13 N.M. 551 | N.M. | 1906
OPINION OF THE COURT.
But, even if it be granted that the rule of law contended for by the appellant was distinctly adopted in the two cases named, we think it has been so 'far worn away by. the current of later decisions as to leave little if any more than that such a provision as the one in question is admissible as evidence of fraud, to be considered in connection with all the other evidence bearing^ on .that point. To hold that such a provision of itself. renders void.the mortgage in which it occurs, no matter how fair and ample the consideration may have been would be to declare in effect that a stock of merchandise intended for retail trade, cannot .be used as security for a loan, or for the purchase of necessary additions to it, except by first making an end of the sale for which alone the- owner obtained it and on which its value chiefly depends.
It is true that such a provision as we are considering may be and often is made the cover of fraud, but on the other ‘hand it may be used in perfect good faith and with beneficial results to all concerned. “The fact that fraudulent relations- are -possible is hardly a sufficient'reason for denouncing relations which are not fraudulent. So if the question were open, or a new one, unaffected by any settled iaw of the state, we incline to the opinion that, the question is not one of law, but one of fact and good faith,” “and that the decision of the supreme court of Iowa rests on sound principles.” Brewer, J., in Etheridge v. Sperry, 139, U. S., 266. This case is approved in Huntley v. Kingman, 152 U. S., 527, 535. These cases, with' Gay v. Bidwell 7 Mich. 519, Clark v. Hyman, 55 Iowa, 14, and numerous others which might be cited, well support the conclusion stated in Jones on Chattel Mortgages, Sec. 425, 435: “That the doctrine of absolute fraud arising in a mortgage of merchandise, from the mortgagors retaining possession, with the power of disposal in the usual course of trade, is not supported by any. preponderance of authority, that it is contrary to sound principles of jurisprudence, * * * that the qualifications of the doctrine made by leading courts, have, in a large measure destroyed its force, and axe indicative that these courts themselves, wish to be rid of the whole of it."
Whether under a mortgage of a stock of merchandise, articles added to it by the mortgagor, after the mortgage went into effect, can be recovered by the mortgagee from a subsequent attaching creditor, actually in possession, we do not decide, as the question was not raised in the trial court, and was only casually referred to in one of the briefs submitted to this court. Judgment affirmed.