70 N.W. 277 | N.D. | 1897
Every fact and circumstance surrounding this case, as shown by the record, tends to confirm the justice of the judgment from which the appeal is taken. If that judgment is to be disturbed, it must be by reason of some imperative rule of law. The action was claim and delivery. As we understand it, all the property mentioned in the complaint has been eliminated from the case except the wheat. In this plaintiff claimed- a special interest and right of -immediate possession by virtue of chattel mortgages executed by defendant. The execution of the mortgages was admitted, but it was claimed that they -were obtained by fraud. All the circumstances attending the execution of the mortgage were fully set forth. There was, also, a general denial. After both parties had introduced their evidence, and rested, the court directed a general verdict for defendant. This is the one error assigned, and its consideration necessitates some reference to the testimony.
In the summer of 1893, the defendant became indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $200 for machinery .purchased. On July 28th of that year defendant gave the plaintiff a chattel mortgage securing two notes, of $25 each, — one maturing October 1, 1893, and the other a year later. On August 1, 1893, defendant executed to plaintiff another chattel mortgage securing two notes, of $75 each, maturing at the same dates. The mortgages, as well as those hereinafter mentioned, were drawn upon forms printed with blank spaces, and for the special use of plaintiff in North Dakota, The first portion of the instrument, naming the mortgagor and mortgagee, with their residences, etc., is about in the usual form. Then follow blank lines for the description of property, ’and, following the blank lines, is the following, in print: “All the crops, of every name, nature and description, now growing, sown, or to be sown, and to be grown, cultivated, and harvested during the years A. D. 1893, 1894, and 1895, and each and every succeeding year until the debt hereby secured is fully paid, on the following described land, now occupied or rented by me, to-wit, -of section-, town .-, range-, county of-, State
It is perfectly clear that the new mortgages covered property not covered by the old. It is equally clear that defendant never intended to give mortgages on any property not covered by* the old mortgages, and equally clear that plaintiff, by its agent, represented and stated to defendant that it did not ask or expect a mortgage on any property not covered by the old mortgages. The presence of additional property in the new mortgages must, then, be the result either of fraud or mistake. If plaintiff took mortgages covering additional property, and knowingly did so, fully understanding, as it must, that defendant did not so intend, it was, under the circumstances of this case, considering the previous conversation, the condition of defendant’s sight, his long acquaintance with the agent, and the unquestioned confidence that he placed in him, a gross fraud upon defendant that would avoid the mortgage as to the additional property. On the other hand, if plaintiff’s agent inserted the additional property because he believed that it was in the original mortgages, when in fact it was not, and if defendant signed the renewal mortgages believing that they covered only such property as was covered by the old mortgages, then there was a case of mutual mistake, which would equally avoid the new mortgages as to the additional property.
But plaintiff urges that, since defendant pleaded fraud as a defense, he must establish fraud, or his defense must fail. Under
■ But it is said that he. was negligent in not discovering the mistake before the mortgage was delivered. This is based upon the fact that he called his daughter to witness the mortgages. She could readily read the instruments, and it is said he was negligent in not asking her so to do. Under the circumstances, we think that fact no evidence of negligence whatever. The condition of defendants’s eyes was well known to the agent. He could not help knowing that defendant trusted to his honesty and accuracy. There had been a full understanding that the new mortgage should cover only what was in the old. If, under the circumstances, plaintiff’s agent, either by fraud or mistake, included in the mortgages anything that ought not to have been there, plaintiff is in no position to say that defendant was negligent in not discovering it.
The judgment of the District Court is,affirmed.