47 Neb. 678 | Neb. | 1896
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
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
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
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-
Reversed and remanded.