113 Kan. 39 | Kan. | 1923
On January 11, 1921, the Haddam State Bank, claiming under three chattel mortgages, two bills of sale given for security, and a written contract between the parties hereto, brought replevin against C. I. McHenry for property including live stock, farm machinery, corn and fodder. It recovered, and the defendant appeals.
“All personal property, including crops, not otherwise disposed of shall be sold at public auction during or before the month of February, 1921, and the avails thereof distributed according to the terms of this contract except the hogs, sheep or cattle (other than milk cows) may by mutual consent be sold to the best advantage prior to that time.”
The defendant asserts that this contract superseded the chattel mortgages and the bills of sale, .which were in effect chattel mortgages, and gave him the right of possession until the last of February. We do not accept this view. The bank under its mortgages, although entitled to take possession by reason of the defendant’s default, was under no obligation to assert that right at any particular time. We think the contract merely contemplated forbearance in that regard, to give opportunity for the property to be used to advantage in the hope of its paying out, the defendant’s right of possession, if at any time absolute as against the bank, lasting no
The jury were told that the bill of sale, was a mortgage and that under the chattel mortgages the bank was entitled to take possession of the property if it deemed itself insecure. The defendant complains of these instructions on the ground that they imply that the bank was entitled to take possession under its bill of sale if it deemed itself insecure, whereas “a mortgagee of personal property has no authority to take possession of the mortgaged property before'the maturity of the indebtedness unless by the express terms of the mortgage itself the right to take possession when the mortgagee deems himself insecure is specifically provided for.” The statute provides, however, that “in the absence of stipulation to the contrary, the mortgagee of personal property shall have the legal title thereto, and the right of possession.” (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 6501.)
An instruétion was given to the effect that other property may, by agreement of the parties, be substituted for some of that included in a chattel mortgage, and thereby become subject to the lien. Complaint is made of this on the ground that no substitution had been alleged. We do not discover that the silence of the petition in that regard resulted in any actual -prejudice.
A further instruction was given that “where a mortgagor purposely or negligently commingles the mortgaged goods with like goods of his own without the consent of the mortgagee so that the part covered by the mortgage cannot be identified and separated from the rest, the mortgagee may hold the whole of such commingled and confused property under his mortgage.” This is objected to on the ground that the commingling of the mortgaged property with other property of like nature must have been contemplated, because the defendant was operating a farm where he necessarily had live stock, farming implements, crops and grain, and that the duty rested on
The judgment is affirmed.