When the description in a chattel mortgage is correct as far as it goes, but fails fully to point out and identify the property intended to be conveyed, a subsequent purchaser or incumbrancer is bound to make every inquiry which the instrument itself could reasonably be deemed to suggest. Smith v. Mclean, 24 Iowa, 322.
But it is claimed that the description is not Correct as far as it is a description. We do not think that the description can be said to be incorrect where it is shown that some would call the animal brown, and some would call it black, if it be described by either color. The shade of color between a dark brown and a black horse is well known to be somewhat indistinct, and different persons might well describe the animal as one color or the other, as the principal witness in this case states. We think that, taking the evidence as to the color in connection with the statement of the place where the horse was kept, the defendant should be charged with constructive notice of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and that the Circuit -Court should have so found.
Be VERSED.