154 N.W. 527 | N.D. | 1915
This is an action of conversion brought against the defendant Grain Association by the Scofield Implement Company on account of the alleged wrongful sale of grain alleged to be covered by a chattel mortgage. The main, if not the sole, defense of the defendant Grain Association is that paramount to the lien of the plaintiff was the lien of a chattel mortgage on crops which was given as part security for the purchase price of the land, but which afterwards, and before the execution of the chattel mortgage to the plaintiff, was by a verbal agreement released as security for the purchase price of the land, but by an oral agreement retained as security for advances which were thereafter to be and were thereafter made to the said mortgagor for the purpose of operating and developing the land under a lease thereof.
We are of the opinion that these facts could be proved under the pleadings, and that even if the error of the court in refusing to allow the defendant to prove them was afterwards cured by the admission of testimony which covered substantially the same proposition, he erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff which could only have been on the ground that such evidence was inadmissible. The answer alleges,— “that: on the 6th day of April, 1909, Phillip Xershtien made, executed,, and delivered to Jourgen Olson, promissory notes aggregating $5,680, $5,200 of said amount bearing interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum, and the sum of $480 thereof bearing interest at the rate of 12‘ per cent per annum, said notes maturing November 1, 1909; that at the samé time and place, and as a part of the same transaction, and for the purpose of securing the payment of said indebtedness, the said Phillip Kershtien made, executed, and delivered to Jourgen Olson, a
Even if given for future advances in the first instance it would have been unnecessary to have stated that fact in the mortgage or in the note. Union Nat. Bank v. Moline, M. & S. Co. 7 N. D. 201, 73 N. W. 527. It would also have been unnecessary to have stated that fact in the pleadings, a general allegation to the effect that such note had been given and such mortgage had been executed as security therefor and that such note was unpaid being sufficient.
It seems, too, to be quite generally held that a mortgage to secure future advances is valid, and that such a mortgage need not express its object upon its face, although it is better that it should. The true principle seems to be “that a mortgage knowingly and intentionally given and taken for a larger amount than is due, and not as security for future advances, is fraudulent as against the other creditors of the mortgagor, but that a mortgage given in good faith, in whole or in part,
We, in short, have held in the case of Union Nat. Bank v. Moline, M. & S. Co. 7 N. D. 201, 73 N. W. 527, that “a mortgage to secure future advances is valid as to the mortgagor, and also as to third persons. . . . If such mortgage states on its face that it is given as security for future advances, or if it appears 'to be a mortgage for a specified sum, and the total amount claimed to be due under it does not exceed such.sum, the holder of a second lien on the same property, who has notice, either actual- or constructive, of such mortgage, takes subject thereto, not only as to all advances which had been made when his lien attached, but also as to all future advances made by the holder of such mortgage before notice that another lien has attached to the property. . . . The recording of the second lien does not give the holder of the prior mortgage constructive notice of such second lien, and therefore advances thereafter made are protected the same as advances made before such second lien is recorded, provided the holder of the first lien has no other notice of the existence of such subsequent lien.” See also Tully v. Harloe, 35 Cal. 302, 309, 95 Am. Dec. 102; Minor v. Sheehan, supra; Barnard v. Moore, 8 Allen, 273; Anderson v. Liston, 69 Minn. 82, 72 N. W. 52; Sayre v. Hughes, 32 N. J. Eq. 652.
It is undoubtedly “generally held that a mortgage on land cannot, by any mere parol agreement of the parties, be made to cover any other debt, or any fresh advances, or any larger amount than that expressed
We, too, are not unmindful that § 6712 of the Compiled Laws of 1913 provides that “the existence of a lien upon property does not of itself entitle the person in whose favor it exists to a lien upon the same property, for the performance of any other obligation than that which the lien originally secured.” It is to be noticed, however, that the statute expressly uses the words, “does not of itself,” and here we have proof of the oral agreement, or rather of the redelivery of the note and mortgage for the new consideration. The transaction, indeed, to our minds in effect amounted to a new delivery. “No particular form or •ceremony is necessary to constitute a sufficient delivery of a mortgage. It may be by words without acts, or by acts without words, or by both combined. Manual transfer of the document from the hands of the mortgagor to those of the mortgagee is not essential. It is only required that there should be manifested 'a clear intention of the parties that the instrument shall become operative as a mortgage, and that the mortgagor shall lose and the mortgagee acquire the absolute control over it.” 27 Cyc. 1114. Here the proof which was allowed to be introduced tended to show this new delivery, or at any rate the plaintiff should have been permitted to have shown it. So, too, we are not unmindful of § 5938 of the Compiled Laws of 1913, which provides that “a contract in writing may be altered by a contract in writing or by an executed oral agreement, and not otherwise.” We have before us, however, not an attempt to alter a contract in writing, but a case where the consideration of a mortgage and mortgage note has failed by reason of the cancelation of the original agreement under which it was delivered
For tbe reasons stated above we are satisfied that tbe learned trial judge erred in excluding evidence of tbe lease, and tbe contract for advances and tbe nature and extent thereof, and in directing a verdict for the plaintiff, and for those reasons tbe judgment is reversed and a new trial is ordered.