9 S.D. 560 | S.D. | 1897
Basing its claim upon a chattel mortgage covering a stock of general merchandise, kept for retail trade, and alleged to have been wrongfully converted by the defendants, plaintiff brought this action, and recovered judgment for the value thereof; and this appeal is from said judgment, and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial.
It is undisputed that appellants Mons Anderson Company and Tolerton & Stetson Company each held mortgages prior and paramount to the mortgage upon which respondent relies and the essential facts with reference thereto may be stated more specifically as follows: Alonzo Emrick, while the owner in actual possession of the property in dispute, at the village of Egan, in Moody county, mortgaged the same to appellant Tolerton & Stetson Company on the 27th day of December, 1893; to secure the payment of $475 due May 1, 1894, and again on the 7th day of June, 1894, to secure an additional indebtedness of $409.31, payable on or before three months from date. On June 30, 1894, said Emrick, while still the owner in actual possession of the property, executed a mortgage thereon to secure to appellant Mons Anderson Company the payment of $642.92, due in 15 days; and on the last day of the following month, while the foregoing mortgages were of record and wholly unsatisfied, he executed respondent’s mortgage to secure $590, due on or before November 1, 1895. Thereafter, and on the 24th day of August, 1894, more than 30 days prior to the filing of respondent’s mortgage, Emrick sold the entire stock of merchandise thus incumbered to May Farrell, who upon the same day removed it to the village of White, in Brookings county, where the same was again sold, prior to the filing of respondent’s mortgage, to the defendant C. H. Farrell, to whom actual knowledge of the existence of said unfilled mortgage is not imputed. On the 2d day of October, 1894, appellants Tolerton & Stetson Company and Mons Anderson Company, apparently without actual notice of respondent’s mortgage, seized and took possession of the stock of goods in question, which
Conceding that the agent of the purchaser of the property from the original mortgagor had actual notice of the unfiled mortgage, and verbally agreed to pay respondent’s debt secured thereby, that along would not bind C. H. Farrell, or charge
The views here expressed render unnecessary any further consideration of appellant’s assignments of error. The judgment appealed from is reversed, and a new trial is awarded.