53 So. 770 | Ala. | 1910
Detinue, for a mule, by subsequent purchasers (appellees) from mortgagor against the mortgagee (appellant). The mortgage was seasonably recorded in January, 1907. In May of that year the appellees purchased an animal from the mortgagor. The mortgage, among other chattels, contained the description of “1 sorrel mule colt Traveller.” The complaint describes the property sued for as “one bay horse mule.”
The plaintiffs invoked their protection under the doctrine of bona fide purchaser for value and without notice. The court, at their instance, charged the jury as
If othemvise efficacious as the basis of constructive notice to purchasers, the seasonable recordation of a mortgage operates to impute such notice, to all the world, of the existence of the lien or the mortgage. — Chadwick v. Russell, 117 Ala. 290, 23 South. 524; Smith v. Fields, 79 Ala. 336. As respects the description of chattels covered by a mortgage, and the effect, protective in nature, upon the rights of purchasers or mortgagees, a different rule prevails where purchasers are to be concluded as upon constructive notice arising from compliance Avith the statute for recording such instruments; and, on the other hand, Avhere the contest is between the pwrties to the instrument. In the former event, and that is the inquiry here presented, the description may be sufficient betAveen the parties, and yet insufficient to give rise to the constructive notice essential to defeat the successful assertion of the protection accorded a bona fide purchas
To put the proposition otherwise: In order to impute to a purchaser of a mortgaged chattel notice that such chattel is subject to the lien of the mortgage, it is not essential that the chattel bought should answer, with entire exactness, to the whole description written in the recorded instrument. As between mortgagees and purchasers, the rule, as stated by Judge Freeman in Barrett v. Fisch (Iowa.) 14 Am. St. Rep., at page 242, is: “The mortgage * * must point out the subject-matter of it, so that such persons (purchasers) by it, together with such inquiries as the instrument suggests, may be able to identify the property intended to be covered.” (Italics supplied.) This statement of the rule accords with the doctrine long recognized in and enforced by this court. In Connally v. Spragins, supra, the issue arose between parties relationed as these parties. The description in that mortgage was: “One black mule about eight years old.” The court said: “Such a general description may be rendered more certain when ‘read in the light of circumstances surrounding the parties’ at the time the instrument was executed. And it was sufficient, when recorded, to excite the inquiry of strangers dealing with the mortgagor, and thus charge them with notice.” Connally v. Spragins is grounded, in this particular, on Ellis v. Martin, 60 Ala. 394; and the doctrine of that decision supports the former. In Smith v. Fields, supra, the description was: “My entire crop of cotton and corn.” I-Iardly any words could have been any more general. The court said: “'The description of the property in the mortgage,
The rule before stated in the words of Judge Freeman is substantially that employed in Jones on Chattel Mortgages (5th Ed.) §§ 54, 54c. From this premise of statement and decision it must needs result that the following text, in 24 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, pp. 151, 152, is sound: “The record of an instrument entitled to registration imparts to such persons as are bound thereby constructive notice of all facts, which they could have ascertained by an actual examination of such record, but also all of those as to which it reasonably suggests an inquiry, and which would be disclosed by such inquiry. * * A subsequent purchaser is entitled to rely upon the record, and cannot be charged with constructive notice, of latent, equities, or facts not disclosed or suggested by the record itself. * * Where the property conveyed is not described sufficiently to identify it with reasonable certainty, and there is nothing to put the searcher on inquiry, the record will not give constructive notice of the conveyance. But the record, although defective as regards the description of the property, will nevertheless operate as notice if sufficient to put a reasonable man on inquiry as to what property was actually conveyed.” (Italics supplied.)
These facts, recited in. the mortgage, must be held to have been within the knowledge of the appellees, even though they did not actually read the instrument as recorded; and were of themselves sufficient to lay the obligation of inquiry on the appellees when dealing with this mortgagor. — Connally v. Spragins, supra; Smith v. Fields, supra. Whether the stated inquiry would have led to the discovery of the fact that the mule in suit was the mule covered by the mortgage was a jury question, as we have before stated. — Tompkins v. Henderson, supra.
Defendant, on his examination, was asked by his counsel this question: “How many mules or colts did Willie Hinton have from January 1, 1907, through May of that year?” This question should not have been disallowed. It bore immediately on the issue whether the mule in the suit was the mule covered by the mortgage.
The witness Gewin, introduced by defendant, testified that he had been dealing in mules and horses for many years; that he was “acquainted with their growth and development”; and that “mules change color.” Defendant’s counsel propounded this question to him: “Please state, if you know, whether a light or sorrel colored colt is likely to turn darker as it grows older?” Plaintiff’s objection was sustained. The identity of the mule was in issue. Some of the evidence tended to show that the mule in suit was bay. The mortgage described a sorrel colt. The idea evidently intended to be expressed in the question was pertinent to the issues in the case, and was admissible, if it had been couched in more definite language. The term “likely” was rather too indefinite, too equivocal, for employment in the connection indicated. This court, in Howard’s Case, 108 Ala. 571,
For the errors indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.