199 Mo. App. 96 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1918
The plaintiff (respondent) brought suit on six promissory notes which had been given it by the defendants who are husband and wife, defendants having purchased a threshing machine outfit and given these and other notes aggregating $2100 secured by chattel mortgage on the machinery. The same question being presented as to both mortgages the disposition of one will rule the case.
The point to be decided goes to the notice of sale under the chattel mortgage after default had been made in' the payment of a part of the debt.
The chattel mortgage provided that iñ ease of default plaintiff upon taking possession might proceed to sell the property at public auction to the highest -bidder at Keener, Butler county, Missouri, first having given ten days’ notice of the time, terms and place of sale, and the property to be sold, by posting three written or printed handbills in three public places in said county. The mortgage also provided that the mortgagee might
After default the plaintiff and defendants entered into the following agreement or stipulation:
“We, S. D. Ellis and Parlee, his wife, hereby agree and consent that the property described in a chattel mortgage given by us to the Huber Manufacturing Company for $2100 dated May 22, 1915, may be sold at Williamsville, Wayne county, Missouri, instead of Keener, Butler County, Missouri, as provided in said mortgage. Dated this 26th day of May, 1916.
“S. D. Ellis,
“Parlee Ellis.”
This came about by reason of the fact that it was easier to get the machinery to Williamsville than to Keener, and both parties agreed that it might be taken to Williamsville and sold there under the mortgage. In this stipulation to sell at Williamsville instead of Keener there is no mention made about any change in the character or the posting or the place of posting the notices of sale.
The plaintiff having taken possession of the property at Williamsville in Wayne county proceeded to post the notices of sale in Wayne county and posted no notice, as required by the terms of the chattel mortgage, in Butler county. The sale took place at' Williamsville and the plaintiff Sought the property for $900. After deducting certain expenses of the sale .plaintiff gave credit on the notes given for the purchase price for what remained, and in this action seeks to recover the balance alleged to be ‘due on said notes.
Defendants in their answer set up the failure to post proper notices of said sale, charged that the sum paid- — $900—was a grossly inadequate price for the machinery, and asked credit for $2250, which they allege to be the value of. the machinery taken and retained by the plaintiff in the manner hereinbefore described.
The law is well settled in Missouri as well as elsewhere that the powers conferred by a chattel mortgage' in order to pass title to a purchaser under a sale must be strictly followed, not only as to the places designated for posting notices and the length of time, but in all other particulars. The reason for this rule is that the powers exacted by the mortgagee which gives him authority to take the mortgagor’s property and transfer title therein is a drastic measure not contemplating any supervision of a court and one simply of contract. [Schanewerk v. Hoberecht, 117 Mo. 22, 22 S. W. 949; Stine v. Wilkson, 10 Mo. 75; Thornburg v. Jones, 36 Mo. 514; Hutchins Hanks Coal Co. v. Land & Coal Co., 141 Mo. App. 251, 124 S. W. 1098; Sears v. Livermore, 17 Ia. 296, 85 Am. Dec. 564, 27 Cyc. 1474 and 1476; 7 Cyc. 109; 2 Jones on Mortgages, secs. 1827 and 1836; Jones on Chat. Mortgages’ (5 Ed.), sec. 795.]
The law as settled in this State should be strictly observed in applying it touching the giving of notices by publication. [Gray v. Worst, 129 Mo. 122, 31 S. W. 585; Cruzen v. Stephens, 123 Mo. 337, 27 S. W. 557.]
The contention of the respondent — that the subsequent agreement between the parties that the place of sale of this machinery should be a different place than that named in the chattel mortgage waived the.requirement as to the place of posting notices of the sale — is not well taken. To begin with the chattel mortgage by definite and unambiguous language declares that the post
Respondent cites but one case to support the validity of the sale, the case of Darnall v. Darlington, 28 S. C. 255, 5 S. E. 620. That was where the mortgagee had taken possession of some mules on which he held a chattel mortgage and the mortgagor had defaulted in the payment of the debt. The chattel mortgage required certain notices of sale to be posted at a small town called Allendale. The mortgagee in that case took possession of the mules on a telegram received from the mortgagor instructing him to “take stock to Savannah and sell there.” Following this instruction the mortgagee took the mules to Savannah, advertised for two days a sale, and sold them, applying the proceeds on the debt, and brought suit for-the balance due. The defendant mortgagor set up the invalidity of the sale because the chattel mortgage was not complied with as to the posting of notices. The court in that case held that in view of the fact that there was no evidence to the effect that the sale was in any way unfair or that the property brought an inadequate price, and that the sale was made
The appellants raise the novel proposition that because the plaintiff was willing to sell the machinery originally to the appellants for the sum of $2400 on time notes drawing five per cent interest, as it did, or for the sum of $2100 cash, the transaction, as closed, was usurious and the chattel mortgage void. Of course no authorities are cited to support this claim and it is without merit. To. deny a seller the right to take a less amount in cash for an article than he would when sold for payments on time would bar to merchants a very beneficial instrument of commerce known as discounts.
For the reasons hereinbefore stated the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.