109 Mich. 205 | Mich. | 1896
(dissenting). The following statement of facts is taken from the brief in behalf of the plaintiffs, and is correct:
“ On October 11th, the plaintiffs, who were residents of Canada, advanced to one George Leroy, a resident of Illinois, at Detroit, Michigan, $1,600, and took from him a chattel mortgage covering a one-half interest in three trotting horses, which interest was then owned by Leroy. The other one-half interest in two of the horses was owned by the plaintiffs, and in the third horse by another person, not a party to this suit. The plaintiffs and Leroy, at or about the execution of the mortgage, agreed that these horses should be raced on joint account during the winter of 1892 and the racing season of 1893, the winter racing to be in the Southern United States; the plaintiff Vining to manage the horses, making all contracts and entries, collecting the moneys, and doing all the business, Leroy to do the driving, and the money for expenses to be furnished by the plaintiffs, the profits and losses of the racing to be equally shared among the three. This arrangement was not to affect the property rights of the several parties in the horses. At the time of the execution of the mortgage, it was contemplated by the parties that the horses should be taken out of the State, and they were then on board the cars in Detroit for shipment South, and went out of the State in the afternoon of the same day.
“After racing the horses in the Southern States through the winter and spring, they were shipped back from the South to London, Canada, on May 4, 1893, and passed through Detroit in transit for London, where they arrived on May 8th. In order to get them into Canada, the plaintiff Vining gave a bond in the sum of $10,000, condi*207 tioned to return them to the United States within 70 days. The racing of the horses was continued in Canada under the same arrangement; but Yining fell sick, and was unable to remain with the horses personally. The horses were raced at various places in Canada, and finally at Toronto, at a race meeting beginning about the 3d of July. The plaintiff Ferguson attended at these races, and instructed Leroy to ship the horses on July 10th to Detroit, where they were next to race, and left him to do so. Instead of shipping the horses, Leroy disappeared; and, the plaintiffs learning from one Stilson, the assistant driver, who was in their employ, that Leroy had gone, Ferguson again went to Toronto, and on Saturday, July 15th (the period within which the horses were to be returned according to the condition of the bond being nearly up), shipped them back to Detroit, where Yining took charge of them.
“It appears that the horses, before coming to Toronto, were in Tilsonburg, which is about 100 miles distant, and in another county. Leroy had gone ahead to Toronto, and there met the defendant Millar on June 30th, and represented to him that he had these horses at Tilsonburg, and wanted to get them down to Toronto for the races, and wanted to borrow of Millar money to pay to bring them and to keep them in Toronto during the races. Millar gave him some money then, and agreed to make further advances, taking a mortgage on the horses as security. This mortgage Millar filed in the county clerk’s office in Toronto on July 5, 1893. Defendant Millar testifies that on July 8th, with Leroy’s consent, he put the horses in the care of one Briggs, the keeper of an hotel at the race track, to hold possession for him. At the time when Ferguson returned to Toronto, after Leroy’s disappearance, he found the horses in the possession of Stilson, the plaintiffs’ assistant driver, at the stable of Briggs; saw Briggs, and paid him all his charges for feeding the men and horses, and told him he was going to ship the horses. Briggs made no claim of possession, and Ferguson learned nothing about Millar or his mortgage.
_ “On Monday, the 17th of July, when the horses arrived in Detroit, where they were to race, the plaintiffs recorded their mortgage; and, on the following day, the defendant Millar came to Detroit, and had the defendant Fox, who is a constable, seize the horses under his chattel mortgage.- The plaintiffs, to whom this act was the*208 first notice of Millar’s mortgage, demanded the return of the property, and, on its being refused, brought this action of replevin, upon the trial of which a verdict was directed in their favor.”
The principal question in the case is whether the defendant Millar’s mortgage has preference over that of the plaintiffs, which was prior in date. The question is not new in this court. The principle governing it has been discussed and determined in the following cases: Montgomery v. Wight, 8 Mich. 143; Boydson v. Goodrich, 49 Mich. 65; Corbett v. Littlefield, 84 Mich. 30. In all these cases it was held that chattel-mortgage laws have no force beyond the jurisdiction of the sovereignty enacting them, and that the notices, which the record of them is designed to give, have no extraterritorial -force. The reasoning of Justice Campbell in Montgomery v. Wight is exhaustive and conclusive. It was followed in the other opinions. It may be conceded that the defendant Millar has a lien valid in Canada, and that plaintiffs have a lien valid in Michigan. The parties, therefore, have no other or different rights than they would have if there were no law in either country providing for recording mortgages, and declaring the effect of such record.
It is sought to distinguish this case from the above, upon the claim that Millar had reduced the property to possession in Canada, and that it was illegally and surreptitiously taken from him. In the cases above cited, the property was left in the control of the mortgagor; and in Corbett v. Littlefield it was held that the attachment lien in this State prevailed, although the property was removed from the State of Nebraska without the knowledge or consent of the mortgagee. The difficulty with the defendants’ contention is that the facts do not support it. There was no actual or visible change of possession. The horses were at Mr. Briggs’ hotel, and in his possession, at the time defendant Millar claims possession was given to Mr. Briggs for him. This possession was only that of an hotel keeper in charge
In view of this disposal of the case, the other ■ questions raised become immaterial.
Judgment should be affirmed.
Under the statement of facts by Mr. Justice Grant, it appears that defendant Millar had taken possession of the property, and placed it with a custodian (Briggs), and this with the assent of the mortgagor. The property was not detained by the custodian, but, as his agency was a special one, it is clear that he exceeded his authority in delivering it over to, or permitting it to be taken by, plaintiffs. We have, then, a case in which the mortgagee in Canada has taken possession of mortgaged property, and in which the mortgagor has, without his assent, regained possession, transported the property to Michigan, and a prior lien holder has asserted a lien which, while the property was so in the possession of the Canadian mortgagee, was inferior to the Canadian lien. To give the Michigan lien priority under these circumstances is certainly to go a step further than this court has yet gone. In the cases of Montgomery v. Wight, 8 Mich. 143, Boydson v. Goodrich, 49 Mich. 65, and Corbett v. Littlefield, 84 Mich. 30, it appears that the foreign mortgagee permitted the mortgagor to retain possession. In Corbett v. Littlefield it was said distinctly that the mortgagee had it in his power to protect himself by taking possession of the mortgaged property. It can hardly be said that it was intended to imply that he must, in addition to taking possession, stand guard over the property constantly, to see that the mortgagors do not take it out of his possession and to another jurisdiction. If, in fact, Millar was invested with possession, it is difficult to see how he could have done more to protect himself, unless an absolute duty does rest upon a mortgagee to see that no person with or without right shall take the property beyond the jurisdiction; and I cannot understand why this duty should be imposed upon a mortgagee in possession any more than it is upon an absolute owner. Without regard to the record of the mortgage in Canada, it was good as against any but creditors who became such after the mortgage was made
Certainly, plaintiffs, as mortgagees, under a mortgage executed in Michigan, upon property which was, by their direct assent, taken to Ontario, were not entitled to priority over a mortgage given in Ontario, and under which possession was given to the mortgagee. Can it be said, then, that because Briggs, the custodian, did not withhold the property from them, and because they did not in fact know of the title acquired by Millar from Leroy, they are to be given priority for this reason? I cannot understand how they could occupy any better position than a purchaser from Leroy could occupy; and if the mortgage to Millar was taken by him in good faith, and the possession was actually transferred as testified to by him, I think the mortgage as to Leroy’s half interest in the horses was good, and entitled to priority over plaintiffs’.
Judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.