232 P. 189 | Mont. | 1924
Stated briefly, the facts out of which this controversy arose are that the Citizens' National Bank of Laurel held a chattel
7. Sale of mortgaged chattels by or with the consent of mortgagor, and application of proceeds to payment of mortgage as a foreclosure cutting off intervening liens, see note in 45L.R.A. (n.s.) 1137. *191 mortgage upon a crop of grain belonging to G.A. Starkweather to secure an indebtedness of something over $17,000. The mortgage had been filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder, and, while it was still in full force and effect, the Occident Elevator Company purchased a portion of the mortgaged property, and paid the purchase price to Starkweather directly.
This action in conversion was instituted by the bank, through the receiver in charge of its business, to recover from the elevator company the value of the grain so purchased, and in the complaint the transactions are set forth at length. The answer is a general denial.
Upon the trial, and after the plaintiff had rested, the defendant sought to show that it purchased the grain in controversy from Starkweather and paid the purchase price to him directly under an agreement with the plaintiff bank that it might be done. The offered evidence was rejected, and the defendant having rested, a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff by direction of the court, and from the judgment entered thereon defendant appealed.
1. It is contended that the mortgage was not entitled to be[1] filed, and therefore did not impart constructive notice.
Section 8276, Revised Codes, provides that every chattel mortgage, in order to be entitled to be filed, must be signed and acknowledged by the mortgagor and bear the affidavit of good faith by the mortgagee. The section then proceeds:
"And every mortgagee must surrender without cost to the mortgagor, at the time of the execution of the mortgage, a correct copy of the original mortgage so signed, with acknowledgments shown thereon. And the mortgagor must surrender to the mortgagee a receipt, which shall be attached to the original mortgage, showing that the mortgagee has surrendered to him a copy of such mortgage, and said receipt must accompany the mortgage when presented to the clerk and recorder and filed therewith. Otherwise said mortgage shall not be filed as a chattel mortgage by the clerk and recorder." *192
In the mortgage in question there appears immediately below the mortgagor's signature and above the acknowledgment and affidavit the following:
"Mortgagor's receipt for copy. I hereby acknowledge that at the time of the making, execution and delivery of this mortgage, the mortgagee delivered to me a full, true and complete copy of the foregoing mortgage, without additional cost to me, and that I received said copy of mortgage.
"G.A. STARKWEATHER."
It is argued that this receipt does not purport to refer to the mortgage "with the acknowledgments shown thereon," but can be construed only as a receipt of a copy of so much of the entire instrument only as precedes it in point of arrangement. At first blush there would appear to be some merit to the contention, but when it is recalled that section 8276 does not require that the receipt shall be written upon the mortgage, but only requires that it must "be attached to the original mortgage" and "must accompany the mortgage when presented to the clerk and recorder and filed therewith," the defect recedes to the vanishing point. The mortgagor acknowledged the receipt of "a full, true and complete copy of the foregoing mortgage," and it would require an extremely strained construction of the language to say that it means a copy of only that portion of the instrument which precedes it in place. The same contention made here was made and overruled in Colman v. Shattuck, 2 Hun (N.Y.), 497, and inCommercial State Bank v. Interstate El. Co.,
It is insisted by defendant that our chattel mortgage statute[2] must be construed strictly, and some of the early decisions of this court announce that rule, but it has never prevailed in this state since the adoption of the Codes, although the statute was apparently overlooked in Reynolds v.Fitzpatrick,
In passing, we observe that, if the matter stated in the first offer of proof be true, defendant must have had actual knowledge of the bank's mortgage, otherwise there would appear to be no reason for defendant consulting the bank and securing its consent before purchasing the grain.
2. When defendant sought to show that the grain had been purchased from Starkweather and the purchase price paid to him, by consent of the bank, counsel for plaintiff objected upon the ground that the manifest purpose was to prove a waiver which had not been pleaded. Upon the admission of counsel for defendant that such was the purpose, the objection was sustained and the offered evidence excluded. It is urged that the court erred in the ruling, and that the evidence was admissible under the general denial in the answer.
A general denial is authorized by statute (sec. 9137, Rev. Codes), and the effect of it is to put in issue every material[3, 4] allegation constituting the statement of plaintiff's cause of action, and casts upon the plaintiff the burden of establishing, prima facie at least, the presence of every element necessary to a recovery. (Hickey v. Breen,
"A conversion is any unauthorized act which deprives a man of his property permanently or for an indefinite time. * * * Any distinct act of dominion wrongfully exerted over one's property in denial of his right, or inconsistent with it, is a conversion." (Glass v. Basin Bay State Min. Co.,
The general denial puts in issue all of these allegations, and any evidence which tends to negative any of them is admissible. (Chealey v. Purdy, above.) If in this action the bank[5] consented to the sale of the grain by Starkweather to defendant and to the payment of the purchase price therefor to Starkweather directly, then the appropriation of the property by the defendant was not wrongful (United States Nat. Bank v.Great Western Sugar Co.,
After a conversion of mortgaged chattels has actually taken place, the mortgagee may waive the tort (26 R.C.L. 1144), or he may waive his lien upon the property at any time. (11 C.J. 674.)
The distinction between a waiver of the conversion and a waiver of the lien is important as it relates to the question of pleading. The defense that the tort has been waived admits that defendant converted the property and that plaintiff had a cause of action therefor, but seeks to show that plaintiff chose to treat the act as not wrongful and thereby to relinquish his right of action. Such a defense is in the nature of a confession and avoidance, which must be pleaded specially. It is such *195 a defense as is required to be pleaded by subdivision 2 of section 9137, Revised Codes. (31 Cyc. 218; Bowers on Conversion, sec. 543.)
In 38 Cyc. 2075, the general rule is stated as follows: "All defenses in bar are admissible under the general issue, except matters of confession and avoidance."
The defense that the mortgagee bank waived its lien before the property was taken by the defendant is a denial that the mortgagee had any interest in the property at the time it was taken. In this action, in order to prevail it was incumbent upon plaintiff to show some interest in the grain at the time of the alleged conversion (Potter v. Lohse,
A waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known right[6, 7] (Murray v. Heinze,
When counsel for defendant conceded that the purpose of offering the evidence in question was to establish a waiver, he could not have referred to a waiver of the tort, for at the time to which the offered evidence relates no tort had been committed. His reference must have been to a waiver of the lien, and the offer clearly indicates that this was the purpose. The *196
authorities are practically unanimous in holding that a mortgagee does waive his lien when he consents that the mortgaged property may be sold to a third person without reservation. (Fincher v.Bennett,
In Bowers on Conversion, section 534, the general rule is stated as follows: "A general denial puts in issue the conversion of the goods, so that thereunder the defendant may prove any fact showing or tending to show that there was no conversion; thus it may be proven under a general denial that the taking of the goods by the defendant was by permission of the plaintiff and according to an agreement between the parties." To the same effect is the text in 26 R.C.L. 1145.
The offered evidence was admissible under the general denial and the court erred in excluding it.
Counsel for plaintiff now suggest that the purpose of the[8] offered evidence was to establish an estoppel in pais, but that was not the theory advanced in the lower court, and on appeal counsel will not be heard to change the theory upon which the action was tried. (Raiche v. Morrison,
It is argued further that the offered evidence did not go[9] further than to establish a conditional waiver, and this upon the theory that the bank agreed to the purchase only on condition that its name should appear as a payee on the checks. But we are unable to so construe the language. The offer in its entirety reads as follows: "The defendant Occident Elevator Company now offers to prove by the witness J.S. Nicholson, upon the stand, as follows, to wit: First, that prior to the dates *197 of the alleged acts of conversion pleaded in the complaint in this action, the said J.S. Nicholson, who was then and there the agent and representative of the Occident Elevator Company at Molt, Montana, had a conversation with one Lester B. Koons, who was then and there the cashier and an officer of the Citizens' National Bank of Laurel, in which the said Lester B. Koons, said to the said J.S. Nicholson that the Citizens' National Bank of Laurel wanted Mr. Nicholson to put the name of the bank on any checks that were given to G.A. Starkweather in payment of grain of Starkweather delivered at the elevator; that Nicholson replied that he would do so, and further said to Mr. Koons, `What shall we do about the threshing and other expense in connection with this grain? Starkweather had been in to see me and wants some of the money for that purpose.' To which Mr. Koons replied: `It will be perfectly satisfactory to the bank,' or words to that effect, `for you to pay to Mr. Starkweather enough to take care of this expense.'"
While the language of the offer is not as explicit as it might be, the meaning appears to be reasonably plain. If in the first portion of this conversation the parties had in contemplation that the elevator company would purchase the entire crop subject to the mortgage, the reason for the bank's request is perfectly apparent, for, if the checks given for the purchase price were made payable to Starkweather and the bank jointly, then the bank could see that the money was applied to the discharge of the indebtedness due it, for the negotiation of the checks would require the indorsement of both payees. (Sec. 8448, Rev. Codes.) If, however, the parties contemplated that the elevator company would purchase only so much of the grain as was necessary to defray the expenses, then the agreement that the bank's name should be written in as a payee is meaningless and purposeless, since the money for that portion of the grain was to go to Starkweather directly and to be used for a purpose other than the payment of the debt due the bank. *198
We think the only fair construction of the language is that in the first instance the parties contemplated that the entire crop would be purchased by the elevator company, and the agreement that the bank's name should appear as a payee was predicated upon that assumption. When, however, it was later suggested in the same conversation that the threshing and allied expenses required immediate attention the special agreement was made that, for the portion of the crop necessary to meet those expenses, the purchase price should be paid to Starkweather directly, which would have authorized payment to be made in cash or by checks payable to Starkweather only.
What has been said with reference to the first offer of proof is applicable equally to the third and fourth offers.
The evidence sought to be introduced by the second offer appears to be altogether immaterial, and the ruling upon it was clearly correct.
3. While it appeared that Starkweather did not hold the legal title to all of the land upon which the mortgaged grain was grown, we think the evidence is sufficient to show that he had such interest in the grain itself that he could give a valid mortgage upon it.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES RANKIN and STARK concur.
MR. JUSTICE GALEN, being absent on account of illness, did not hear the argument and takes no part in the foregoing decision. *199