104 F. 449 | 8th Cir. | 1900
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
One of the issues that was raised on the trial below was whether the defendant C. G. Moore was a partner of S. S. Shapard at the time the latter directed the levy of the writ of attachment. The trial court disposed of this issue as a matter of law, instructing the jury, in substance, that Moore was a partner of Shapard at the date of the levy and sale, and that, being such, he was liable for the wrongful act of Shapard in directing the levy, if it was in fact wrongful, although he was not present, and neither directed the levy to be made, nor authorized the subsequent sale of the attached property. To this instruction an exception was taken, which presents one of the principal questions to be considered.
The testimony in the case concerning the existence of the alleged co-partnership was, in substance, as follows: Moore lived at Eu-faula, in the Indian Territory, a considerable distance from South MeAlester. About two years prior to January 1, 1897, he formed a co-partnership with Shapard for the purpose of carrying on the grocery business at South MeAlester. By the terms of the agreement,
A controversy arose at the'trial as to whether the bill of sale under which the plaintiffs derived title, which was executed at San Antonio, Tex., on January 4, 1894, was a bill of sale, as it purported to be, or in reality a mortgage given to secure a loan for the sum of $800, which was the consideration expressed in the bill of sale. There was some evidence to the latter effect contained in an affidavit for a continuance which the trial court permitted to be read. The plaintiffs contended that the instrument was what it purported to be, to wit, an absolute bill of sale. In view of this controversy the trial court instructed the jury, in substance, that, even if the plaintiffs did own the property by virtue of a mortgage recorded in Texas (and the bill of sale in question was there recorded), the plaintiffs might nevertheless recover, if the defendants had actual notice of the record of the mortgage when they levied upon and sold the property. The defendants below reserved an exception to tMs part, of the charge, and they assign two reasons why it was erroneous. First, they say, in substance, that the attached chattels “were not recently brought from another state,” but had been in the Indian Territory for about 18 months prior to the levy, and were liable to be attached for the debts of Cottraux; second, that the plaintiffs, if mortgagees, could not follow the property into another state, and sue a creditor of one who had the mortgaged property in his possession for attaching and selling it “without first showing that there was not sufficient property left to satisfy their debt.”
There has been much discussion concerning the effect of .the removal of mortgaged goods and chattels from the state where the mortgage was made and recorded, to another state. The general consensus of judicial opinion seems to be that when personal property, which at the time is situated in a given state, is there mortgaged by the owner, and the mortgage is duly executed and recorded in the mode required by the local law, so as to create a valid lien, the lien remains good and effectual, although the property is removed to another state, either with or without the consent of the
As respects the second contention stated above, — that the defendants below, if the plaintiffs were merely mortgagees, were not guilty of a tortious act, or, in other words, of a conversion, in levying on the property in controversy, unless after the levy and sale there was not enough of the mortgaged property left to satisfy the mortgagees’ debt, — -this may be said: Some courts have held that a levy made upon mortgaged personal property in the possession of the mortgagor under a writ of attachment or execution against him does not amount to a conversion, because a sale, if made, under the writ, only conveys the mortgagor’s right of possession and his equity of redemption, and does not destroy the mortgagee’s interest. Manning v. Monaghan, 28 N. Y. 585. Other courts, however, maintain the contrary view, holding that a seizure of mortgaged personal property against the protest of the mortgagee amounts to a conversion. McConeghy v. McCaw, 31 Ala. 447; Frisbee v. Langworthy, 11 Wis. 375; Tannahill v. Tuttle, 3 Mich. 104. And this is said by Mr. Jones, in his treatise on Chattel Mortgages, to be the better rule, especially where the officer assumes to sell the entire interest when he has notice of the mortgage. Jones, Chat. Mortg. § 561, and note' thereto. In the case in hand the evidence shows that the mortgaged property, when seized, was not in the custody of the mortgagors, but was in the actual possession of J. E. Cottraux, who claimed to hold it as a lessee of the plaintiffs. The present record does not show with certainty that the writ of attachment under which the property was seized ran against either of the mortgagors, but rather indicates that it ran against the son of the mortgagors, to wit, J. E. Cottraux. The plaintiffs also at the time of the levy would seem to have been entitled to the immediate possession of the property in controversy, even if they were merely mortgagees. Moreover, the attaching creditors were notified before the sale that the plaintiffs were the owners of the property, and they disregarded the notice altogether, by assuming to sell it, or so much thereof as was necessary to satisfy their claim, as the absolute property of their debtor, and thereafter appropriated the proceeds of the sale. After the sale the offer that they appear to have made to restore the residue of the property which remained unsold was an offer to restore it, not to the plaintiffs, but to J. E. Cottraux, as the agent of one of the mortgagors. Under these circumstances, we are of opinion that the acts of the attaching creditors amounted to a conversion of the property, and entitled the plaintiffs to recover the fair
Some other questions are discussed in the briefs, which have been considered, but they do not require special noticie. As the trial court erred in that part of its charge heretofore considered, which declared, as a matter of law, that Moore was a partner of Shapard, and was responsible for his acts if they were tortious, the judgment of the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory and the judgment of the United States court for the Central district of the Indian Territory must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial. It is so ordered.