10 N.H. 46 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1838
The case finds that the mortgage from Coon in this instance to the plaintiff was executed in Massachusetts, where the parties to the contract resided at the time, and was duly recorded, in compliance with the requisitions of their statute. Such mortgage, therefore, by the laws of Massachusetts, is valid.
The property was there — the contracting parties were there —and, on every principle, the lex loci governs. The property then passed by the mortgage, vesting the title conditionally in the plaintiff.
Such is conceded to have been the case ; but it is contended that when the mortgagor of the property came within this government, bringing the property with him, the rights of the mortgagee terminated, unless he caused the mortgage to be duly authenticated here, precisely as though the property had been within this jurisdiction when the mortgage was first executed — that such former mortgage was in fact abrogated, and the lex rei sites prevailed the moment the property was brought within the limits of this state.
Numerous cases have been cited as to the conflict of laws betwixt different governments, but the case does not seem to us properly to involve a question of that description.
The conveyance in Massachusetts, under the laws of that state, raised no conflict with our laws here ; neither did the removal of the property within this jurisdiction. The sole question is, whether the omission to do an act here, at a period subsequent to the conveyance, shall cause the plaintiff
And what has been done here, or what has been omitted to be done in this state, that should occasion the forfeiture of this plaintiff’s right to his property? It is said, that the mortgage of such property is not here recorded. But does our statute require such record ?
It is provided by the act to prevent fraud in the transfer of personal property, passed June 22, 1832, that “ no mortgage of personal property, made after that date, should be valid except between the parties to it, unless possession should be taken and retained by the mortgagee, or the mortgage should be recorded in the office of the town in which the mortgagor resided.”
Now, where did the mortgagor reside when this mortgage was made ? Confessedly not within the limits of this government ; but it so happens that in the town where he did then reside, the mortgage was duly recorded; but whether this had been so or irot, if the conveyance had once become legally a mortgage ; that is, had all the necessary requisites at the time been complied with so as to make it valid and subsisting, and to cause it once to be regarded as such by our law, it would after that time, for aught that appears incur statute, always remain a mortgage.
The moving of the property from place to place, whether within our own limits, or from a foreign government here, does not contravene any of the provisions of this act. The law is silent upon the subject: and there is no principle of construction which, in our belief, would justify us in extending the operation of the act beyond cases specifically provided for.
The general rule as to conveyances is, that property passes under any instrument legally executed. To this there is the exception, that such conveyances, to operate as to third per
There would, farther, be most serious objections to such a provision or construction of the act as is contended for in this and similar cases, as it would place it in the power of the mortgagor, who was left in possession of the property, to defeat a mortgage of such property at any moment by removal from one town to another, or from another state here ; and, in the absence of any express provision of the statute directly applicable to such cases, it would be the duty of a court to infer that they were not intended to be specially provided for by the legislature.
The individual who causes an attachment to be made on property in possession of another, must look to the title. Possession is mere prima facie evidence of title. If the holder of it is recently from an adjoining state, there may be an owner of it there, or mortgages upon the property; and so there might be at the former residence of the holder of the property, if he had recently removed from any one section of the state to another. And it would be quite as easy to learn the facts as to the true title of the property in the one case as the other. In either case the law leaves the whole matter to the industry of the creditor. We are satisfied that it contains no provision which requires us to hold the mortgage as void, or that any rights acquired under it are forfeited, from the mere fact of removal. The mortgage still retains its original character, and the mortgagee’s rights remain in full force.
The attachment, therefore, by the defendant cannot be sustained, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover the value of the property taken.
Judgment for the plaintiff.