128 Iowa 649 | Iowa | 1905
The policy in suit was issued to cover a stock of merchandise owned by plaintiff and situate in the town of Lovinia, Calhoun county, this State. One of the policy provisions is as follows: “ If the said personal property be incumbered by chattel mortgage, . . . this policy shall be void.” In its answer the defendant pleaded a violation of said policy provision, alleging that subsequent to the issuance of the policy plaintiff had incumbered the property by mortgage. The record contains an admission on the part of plaintiff to the' effect that a chattel mortgage was executed by him covering the property insured, but it is his contention that the same was never delivered and did not therefore amount to an incumbrance on the property. At the close of all the evidence the defendant moved for an instructed verdict, on the ground that it had been made to appear without dispute that the provision of the policy as above referred to had been violated and the policy thereby rendered void. Such motion was overruled, and the question of the delivery of the mortgage admitted to have been
Our reading of the record discloses that the facts are not the subject of any serious dispute. It appears that plaintiff was indebted to the First National Bank of Sac City on two notes. Subsequent to the issuance of the policy in suit, he was called upon by II. S. Barnt, assistant cashier of said bank, for security upon said notes, and it. seems that plaintiff executed new notes in place of the ones then held by the bank. To secure such new notes he also executed a chattel mortgage, covering the stock of merchandise in question with other properly. As executed, S. H. Barnt was named in the notes as payee, and in the mortgage as mortgagee, and such came about in this way: As originally drawn'up the new notes and mortgage named said U. S. Barnt as payee and mortgagee. When about to execute the notes and mortgage, it was discovered that no notary was present to take the acknowledgment; and, as H. S. Barnt was a notary,, he erased his own name in the papers and inserted the name of his father, S. H. Barnt, to the end, as declared by him, that as a stranger to the transaction he might officiate in his capacity as a notary and take the acknowledgment. After the notes and mortgage were executed, the same were taken possession of by H. S. Barnt, and the mortgage was made a matter of record by him. Subsequently all the papers were turned over to and, taken possession of and retained by said bank. It is conceded that S-. II. Burnt, father of said H. S. Bamt, lived in another State; that he had no personal interest in the bank, or the particular debt in question; and that he had no knowledge of the transaction until long after the fire, when he repudiated the use of his name as without any warrant of authority on his part.
In view of the conclusion thus reached, other questions discussed in argument need not be noticed. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.— Reversed.