173 F. 597 | 8th Cir. | 1909
(after stating the facts as above). The court below was clearly right in holding the mortgage inoperative and void as to the five wagons. It appears without contradiction that
The mortgage was recorded more than four months prior to the adjudication in bankruptcy, and therefore, so far as the bankruptcy act was concerned, it created a valid preferential right over all other creditors of the bankrupt. But by the law of Missouri (section 3404, Rev. St. 1899 [Ann, St. 1906, p. 1936]), where the mortgage was made, it became and was invalid against any other person than the parties thereto until it was recorded. No question of lawful or unlawful preference within the contemplation of the bankruptcy act is now presented. The sole inquiry is whether the property in question, prior to the bankruptcy proceedings, belonged to the mortgagee or to the creditors of the bankrupt who extended credit to him, after the execution of the mortgage and before it was recorded. No other creditors assert any claim to it.
The trustee iri bankruptcy stands for and represents all persons interested in the estate of the bankrupt. In this case, doubtless moved so to do by the interested creditors, he seeks to assert an equitable right in favor of certain special creditors to a part of the bankrupt’s estate as against the holder of a chattel mortgage purporting to convey it to one creditor. The rights of these special creditors rest on the principle of estoppel, and are no less enforceable in the bankruptcy court than they would be if they had their origin in written contract. Equitable rights, no less than legal, are there enforced. Atchison, Topeka & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Hurley, 153 Fed. 503, 82 C. C. A. 453, s. c. 213 U. S. 126, 29 Sup. Ct. 466, 53 L. Ed. 729. The mortgagee, Bothe, by leaving the property in the possession of the bankrupt and withholding’ the mortgage from the record, invited others to deal with the bankrupt on the assumption of his ownership of an unincumbered title to the property conveyed. Whether those so dealing with him were actually deceived or not is immaterial. The inevitable tendency was to mislead and deceive, and the presumption must be indulged that they were misled to their injury. Landis v. McDonald, 88 Mo. App. 335; Harrison & Calhoun v. South Carthage Min. Co., 95 Mo. App. 80, 68 S. W. 963, and cases cited.
As between the mortgagee and those dealing with and extending credit to the mortgagor subsequent to the date of the mortgage and prior to the recording of it, there is an obvious equity in favor of the latter. It was doubtless in recognition of this equity that the provisions of section 3404 were enacted into positive law. That section has been the subject of much consideration by the appellate courts of Missouri; and this court, in the recent cases of First Nat. Bank of Buchanan County v. Connett, 142 Fed. 33, 37, 73 C. C. A. 219, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 148, and McElvain v. Hardesty (C. C. A.) 169 Fed. 31, considered the
“The Missouri statute provides that no mortgage of personal property shall he valid against any other person than the parties thereto, unless possession of the mortgaged property he delivered' to and retained by the mortgagee, or unless the mortgage be recorded in the county in which the mortgagor resides. The sweeping character of its provisions at once attracts attention. Under this statute it has been held, that where possession is not taken an unrecorded chattel mortgage is fraudulent and void in law as to every one, excepting trespassers, parties to the instrument, and general creditors whose demands arose prior to the time it was given; nor as to such prior creditors' is it valid if hy proceedings in court or otherwise they have secured a lien upon the property before it is recorded. Such a mortgage is also utterly void as to simple contract creditors who extended credit after it was given, and who have secured no title or lien hy purchase, execution, atta'chment, or otherwise. As to them the subsequent recording of the instrument is of no effect. It cannot be asserted against the enforcement of their demands.”
We perceive no reason for departing from this deliberate declaration, and we accordingly adhere to the conclusion there expressed.
Detached expressions are found in Harrison & Calhoun v. South Carthage Min. Co. and Dandis v. McDonald, supra, to the effect that, if “a prior creditor” fails to obtain some specific lien by attachment, execution, or otherwise on the mortgaged property before the mortgage is actually recorded, the mortgage is by the act of recording validated as to such creditor, and his right is subordinated to the rights of the mortgagee; and counsel for the mortgagee seize on expressions of this kind and claim that, because the special creditors in this case failed to take steps to fix a lien upon the mortgaged property before the mortgage was recorded, their rights were lost. We cannot give our assent to this claim. Dhitil the mortgage was recorded it was absolutely void as to these special creditors. Their superior rights arose against the property of their debtor while the mortgage was thus void, and to hold that such rights were lost before they had an opportunity to assert them, before they even knew of the existence of the mortgage, is a palpable absurdity. We find nothing in the cases referred to to justify any such contention. The-.'words “prior creditors,” there referred to, clearly relate to creditors whose claims antedated the execution of the mortgage. This is apparent, not only from the opinions taken as a whole, but from other cases there cited and relied on. Such creditors, who parted with nothing on the faith of their debtor’s ostensible ownership of unincumbered property, are required to take some step to fix a lien upon the mortgaged property prior to the recording of the mortgage in order to secure an equitable standing. Until then they have no equitable right or claim enforceable in a court of equity. On the contrary, creditors who extend credit to the mortgagor after the execution of the mortgage and before it is recorded have, as already seen, a clear equitable right, inhering in the transaction itself, superior to the mortgagee, and this right entitles them to relief without the necessity of fixing a lien as a prerequisite.' This distinction, we think, is clearly recognized in the Missouri cases relied upon by counsel, and was distinctly recognized and applied by us in First Nat. Bank of Buchanan County v. Connett, where we said:
*601 “Shicli a mortgage is also utterly void as to simple contract creditors who extended credit after it was given, and who have secured no title or lien by purchase, execution, attachment, or otherwise. As to them the subsequent recording of the instrument is of no effect. It cannot be asserted against the enforcement of their demands.”
The trial court held that the proceeds of the property sold should be distributed ratably between the creditors whose claims accrued after the execution of the mortgage and before it was recorded, and also held that the claim of the mortgagee in this case had the same equitable standing as the other claimants, and should participate ratably with them in the distribution of the proceeds of the property. The trustee does not challenge that feature of the order, and hence it needs no consideration.
We think the mortgagee was accorded all the rights he had; and, finding no error in the proceedings in the trial court, this petition for review is dismissed.
•For other cases see same topic & $ number In Dec. & Am. Digs. 1907 to date, & Rep'r Indexes.