63 P. 760 | Or. | 1901
Lead Opinion
after stating the case, delivered the opinion' of the court.
The test of departure is determined by a negative answer to the inquiry whether evidence of the facts alleged in the reply is admissible under the allegations of the complaint: 6 Enc. PI. & Prac. 462; Estes v. Farnham, 11 Minn. 423. Applying to the case at bar the standard thus suggested for ascertaining a departure in a pleading, the question is presented whether evidence of the plaintiff’s special property in the boiler by reason of his chattel mortgage thereon was admissible under the allegation of his general ownership thereof, as stated in the complaint. The statute confers upon the mortgagee of chattels the right to their immediate possession whenever a breach occurs in the condition of the mortgage, and, if possession thereof be not delivered ff> him upon demand, he may recover the same in an action therefor: Hill’s Ann. Laws, §§ 132, 3837. It was formerly held in this state that a mortgage of chattels created only a lien upon the property affected thereby (Chapman v. State, 5 Or. 432; Knowles v. Herbert, 11 Or. 240, 4 Pac. 126) ; but it was subsequently determined that upon a breach of the condition of a chattel mortgage the mortgagee thereby secured a qualified ownership in the property: Case Threshing Mach. Co. v. Campbell, 14 Or. 460 (13 Pac. 324); Marquam v. Sengfelder, 24 Or. 2 (32 Pac. 676); Reinstein v. Roberts, 34 Or. 87 (75 Am. St. Rep. 564, 55 Pac. 90). In Moorhouse v. Donaca, 14 Or. 430 (13 Pac. 112), the plaintiff, having commenced an action to- recover the possession of a header, alleged in the complaint that he was the owner
In such action, which has been substituted by the legislative assembly of this state for the common-law remedy of replevin, the issue usually tried is the right of possession; the ownership of the property alleged to' have been unlawfully taken or detained being important only so far as it tends to establish the right sought to be enforced. Mr. Jones, in his work on Chattel Mortgages (4 ed.), § 699, in speaking of the mortgagee’s interest in the property and his rights and remedies after a breach of the conditions of the mortgage, says’: “In nearly half the states a mortgage of real property has come to: be regarded as merely a lien, and not a conveyance of the legal title. But a chattel mortgage is a transfer of the title to the mortgaged property, and not a lien upon it, even in those states in which a mortgage of real property is regarded as merely a lien upon it, and not a title to it in the mortgagee. Since the title of a mortgagee to real estate only becomes absolute after a strict foreclosure, or after a conveyance to him upon a foreclosure sale, while his title to personal property becomes absolute upon the mortgagor’s default, a mortgage of personal property is in this respect a higher security than a mortgage of land.” The doctrine thus announced has not been carried to that extent in this
“In replevin,” says Mr. Justice Mitchell, in Miller v. Adamson, 45 Minn. 99 (47 N. W. 452), “the plaintiff is not required to plead specially the source of his title, or the particular facts which entitle him to. the possession of the property. He may allege generally that he is the owner and entitled to the, immediate possession, and, under that, prove any right of property, general or special, that entitles him to such possession. In replevin the term ‘owner’ does not necessarily import general or absolute ownership. The action being one for the possession, it is what may be called the ‘possessory title’ that is important. Hence, under the general allegation in plaintiff’s complaint that he was the owner and entitled to the possession, it was competent for him to prove a chattel mortgage on the property from the owner to himself, and a breach of its condition that, by the terms .of the instrument, entitled him to the possession, of the mortgaged property. It could make no difference whether the condition broken was one for the payment of the debt or some other.” A conclusion contrary to that just announced has been reached by the courts of last resort in other states, in. which it is held that evidence.of a mortgagee’s interest upon á breach of the conditions of a mortgage was inadmissible under an allegation of general ownership ; but most of these decisions have been predicated upon statutory pro^ visions. Thus, in Kern v. Wilson, 73 Iowa, 490 (35 N. W. 594),—a case relied upon by the defendant, — file statute required the complaint to state “the facts constituting- the plaintiff’s right to the present possession thereof, and the extent of his interest in the property,, whether it be full or qualified ownership”: Code, Iowa, 1873, § 3225, subd. 3.' Our statute in respect to the mode of stating the- facts in the complaint in an action of this character does not contain
Rehearing
Decided 25 March, 1901.
On Motion for Rehearing.
delivered the opinion.
Rehearing Denied.