This case is in this court for the second time. The decision on the first appeal is reported in 3 N. D. 412, 57 N. W. 87. The action is, in brief, for the recovery of the value of certain grain belonging to plaintiff, which was seized and sold by defendants, who justify the act under a thresher’s lien. The second trial was by the court by consent of parties, and defendants again prevailed. The case was tried after Ch. 82, Laws 1893, went into effect, and must be governed by the provisions of that act, which require all actions tried by the court where issue has been joined to be tried by having all testimony offered by either party reduced to writing, and, on appeal to this court, the evidence is sent up, and the facts tried here de novo. We can no longer review facts in these cases by exceptions to findings. There is no suggestion that the evidence was not so taken and is not properly before us for our consideration; nor is
The law authorizes a thresher’s lien to be foreclosed in the same manner that chattel mortgages are foreclosed. Laws 1889, Ch. 88. Section 7, Ch. 26, Laws 1889, provides that, upon a foreclosure of a chattel mortgage, the officer making the sale, within ten days after making the sale, shall make a written report of his proceedings in the matter, and file the same with the register of deeds where the mortgage was filed. The undisputed evidence shows that in the foreclosure of this thresher’s lien no such report was filed until the eleventh day after the sale. Plaintiff claims that this fact invalidates the sale, and renders the seizure a conversion. We think not. The point is covered by Johnson v. Day, 2 N. D. 295, 50 N. W. 701. That was a case of real estate foreclosure, but the principle is the same. We held the provision requiring the subsequent filing of the certificate within a specified time was directory, and not mandatory. It is a matter over which a purchaser has no control, and need not take place until ten days after a completed sale. It would be most unjust to hold that such a sale could be destroyed by the nonaction of the officer.
We held in our former opinion in this case that the lien holder, in order to justify his seizure, must show that the grain seized was grown on the land described in the affidavit for the lien. The case was reversed for failure of proof in that direction. The failure was equally signal upon the second trial. The lien affidavit asserts that the grain was grown upon thetW. y2 of section 28, township 144, range 65. The undisputed proof shows that the W. y2 of the W. % of said section was, at the time the threshing was done, unbroken prairie land. The E. y of said W. y, contained the trees for what the witnesses call the “tree claim.” A portion of it was meadow and the balance cultivated land. A highway runs east and west through said section. That portion of the E. y, of the W. y north of the highway which was
It is so ordered.