64 Iowa 725 | Iowa | 1884
On the sixth day of September, 1882, the defendant, Allyn, was doing business as a grocer, and on that day he executed a chattel mortgage to Kirk, wherein he conveyed his stock of groceries. The mortgage also purported to convey “all books of account and rights of credits
The court instructed ■ the jury, in substance, that the accounts which accrued subsequently to the execution of the mortgage were not covered by it, and passed by the assignment to Barnard, the intervenor. ' The principal question arises upon this instruction. We do not determine whether in any event the proper mode of reaching the accounts was by garnishing the mortgagee. We have reached the conclusion that the court Was correct in holding that the subsequently accruing accounts were not covered by the mortgage, and, if we are correct in this, it is immaterial whether the plaintiff’s mode of proceeding was proper or not.
The plaintiff’s position is, that “rights of credits arising out of the business” must 'he deemed to include those that should thereafter arise. But the general ruléis that a chattel mortgage will not be deemed to cover after-acquired property, unless the intention that it should is clearly expressed. Jones on Chattel Mortgages, § 160. Looking at the description in- question, we cannot say that the intention is clear to mortgage accounts not then accrued. It will, not be denied that, strictly, the word arising denotes merely present time. We ought to he allowed to use the word now in connection with it. If that word had been used, the “rights of credits”
The plaintiff contends, however, that the accounts are the proceeds of the goods, and would be covered by the mortgage in the absence of any express provision respecting after-acquired property.
Without determining whether this might not be held to be so under some circumstances, we think that it could not be under the circumstances of this case, and perhaps in no case in an action at law. We infer that the goods were sold by the mortgagee’s consent, in the ordinary course of trade, and as the goods of the mortgagor; that the purchasers’ express or implied promises to pay for them were promises to pay the mortgagor, and that the goods were properly charged in accounts running to the mortgagor. Payments made directly to the mortgagor, so far as they were made, were unquestionably good, notwithstanding the mortgage. It would be a great hardship to hold that a chattel mortgage on a stock of goods covers the proceeds of the goods rightfully sold in the ordinary course of trade. If it covers such proceeds, the purchaser should seek out the mortgagee, and make payment to him, or whithold payment until his rights could be asserted.
The plaintiff offered to show by parol that the intention of the parties to the mortgage was that it should cover subsequently accruing accounts. The court refused to allow such evidence, and the plaintiff assigns the refusal as error.
No rule is more familiar than that a written instrument cannot be varied by parol. The plaintiff sought to violate'
u We see no error in the ruling below, and the judgment must be
Affirmed.