This is an action of detinue, instituted by the appellant against the appellee, to recover certain chattels described in the complaint. The plaintiff asserted its right to recover under a mortgage executed by J. A. Johnson to it on November 3, 1913, and duly filed for record on the same day. The successful defendant relied upon a mortgage executed to it on January 5, 1914, and duly filed for record on the same day, by “J. F. Johnson.” There were two issues on the trial, both of which were concluded by the court’s giving the general affirmative charge for the delendant, viz.: (a) Whether the registration of a prior mortgage on personal property purporting to have been executed by “J. A. Johnson” operated to impute constructive notice to a subsequent mortgagee of one who signed the same as “J. F. Johnson,” the difference being in the middle initial only; (b) whether the true, full name of the mortgagor was “Judge Franklin Johnson.”
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.