosen course to a determinative conclusion or has procured advantage therefrom or has thereby subjected his adversary to injury. Many cases hold that the mere commencement of an action is conclusive evidence of election. See Conrow v. Little,
It has been said also that "at best this doctrine of election of remedies is a harsh, and now largely obsolete rule, the scope of which should not be extended." Friederichsen v. Renard,
Because of the error in submitting the issue of waiver, which should have been disposed of for plaintiff as matter of law, there must be a new trial.
Order reversed. *109