Roche Fruit & Produce Co. v. Vaught

255 P. 953 | Wash. | 1927

This action was brought as one in replevin to recover possession of certain apples, crop of 1925, that were the subject of chattel mortgages given by Joseph Vaught to the Roche Fruit Produce Company. The apples were grown by Vaught on lands leased to him by E.M. Kerper, the lease contract being dated March 23, 1925. The lease provided that the apples when harvested should be delivered at the Kerper warehouse to be packed, handled and disposed of according to the terms set out in the lease. The mortgages in question were given by Vaught after the date of the lease contract of which he had notice, and covered his one-half of the apples. Each of the mortgages provided that the mortgagor would carefully cultivate, raise and harvest the apples and pack and prepare them for market, in default of which the mortgagee might enter the premises, take possession and use necessary means to protect, gather, pack and prepare the apples for market and sell and deliver the same, charging the expenses thereof to the mortgagor, such expenses being secured by the mortgages. Each mortgage further provided that,

". . . if first party [mortgagor] shall fail to take proper care of any of said crop, or if at any time second party shall deem themselves insecure, or the first party shall fail to keep possession of said crop, then and thereupon the second party or its assigns may declare the entire debt and sums thereby due and payable, and it shall be lawful, and second party or its assigns is hereby authorized to take possession of any or all of said crop, pursuant to law, or as the parties hereto may agree, and out of the proceeds of such sale, etc."

After the apples were gathered and delivered at the warehouse provided for in the lease contract, this action was commenced, the plaintiff alleging various breaches of the terms of the mortgages which entitled it, as it *603 claimed, to the right of possession of one-half of the apples, and which it demanded of the defendants who were in charge of the warehouse, and that the demand was refused. Upon commencing the action, the plaintiff, upon giving a bond therefor, at once got possession of one-half of the crop of apples by a writ of replevin. The defendants appeared in the action and set up their rights, Kerper set up his rights under the terms of the lease, Massoth his rights as operating warehouseman in charge with storage and other charges against the apples taken. Upon the trial, it was held that replevin would not lie; and upon findings and conclusions to that effect, judgment was given in favor of the defendants for return of the apples in substantially the same condition they were in at the time they were taken, or in the alternative, a money judgment in the sum of $786.32 found to be the value of the apples. Plaintiff has appealed.

[1] Appellant's first contention that replevin will lie centers upon that portion of the mortgages providing for the mortgagee taking possession of the property and preparing the apples for market upon failure of the mortgagor to properly take care of them. In the case of McClellan v. Gaston, 18 Wn. 472,51 P. 1062, where, under a chattel mortgage with a provision similar to the one in the present case, possession was taken of the chattels without any process and without consent of the mortgagor, it was held that the violation of such a contract by one party is no reason why the other party should compel the performance of the contract by force, and that "the right to an enforcement of this part of the contract must, in the absence of consent on the part of the mortgagor, be enforced by due process of law, the same as any other contract."

In Nettleton v. Evans, 67 Wn. 227, 121 P. 54, *604 which was an action in replevin, this court, upon referring to the McClellan case and in discussing the subject further than it had been discussed in that case, said:

"While that case differs from this in that the possession here is sought to be obtained through legal process, the underlying principle announced was that the provision for taking possession should be construed to be a provision for taking possession in the manner prescribed by the statute. The decision in this case was noted with approval in Spencer v. Commercial Co., 30 Wn. 520,71 P. 53, where it was held that, notwithstanding an agreement in a lease permitting the landlord to take possession by force, the landlord's common law remedy had been abrogated by the statute, and the methods provided by the statute were exclusive remedies.

"Keeping in view the basic idea, that the interest of the mortgagee in the mortgaged property does not rise above a security interest, we think it is consistent to hold that the provision in the mortgage should be construed with reference to the methods provided by statute for subjecting the security to the payment of the debt."

Counsel for appellant argues that the Nettleton case is not in point because in that case the debt was due at the time the action was commenced and that the thing to be accomplished was not mere possession of the goods, but a sale of them to satisfy the debt. But that suggestion, assuming it to be reasonable under some circumstances, is not available here because the breaches of the terms of the mortgages by the mortgagor, which the appellant alleged as justifying its procedure in this case, of themselves matured the debt, by the terms of the mortgages, and authorized the taking of "possession of any or all of said crop, pursuantto law." The right of foreclosure with all its features of preservation and sale of the property was *605 at once complete. Under the authority of those cases we think it must be held that the trial court was right in deciding that replevin would not lie in this case.

[2] It is further assigned that error was committed in entering a joint money judgment in favor of all three defendants in case return of the apples could not be had. This is an action at law to recover possession of personal property. The judgment entered conforms in every particular to the requirements of Rem. Comp. Stat., § 434 [P.C. § 8083], covering such actions. The matter of an accounting between the defendants as to their respective rights in the alternative money judgment, or what part of it, if any, should go to the mortgagor who may be indebted to the appellant, mortgagee, were not litigated or passed on in this case. The money judgment is in the alternative only, and if necessary to protect the rights of any of the parties, the trial court can and will, upon proper proceedings and issues for that purpose, settle all such questions, and for the accomplishment of such adjustment, the judgment in the present case should not be construed a bar. With that understanding the judgment is affirmed.

MACKINTOSH, C.J., FRENCH, FULLERTON, and MAIN, JJ., concur. *606

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