66 Minn. 344 | Minn. | 1896
This was an action for the wrongful conversion of a quantity of wheat, of which the plaintiff alleged she was the owner and entitled to the possession. The basis of plaintiff’s claim to the-property was a chattel mortgage executed November 15, 1893, by one Wuttke to the Bank of Melrose, on “all the wheat, &c., which shall be
1. The defendant makes the point that “a chattel mortgage upon a growing crop should not be construed to be a lien upon the grain when severed and removed from the premises.” In other words, the contention is that in view of the fact that the property is left in the possession of the mortgagor to harvest and thresh, and that, after it is removed from the land where raised, it bears no earmarks by which it can be identified, therefore, as to purchasers of the grain, we should apply a rule somewhat similar to that of the common law in sales in market overt, as seems to have been done in Gillilan v. Kendall, 26 Neb. 82, 42 N. W. 281. The law is settled otherwise in this state by Close v. Hodges, 44 Minn. 204, 46 N. W. 335, in accordance with the great weight of authority. Jones, Ghat. Mortg. § 69.
The English custom of markets overt is not recognized in this country. Whether the necessities and policy of commerce require any modification of the law of chattel mortgages as to property which, like growing crops, is left in the possession of the mortgagor, the form of which he may change, and which, when thus changed, is incapable of identification by inspection, is a question for the legislature, and not the courts. The general principle applicable to the law of personal property is that no one can transfer any better title than he himself has, and the statutory law as to chattel mortgages is that filing constitutes constructive notice to all the world.
Where a valid chattel mortgage has been filed, a purchaser of the property from the mortgagor can obtain title free of the incumbrance only when the conduct of the mortgagee amounts to an express or implied authority to the mortgagor to sell the property, or has been such as equitably to estop him from denying that he had given the mortgagor such authority. Grain must necessarily be harvested when it is ripe, and, in the course of husbandry, is usually threshed and marketed, or stored, soon afterwards. But mortgagees of growing grain frequently pay no attention to' the property after the execution of
2. The further point is made that there was no evidence that at the time the mortgage was executed the mortgagor was in possession of, or had any interest in, the land on which this grain was raised, and, hence, that the grain had not even a potential existence, and was incapable of being the subject of a mortgage. This is fully disposed of by the case of Ludlum v. Rothschild, 41 Minn. 218, 43 N. W. 137, in which this court went entirely beyond the doctrine of “potential existence,” and adopted the rule in equity, holding that where parties, by their contract, in clear terms express an intention to create a mortgage lien upon personal property, not then owned, but to be subsequently acquired, by the mortgagor, whether then in being or not, the mortgage attaches as a lien on the property as soon as the mortgagor acquires it.
8. Another point is that the evidence was insufficient to justify a verdict in favor of the plaintiff because it failed to show (1) that the grain which defendant bought was raised on the land described in the mortgage; or (2) that the mortgagor, Wuttke, owned the grain, or had any interest in it. An examination of the evidence satisfies us that this point is well taken, as to the second specification.
Taking the evidence of Wendtlant and Hitchcock together, we think it can be fairly inferred from it that 550 bushels of the wheat raised on the land described in the mortgage were purchased by the defendant; but we fail to find any evidence that would furnish a sufficient basis for the conclusion that this grain belonged to Wuttke, the mortgagor, or that he had any interest in it; and, of course, he could not mortgage anything but his own interest.
It appears that Wuttke farmed this land, and raised a crop on it, in 1894. If the evidence had stopped there, this would be prima facie
The evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict.
4. It appears that the defendant bought this grain in the market, in the usual course of business, and paid for it. This constituted prima facie evidence that the defendant was a purchaser in good faith, in the absence of any opposing, suspicious circumstances. Wright v. Larson, 51 Minn. 321, 53 N. W. 712. Upon this state of facts, the burden was on the plaintiff to prove that her mortgage was executed in good faith. There was no evidence on that point, and for that reason, also, the verdict cannot be sustained.
5. The instruction of the court to the jury referred to in the sixth assignment contained error prejudicial to the defendant, and we doubt whether the modification subsequently made by the court went far enough to correct the error, but we only refer to the matter here with reference to a new trial.
6. Upon the point that a demand on defendant for the grain was necessary, we need only refer to what was said in Adams v. Castle,
There is nothing in the point that there was no evidence of any breach of the conditions of the mortgage. The possession and production of the note by the plaintiff was prima facie evidence that it had not been paid, and one of the conditions of the mortgage was that the mortgagee might take possession of the property in case of an attempt by the mortgagor or any one else to remove or dispose of it.
But, for the reasons already given, the order appealed from is reversed and a new trial ordered.