16 S.W.2d 463 | Ark. | 1929
STATEMENT OF FACTS.
H. H. Holt brought this suit in equity against S. H. Haney and W. H. Haney to foreclose a mortgage on certain personal property, consisting of mules, horses and farm implements, which were specifically described in the complaint. The defendants admitted the indebtedness due the plaintiff, but defended the foreclosure suit on the ground that W. H. Haney had a paramount mortgage on the same property executed by S. H. Haney.
The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, which showed that S. H. Haney was indebted to H. H. Holt in open account in the amount of $378.69; that H. H. Holt had paid as surety for S. H. Haney the sum of $429.83, and that S. H. Haney had executed a chattel mortgage to H. H. Holt on certain personal property, which is specifically described in the complaint, and in the mortgage which was introduced in evidence; that said mortgage was never recorded or filed for record, for the reason that no acknowledgment to it was executed. The agreed statement of facts shows further that the property in the Holt mortgage was embraced in a subsequent mortgage to W. H. Haney by S. H. Haney, which was filed for record. The agreed statement of facts further shows that the defendant, W. H. Haney, was indebted to the plaintiff, H. H. Holt, in the sum of $349.85. The property described in the mortgages is in the possession and control of the defendants. We copy from the agreed statement of facts the following:
"It is further stipulated and agreed that the clause contained in the W. H. Haney mortgage as follows: `This mortgage is second to a previously recorded mortgage,' referred to the mortgage to H. H. Holt, and that both defendants thought at the time of the execution of the W. H. Haney mortgage that the Holt mortgage was of record."
The chancellor made a specific finding of facts in favor of the plaintiff, in accordance with the stipulation, *405
as to the amount due the plaintiff by the defendants. The chancellor was also of the opinion that the mortgage executed by S. H. Haney to H. H. Holt was a paramount lien on the property to that executed by S. H. Haney to W. H. Haney, and a decree of foreclosure in favor of Holt was entered of record. To reverse that decree W. H. Haney has duly prosecuted an appeal to this court.
(after stating the facts). The record shows that the mortgage given by S. H. Haney to H. H. Holt was never recorded or filed for record. The mortgage from S. H. Haney to W. H. Haney was properly acknowledged and filed for record. Hence it is first contended that the Haney mortgage was a superior lien to the Holt mortgage. In making this contention, counsel for appellant (defendant below) rely upon our mortgage statute to the effect that the filing or recording of a chattel mortgage is essential to its validity as against third persons, even though the subsequent mortgagee has actual notice of the execution of the first mortgage. In other words, they rely upon the rule laid down in Thornton v. Findley,
We do not think that rule has any application under the facts in the present case. In 11 C.J., 393, page 650, it is said that a recital in a mortgage that it was made subject to another will postpone it thereto, without regard to questions affecting priority of record. Numerous cases are cited in support of the text, and among them is Ghio v. Byrne,
In Young v. Evans-Snider-Buel Commission Co.,
"This agreement of plaintiffs, substantially recited in their mortgage, to take their security subject to the defendant's prior mortgages, which were an equitable lien upon the cattle, valid between the parties thereto, obviously takes the defendant's case, upon this issue, out of the principle of the Arkansas case aforesaid, upon which plaintiffs rely, and brings it within the well-settled doctrine recognized and, enforced in that State, as well as in the other States of the Union, that `one who takes a conveyance, absolute or conditional, which recites that it is second or subordinate to some other lien or incumbrance, can in no proper sense claim that he is a purchaser of the entire thing. He purchases only the surplus or residuum after satisfying the other incumbrance;' and `a mortgage expressly providing that it shall be subject *407
to a prior mortgage is subject to it, independently of the fact that the prior mortgage is not of record; nor will it alter matters to record the subsequent mortgage first.' Jones, Chat. Mortg., 494; 5 Am. Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), 1015; 2 Cobbey, Chat. Mortg., 1039; Clapp v. Halliday,
In Nation v. Planters' Mechanics' Bank,
In Eaton v. Tuson,
Again, it is insisted that the judgment in favor of Holt against W. H. Haney should be reversed because the account was barred by the statute of limitations; but the chancellor correctly held that the stipulation in the case took away from the defendant the right to plead the statute of limitations. The stipulation expressly recites that W. H. Haney was indebted to H. H. Holt in the sum of $349.85. It is true that the defendant made a motion to set aside the stipulation in this respect, but no cause was shown why the motion should be granted. Hence there was no abuse of discretion in the chancery court failing to set aside the stipulation. It was deliberately entered into between the respective attorneys of the parties, and was binding upon their clients. There is no contention that at the time the stipulation was made the attorney for W. H. Haney did not have the right to enter into the stipulation. Webster v. Goolsby,
The decree of the chancery court was correct, and will therefore be affirmed.