70 Vt. 399 | Vt. | 1898
The trustee purchased certain property of the defendant for the agreed price of $600, for which he gave the defendant his promissory note and secured its payment by a chattel mortgage upon the property. The mortgage was duly recorded June 6, 1895. The trustee subsequently paid the defendant $100 and the accrued interest on the note, and the payment was indorsed thereon; the remainder of the note is still unpaid. The defendant afterwards sold the note and mortgage to the claimant for $475 and indorsed and delivered them to him, and the claimant had paid him therefor before the service of the trustee process in this suit. The defendant at the same time made and delivered to the claimant his promissory note for $350 and a chattel mortgage of the $600 note to secure the payment of the $350 note. This mortgage was also duly recorded before service of process in this suit. The trustee had no notice or knowledge of the dealings between the defendant and the claimant until after the service upon him of the trustee process, unless the record of the mortgage to the claimant was itself notice to him.
The main contention is whether the $600 note was mortgagable under Y. S. 2251, which reads: “All personal property shall be subject to mortgage agreeably to the provisions of this chapter.”
It is generally laid down that the term personal property embraces all objects and rights which are capable of
It is stated in 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. 974, that as a general rule, in the absence of statutory provisions to the contrary, any personal property which is capable of being sold maybe the subject of a mortgage, and Kimball v. Sattley, 55 Vt. 285, is cited as an authority for the proposition. In that case the language of Powell on Mort. 25, is quoted: “Everything which may be considered as property, whether, in the technical language of the law, denominated real or personal property, may be the subject of a mortgage.” Jones on Chat. Mort. § 114, says that any property which is capable of absolute sale may be mortgaged, and instances a life insurance policy and shares of stock in a corporation. But in § 278 he states the law that : “Statutes respecting the recording of mortgages of personal property apply only to goods and chattels capable of delivery, and not to defeasible or conditional assignments of choses in
In enumerating choses in action as personal property that is mortgagable, it is evident that law writers sometimes mean that they are subject to common law mortgages and assignments without reference to chattel mortgages. For instance, Gardner v. Hoeg & Tr., 18 Pick. 168, and Tripp v. Brownell, 12 Cush. 376, are referred to in one treatise as cases where seamen’s wages were held to pass under chattel 'mortgages; but in those cases wages to be earned were merely pledged as collateral security for money advanced.
In U. S. v. Davis, 5 Mason 356, Judge Story remarked that personal goods, in the strict sense of the common law, are goods which are movable, belonging to or the property of some person, and which have an intrinsic value; that bonds, bills and notes, which are choses in action, are not esteemed, by the common law, goods, whereof larceny may be committed, being of no intrinsic value and not importing any property in possession of the person from whom they are stolen, but only evidence of property. Our statute, § 4939, makes “money, goods, chattels, bank notes, bonds, prommissory notes, bills of exchange,” etc., subjects of larceny. Other states have similar statutes.
It is safe to say that in the twenty years our chattel mortgage law has been in operation, it has not been the understanding of the profession that choses in action were included in the terms of § 2251, and we doubt if an attempt has ever been made to mortgage a promissory note. A debt resting merely in a parol promise, having neither corpus nor situs, is not the subject of a chattel mortgage, nor is a promissory note, which is only the evidence of an indebtedness, mortgagable.
V. S. 1306 provides that negotiable paper shall be subject to the operation of the trustee process unless the same had been negotiated and notice thereof given to the maker or indorser before the service of the trustee process upon him. This statute is for the protection of makers and indorsers of negotiable paper and is important in the transactions of commercial business. The court has always required a strict compliance with its terms in respect to notice. Notice of the transfer must be given by the assignee of the note or through
If the requirements of § 1306 are to remain in force, it follows that a chattel mortgage of a promissory note is invalid without actual notice from the mortgagee to thé maker. On the other hand, if the construction claimed for § 2251 were to prevail the record of the mortgage of a promissory note in the town clerk’s office would do away with the requirement of actual notice under § 1306, and the provisions of the two sections would often come in conflict. The two sections should be so construed, if practicable, that the provisions of each can be given full force and effect.
Section 1306 long antedated the chattel mortgage act, and by it the legislature had fully provided for the transfer of promissory notes by sale and pledge, so there was no occasion that § 2251 should include this class of property.
If the legislature had intended so radical a change in the law as the claimant contends for, we think it would have included promissory notes, eo nomine, in § 2251, or have amended § 1306 so as to make the record in the town clerk’s office of the mortgage of a promissory note a sufficient notice of its transfer; but as before remarked, there was no occasion to include promissory notes in § 2251.
Judgment affirmed.