129 Iowa 573 | Iowa | 1906
Tbe firm of Lesan & Dunning, composed of G. F. Lesan and Day Dunning, was engaged in the business of buying, raising, feeding, and selling cattle in Missouri and Iowa. On February 6, 1903, this firm borrowed something like $3,100 of intervener, and as security therefor Lesan made a mortgage on one hundred and five head of cattle belonging to his firm to the intervener; the cattle being described as follows: “ Seventy-five head of three year old steers; thirty head of two year old steers. Ahoye cattle are colors, are all natives, all dehorned, branded with ‘ L ’ on right hip, which is now or may hereafter be on or about the premises known as the { Powell and Lawrence land ’ in Harrison county, Mo.” On or about August 14, 1903, and after the execution of this mortgage, Day Dunning undertook to sell Walter Edie one hundred and five head of the Lesan & Dunning cattle for the sum of $4,300; attempt being made, as is now claimed, to sell the same cattle which had theretofore been mortgaged to intervener; the sale being subject to the mortgage. Pursuant thereto Edie paid Dunning $1,119.26, which was credited to the account of Lesan & Dunning in a bank which Dunning was then conducting, where the firm kept its account. The sale was oral, and some of the witnesses say that the intention was to convey the animals which were covered by intervener’s first mortgage. In order to obtain the money with which to make the purchase, Edie borrowed the sum of $4,300 from plaintiff and executed a mortgage to it to secure the loan. The description of the property in this mortgage reads as follows:
The following described cattle, to wit: One hundred five head of steers of various colors, all dehorned, branded*576 with letter L on right hip; eighty head three and four year old, and twenty-five head of two year old, all native cattle. The above cattle will be cared for on the George Lawrence land described below until Dec. 1st, 1903, then removed to the P. 0. Eoss farm in Einggold county, Sec. •eleven, township seventy, range twenty-nine. The stock above described may have other brands and marks than those mentioned above, but those given are the brands and marks, and carry the title to the cattle. The above-described stock and chattels have been in the possession of the party of the first part for a period of--— last past, having been paid the party of the first part or Day Dunning of Mt. Ayr, Iowa. The average weight of the above stock is one thousand fifty pounds. This mortgage is given to secure the payment of purchase money. The said stock is in the undisputed possession of said party of the first part on the premises of George Lawrence on Sec. twenty-three in township sixty and sixty-seven, range twenty-nine, in Harrison county, Missouri.
This mortgage was duly acknowledged and properly recorded in Missouri on the 18th day of August, 1903, and in Einggold county, Iowa, on the 22d day of August of the same year. Edie received from plaintiff a draft for $1,119.26, and this he turned over to Dunning, and on August 17th a draft for $3,180 and some cents was sent by plaintiff to the intervener to take up the February mortgage, and a release was executed by intervener to Lesan, the mortgagor, which for some reason was never recorded. On January 5, 1904, defendant, Lesan, executed a mortgage to intervener upon one hundred and fifteen head of steers to secure the sum of $4,680, evidenced by a note of that date, due July 5, 1904; the description in that mortgage being as follows: “ 115 head of three year old steers, ail reds’ roans, and black, except five head, branded with ‘ L ’ on right hip, together with the natural increase thereof, which is now or hereafter, until the indebtedness hereinafter mentioned shall be paid, may be on or about the premises known as the G. F. Lesan farm, in Poe township, in
This action is to recover the possession of the one hundred and five head of cattle' supposed to be covered by plaintiff’s mortgage of date August 11, 1903. Defendant and intervener each denied plaintiff’s right to recover, and each pleaded that Edie never had any title to the property; that the property taken hy plaintiff was in defendant Lesan’s possession as surviving partner of Lesan & Dunning,— Dunning in the meantime having failed in business — ; that Edie never had possession of the cattle; that the mortgage to intervener was and is a prior claim to that of plaintiff; and that plaintiff’s mortgage does not cover the cattle in dispute, and was and is of no validity.
Plaintiff in reply pleaded the invalidity of intervener’s mortgage, alleged that it was taken with knowledge of its (plaintiff’s) mortgage, and it also asked to be subrogated to the rights of intervener in and to the mortgage held by it, which was paid off and canceled. A great many questions have been argued, but plaintiff’s counsel frankly concede that if the cattle taken under the writ are not the ones sold to Edie, or if the alleged sale to Edie was never consummated, so that title passed to him, or if plaintiff’s mortgage does not, in fact, cover the animals taken, or is so uncertain in description that it cannot be made to cover them as against the claims of intervener under its mortgage, then it cannot recover, and the judgment and decree of the trial court dismissing its petition are correct.
Eor the purposes of the case we shall assume as a matter of law, that Dunning, one of the members of the firm of Lesan & Dunning, had the right to sell one hundred and five head of cattle belonging to the firm, without the knowledge or consent of Lesan. This proposition is denied by de
We shall refer briefly to the testimony on this point. Four persons were present at the time it is claimed Dunning sold the cattle to Edie, to wit, Dunning, Edie, a representative of plaintiff by the name of Braniger, and a man by the name of Besan, a relative of the defendant. The first three mentioned drove from Ringgold county down into Missouri to a place known as the “ Hatfield Ranch,” where Besan & Dunning then had about five hundred head of cattle. Dunning said in his testimony that he then sold Edie one hundred and five head of the average of that lot of cattle, and that there was no effort made to segregate or separate the cattle sold; that he never pointed any of them out as being included in the Bowles mortgage, and that no living person could have done so. Braniger said on direct examination that there were over two hundred head in the field which they examined, and that he and Edie picked out the cattle, and that one hundred and'five were separated from the others. -But he also said that these were represented to be the ones covered by intervener’s first mortgage, which, as we have seen, cannot be true, or, if true, plaintiff did not get them under its writ. It is agreed that, according to the talk had on this day, Dunning was to keep the cattle for Edie, and that no date was set for their delivery. On cross-examination the witness said that in picking-out the cattle Dunning would say, “ this is a three year old,” or “a four year old”; that the three and four year old cattle were singled out, and then the two year old, “ they were separated out.” Edie testified that the cattle were
notice to purchasers or subsequent incurnbrancers of the property. Sutton v. Ballou, 46 Iowa, 517; Boothby v. Brown, 40 Iowa, 104; Nuckolls v. Pence, 52 Iowa, 582. Should we find there was such a sale as to pass title as between the parties, it is nevertheless true that Dunning the vendor was to keep possession of the property until some time in the fall or winter, and there is no testimony in the record as to any subsequent change of possession.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.