61 S.E. 196 | N.C. | 1908
This action was brought to recover a debt of $300 and a stock of goods which the plaintiff alleged had been mortgaged to him by the defendant to secure the indebtedness. The property is described in the mortgage as "All the stock of goods now on hand in the storehouse on College Street occupied by me, consisting of groceries, shoes, notions, and general merchandise." At the time the mortgage was given, 15 March, 1900, the defendant, being pressed by his creditors, gave to J. S. Brown, to whom he was indebted, three chattel mortgages, each for $300. I. F. White, who represented the plaintiff company, was not present and did not know the mortgages had been given until they had been registered. One of the mortgages was assigned to him for the plaintiff to secure the defendant's indebtedness to it, which at the time amounted to $220. The defendant told the plaintiff that he had executed the mortgage to Brown and that it would secure him "for what goods the defendant had bought or might buy or for the amount he owed or might owe." The plaintiff contended that the mortgage was intended to embrace not only goods then in the store, but such as were thereafter added to the stock, and, if this was not true, that the defendant afterwards mortgaged the goods described in the complaint to him by parol to secure said indebtedness. The goods seized by the sheriff and now in dispute were not in the store at the time the written mortgage was given — that is, on 15 March, 1900. The plaintiff's counsel thus states the substance of the evidence: "The plaintiff was a wholesale grocer and defendant a retail grocer, doing business within a few doors of each other in the town of Oxford, defendant being a customer of plaintiff. On 1 March, 1900, the defendant was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $220 and continued to trade with plaintiff; that J. S. Brown was also a merchant and vice president of plaintiff company. The defendant was insolvent and was indebted to Brown and other parties, as well as to plaintiff. He had given Brown (332) security for the indebtedness to him, and about the middle of *247 March, 1900, J. F. White, the president of plaintiff company, being absent, defendant gave the mortgage in controversy to I. S. Brown for the benefit of plaintiff, because certain of his creditors were about to sue, as he believed, for their claims, and defendant told Brown and also I. F. White, when the latter returned, that he had given the mortgage to Brown to secure not only what he then owed plaintiff, but what he might thereafter purchase from plaintiff. Defendant continued to trade with the plaintiff up to 13 July, 1906, making payments from time to time, so that, though his purchases amounted to more than $10,000 within that period, still at no time did his account much exceed $300, and when it did the plaintiff would call his attention to it and he would promise to reduce it. In July, 1906, plaintiff made demand upon defendant for the payment of the balance — that is, $382 — and, upon defendant's refusal, brought this action."
The court submitted these two issues to the jury:
1. Is the plaintiff entitled to the possession of the stock of goods described in the complaint? Answer: "No."
2. Is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff, and if so, in what amount?
The court instructed the jury, upon the evidence, to answer the first issue "No," but not to answer the second issue. The plaintiff excepted.
There was a judgment for defendant upon the verdict, and plaintiff appealed.
After stating the case: When this case was here before (
We think he erred in withdrawing the second issue from the jury. But defendant's counsel agreed in this Court that judgment might be entered for the amount of the defendant's indebtedness to the plaintiff. It is not distinctly stated in the record what the amount (335) is. In the complaint the principal is fixed at $300, but no date from which interest runs is given. If the correct amount appeared we could direct judgment to be entered for it; but as it does not, the case must be remanded, with directions to enter judgment in the Superior Court for the proper amount, with interest and costs. If parties cannot agree upon the amount, it will be ascertained by a jury or otherwise as the law directs. We affirm the judge's ruling upon the first issue, but as there was error in withdrawing the second issue from the jury, though corrected by agreement here, the defendant will pay the costs of this Court.
Modified and affirmed.
Cited: Carson v. Ins. Co.,