20 Colo. App. 448 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1905
Suit by appellant against appellee, a corporation, for the -wrongful conversion by the latter of a quantity of grain belonging to the former. Judgment for defendant, and appeal by plaintiff.
The following facts appear from the pleading and evidence: On the 6th day of October, 1900, R. M. Phillips executed and delivered to the plaintiff a chattel mortgage on twelve stacks of grain on the northwest quarter of section 27, township 41, range 9, in Saguache county, to secure his note for $532.20, payable to the plaintiff December 1, 1900. This mortgage provided for the retention by the mortgagor of the possession of the property until default, and was never recorded. The defendant was the proprietor of a mill and elevator. On January 3, 1901, the note being unpaid, the plaintiff, by his agent, exhibited the mortgage to a Mr. Breckenridge, the defendant’s manager, who said that Mr. Phillips’ grain had been delivered there, but had not been paid for; and on demand then made by the plaintiff’s agent, refused delivery of the grain to the plaintiff.
Defendant’s counsel points us to no evidence •upon which it might be said that the defendant purchased the grain. lie assumes a purchase, and argues as if the assumption had been established. The mortgage not having been recorded, if the defendant' was a purchaser, and had purchased without actual knowledge of the existence of the mortgage, it would have taken a good title, and proof of that fact would
An unrecorded chattel mortgage is good as between immediate parties; and the failure to record it, is available only to persons having some right or interest in the property. — Horn v. Reitler, 12 Colo. 310; Morse v. Morrison, 16 Colo. App. 449. A mortgage of chattels vests the title in the mortgagee, subject to the right of the mortgagor to redeem before default. But upon default the legal title becomes absolute in the mortgagee, who thereupon may, if hy the terms of the instrument the property has remained with the mortgagor, take it into his own possession. . Nor, as against a person without interest, is it material what length of time after default the mortgagee suffers to elapse before he asserts his right to possession. In this case, a statutory period of thirty days was exceeded. This delay would have been fatal to the mortgagee’s title, if he had found the property in the hands of a bona fide purchaser, or in the custody of an officer at the suit of a creditor of the mortgagor. But as the defendant was merely holding the property for Phillips, it stood in the shoes of the latter. It could interpose no obstacle to the proceeding of the plaintiff to reduce the property to his possession, which could not he interposed by the mortgagor himself.
When the plaintiff demanded the property he was entitled to its immediate possession. The defendant not only refused to deliver it, hut answered to process in garnishment that he was indebted to Phillips, thus enabling certain of the latter’s creditors to subject it to the payment of their claims, and
The defendant introduced no evidence. On defendant’s motion, after the plaintiff had concluded his ease, the court ordered a nonsuit in his favor. The judgment was erroneous. The plaintiff’s evidence, as it has been laid before us, required a judgment for him.
The judgment will be reversed.
jReversed.