47 Neb. 678 | Neb. | 1896

Ragan, C.

On the 8th day of May, 1891, Peter Peters and John Peters, by their order or contract in writing, purchased a threshing-machine of the O. S. Kelley Company. The machine was to be delivered to them not later than the 20th of July of that year and they were to pay for the same $585. Part of *680this payment was to be made in cash on delivery of the machine and the remainder to be evidenced by their notes, secured by a chattel mortgage on the machine. The machine was delivered on the 23d of July, cash payment made, and John and Peter executed their joint and several promissory notes to the Kelley Company for the remainder of the purchase price of the machine, and at the same time executed to the Kelley Company a chattel mortgage on the machine to secure the payment of their notes. By mistake this mortgage was filed in the office of the county clerk of York county, although the mortgagors resided in Hamilton county. On the 13th day of October, 1891, Peter Peters mortgaged the threshing-machine to the State Bank of Lushton to secure a debt which he then, and had for some time, owed the bank. The bank subsequently took possession of the threshing-machine under its chattel mortgage and was proceeding to foreclose the same when the Kelley Company, by this action, replevied the threshing-machine from the bank. The action was tried to a jury in the district court of York county, a verdict and judgment rendered for the Kelley Company, and the bank prosecutes to this court a petition in error.

1. On the trial the district court, at the request of the Kelley Company, instructed the jury as follows: “The jury are instructed that the law is that partnership effects cannot be released from liability for the unpaid debts of the partnership without the consent of every member of the firm. The corpus of partnership effects is joint property and neither partner separately has anything in that corpus; but the interest of each is only his share of what remains after the partnership ac*681counts are taken. In this case, if you believe from the evidence that Peter Peters and John Peters purchased of the plaintiff in this case the power and separator described in the plaintiff’s petition, in partnership, to be used and operated by them in threshing; and as a part of the transaction the said Peter Peters and John Peters executed and delivered to the plaintiff the notes and mortgage described in the petition and put in evidence by the plaintiff in this case, to secure the payment of the purchase price of the said outfit, then the plaintiff in this case would have the first lien upon the property in question to the amount unpaid upon said mortgage, and the said'Peter Peters would have no right to execute a mortgage upon the said threshing outfit to secure his individual indebtedness, to the prejudice of the plaintiff in this case; and any mortgage so given by the said Peter Peters to secure his individual indebtedness would be subject to the mortgage of this plaintiff, regardless of whether plaintiff’s mortgage was ever filed in the office of the clerk of the county or not.” The first assignment of error argued is directed to the giving of this instruction. The evidence shows that John and Peter Peters were farmers and brothers residing in Hamilton county at the time they purchased the threshing-machine and executed the notes and mortgage to the Kelley Company; that Peter Peters and a son of John Peters accompanied the machine from place to place and used it in threshing grain. Whatever may be said of this instruction as an abstract proposition of law, we think it had no place in this case. It submitted to the jury the question as to whether John and Peter were co-partners, and there is no evidence what*682ever in the record which would justify the jury in making such a finding. Counsel for the defendant in error assume that because John and Peter jointly purchased and jointly owned this ■ property, that therefore a partnership relation existed between them; but such a result by no means follows. They were rather joint owners or tenants -in common, so far as the record shows, of .the property. In Waggoner v. First Nat. Bank of Creighton, 43 Neb., 84, it was held, following the definition given by Chancellor Kent, that “Copartnership is a contract of two or more competent persons to place their money, effects, labor, skill, or some or all • of them, in lawful commerce, or business, and to divide the profit or bear the loss in certain proportions;” and in Iliff v. Brazill, 27 Ia., 131, it was held: “Where two farmers buy in. 'common á threshing-machine, which they use and operate together, and for which they execute-to •the vendor a note, signed by both individually, they are to be treated as joint owners and not as partners.” In Quackenbush v. Sawyer, 54 Cal., 439, it was held that “a mere joint ownership in personal property does not-constitute a partnership.” To the same effect see Wheeler v. Farmer, 38 Cal., 203; Hawes v. Tillinghast, 67 Mass., 289; Goell v. Morse, 126 Mass., 480; Moore v. Curry, 106 Mass., 409; Vose v. Singer, 86 Mass., 226; Donnan v. Gross, 3 Ill. App., 409; Sargent v. Downey, 45 Wis., 498; Cinnamond v. Greenlee, 10 Mo., 578; Ward v. Bodeman, 1 Mo. App., 272; Runnels v. Moffat, 41 N. W. Rep. [Mich.], 224. We do not say that John and Peter were not partners, nor that the threshing-machine was not partnership property, but what we do decide is that the mere fact that they jointly purchased,- ównéd, and operated the *683threshing-machine does not establish that a co-. partnership existed between the joint owners, nor that the threshing-machine was copartnership property. So far as the record before ns goes, John and Peter were joint owners — tenants in common — of the threshing-machine, and the bank acquired a lien upon the interest of Peter Peters in the threshing-machine by virtue of the mortgage he made thereon.

2. The court, on its own motion, also instructed the jury as follows: “If you find from the evidence that the cashier or assistant cashier of the defendant, the State Bank of Lushton, had actual notice or knowledge of plaintiff’s mortgage upon the threshing-machine and power in controversy at the time or prior thereto of taking the mortgage of Peter Peters in favor of such bank upon such machinery, then such bank is not a mortgagee in good faith and your verdict should be for the plaintiff.” The second assignment of error argued is directed to the giving of this instruction.' Counsel for plaintiff in error says, and correctly says, that the instruction was wrong because there was no evidence in the record which justified its being given. The only evidence in the record which tends to show, if that does, that the bank officers had any knowledge or notice of the mortgage held by the Kelley Company is this: The bank was a subscriber for a “bulletin” issued by someone in York county, which bulletin gave the names of parties making mortgages filed in York county and a description of the mortgaged property. It was shown that a bulletin which came to the bank soon after July 23, 1891, recited that John and Peter Peters had executed a chattel mortgage to the Kelley Com*684pany on a threshing-machine, such as the one in controversy, and that this mortgage had been filed in the clerk’s office of York county, but there is no evidence in the record that any officer or agent of the bank ever read this bulletin. If the jury had specially found that the officers of the bank had. actual knowledge or notice of the mortgage of the Kelley Company, the evidence would not have supported the finding, and the court therefore erred in giving the instruction.

3. But it is insisted by the defendant in error that the judgment rendered was the only one which could have been correctly rendered under the facts in evidence in the case; and that, therefore, all errors in the record are without prejudice to the plaintiff in error. This contention rests upon the fact that the undisputed evidence shows that the mortgage made to the bank by Peter Peters on the threshing-machine was made to secure a then pre-existing debt, and that, therefore, the bank is not a mortgagee in good faith, within the meaning of section 14, chapter 32, Compiled Statutes, which declares that “every mortgage or conveyance intended to operate as a mortgage of goods and chattels hereafter made, which shall not be accompanied by an immediate delivery and be followed by an actual and continued change of possession of the things mortgaged shall be absolutely void as against the creditors of the mortgagor, and as against subsequent purchasers and mortgagors in good faith, unless the mortgage, ór a true copy thereof, shall be filed in the office of the county clerk of the county where the mortgagor executing the same resides,” etc. It is not pretended but that John and Peter Peters retained possession of the threshing-*685machine after they mortgaged it to the Kelley Company; nor that this mortgage, or any copy of it, was ever filed in the office of the connty clerk of Hamilton connty, where the mortgagors resided, nor that Peter Peters was not justly indebted to the bank. The sole contention is that a mortgagee of chattels to secure a pre-existing debt is not a mortgagee in good faith. To sustain this contention counsel cite us to Tootle v. First Nat. Bank of Chadron, 34 Neb., 863. In that case it was correctly held that “when goods obtained by fraud have been mortgaged by the fraudulent vendee solely to secure a pre-existing debt dne from him to the mortgagee, the latter cannot claim the protection which the law affords an innocent and Iona ficle purchaser of property from a fraudulent vendee;” but in that case the mortgagor had obtained possession of the property which he mortgaged by fraud; the title as between him and his vendor had never passed. By making the mortgage to the Chadron bank the bank acquired only a lien upon such interest as its mortgagor had, and that interest was nothing, and therefore the bank acquired nothing. In the case at bar, however, the title and possession of the threshing-machine without fraud passed and vested in John and Peter, and the bank acquired by the latter’s mortgage a lien on whatever interest Peter had in the threshing-machine. A mortgagee in good faith, within the meaning of the statute quoted, is one who takes his mortgage to secure a debt actually and justly owing to him, without any notice, actual or constructive, of other existing claims against the mortgaged property. The case cited to sustain the argument of counsel for the plaintiff in error is not in point. *686Tbe judgment of tbe district court is reversed and tbe cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

Post, O. J., not sitting.
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