48 Wash. 32 | Wash. | 1907
This is an action for damages for conversion of property. The court found that, at the time the hereinafter described contract was entered into, the plaintiff was the owner in possession of the stock of goods described; that, for the purpose of securing to be paid to said defendants the sum of $2,628.37, then owing by plaintiff to defendants, plaintiff made, executed, and delivered to defendants a deed to the real estate described, and to further secure the payment of said sum, executed a chattel mortgage of the personal property, which was the stock of goods; that it was agreed in
So far as the pleadings are concerned, there is no question but that there was a flagrant violation of the contract by the
Some days after the trial, up'on application of the defendants, the case was reopened for the purpose of admitting in evidence the chattel mortgage aforesaid, when the defendants asked leave of the court to amend their answer to correspond with the testimony, claiming that they had been misled in regard to the provisions of the chattel mortgage. This motion was denied by the court, to which ruling the defendants excepted ; but the action of the court in denying the motion is not assigned as error here.
The court evidently construed the mortgage as bearing out the allegations of the complaint and the admissions of the answer as to the requirements that the goods should be sold at retail, and an examination of that instrument shows that, while the stipulation in that regard is not in the words of the complaint, the whole tenor of the instrument is plain to the
But it is contended by the appellants that, in any event, the judgment of the court is not correct, for the reason that the action of the defendants did not constitute conversion, and that therefore the plaintiff was only entitled to such damages as he could show that he was entitled to by reason of the goods being sold in bulle instead of by'retail, and many cases are cited to sustain this contention, and this is the general rule in jurisdictions where the legal title passes to the mortgagee. But in this state the legal title remains in the mortgagor and the mortgage is held to be but an incident of the indebtedness, and the goods are only impressed with a lien for the benefit of the moi’tgagee. This has been held so many times and so uniformly by this court that reference to cases is not necessary. In fact this proposition is conceded by learned counsel for appellants, but he seeks to distinguish this case from the ordinary chattel mortgage where the possession generally remains in the mortgagor, and contends that the other rule obtains where the possession is rightfully in the mortgagee. We do not think that mere possession by stipulation in the mortgage necessarily transfers the legal title. It simply gives the mortgagee such additional rights as are stipulated and no more. In this case it gave the right to possession and right to sell in a certain manner, and the answer of defendants that they acted on the belief that they could sell the goods in bulk to better advantage than they could at retail is no defense whatever; for if our construction of the mortgage is correct, that is a question which was the subject of the contract and had been determined by the contract.
The appellants cite Bancroft-Whitney Co. v. Gowan, 24 Wash. 66, 63 Pac. 1111, where it is held that where a chattel
“Neither did the plaintiff, as in the case of McClellan v. Gaston, supra, undertake to enforce its remedy outside of the law, but it has brought itself within the terms of the contract, and the contract is not susceptible of construction. Its terms are too definite, direct, and plain to be varied by oral testimony. It provides that the Bancroft-Whitney Company may take possession of said books and retain the same, or may sell them without taking possession of them. With this right plainly and unequivocally guaranteed to the company by the contract, it was warranted in bringing the action in the form in which it did bring it, for the purpose of obtaining possession of the property.”
In that case it will be seen the mortgagees were strictly following the stipulations in the contract, and it was upon that ground that the court decided in their favor. But in this case, instead of the right to sell in bulk being unequivocally guaranteed to the mortgagees, the stipulation is exactly to the contrary, and they were proceeding in a manner which was prohibited by the contract. It is plain also that Brockway v. Abbott, 37 Wash. 263, 79 Pac. 924, fails to sustain appellants’ contention; and while it is true that in that case we held that a mortgagee in possession for the purposes of security was not guilty of conversion by reason of delaying foreclosure after condition broken, while the right of foreclosure existed, and that the mortgagor could not recover the value of the property without redeeming from the mortgage debt, an examination of the case shows that the question under discussion, and passed upon by this court, was altogether different from the question at bar. There the appellant Abbott contended that the respondent’s acts with reference to the mortgaged property amounted to a conversion of such prop
“The possession of the mortgaged property by a mortgagee in possession does not become wrongful immediately upon condition broken, nor during the time the right of foreclosure exists. If the mortgagee actually converts the property, or suffers his right to foreclose to lapse from some other cause, then he becomes liable to account to the mortgagor for the value of the property over and above the mortgage debt. • But so long as the property remains intact, and the right of foreclosure exists, the possession of the mortgagee is rightful, and the only remedy the mortgagor has, against the mortgagee, is to redeem from the mortgage debt; he cannot recover the value of the property because of mere delay in foreclosure.”
But in this case it is conceded that the property did not remain intact, but that it was actually sold and passed out of the possession of the mortgagees, and there was no opportunity for the moi’tgagor to redeem. The case as a whole sustains the respondent rather than the appellants and announces the rule that, if the mortgagee actually converts the property, he becomes liable to account to the mortgagor for the value of the property over and above the mortgage debt, and that was the judgment which was rendered in this case. We think it hardly worth while to cite extensive authority on this proposition. In short, the mortgagees were in possession of this property as agents of the mortgagor to dispose of the property in the manner provided in the agreement, and not having disposed of it in that manner nor in the manner provided by law under the rule announced in the case just above cited, they become liable to the mortgagor for the value of the property over and above the mortgage debt.
The judgment is affirmed.
Mount, Root, Rudkin, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.