Suit in detinue by appellee against appellants. Plaintiff rested for recovery upon a certain mortgage executed to him by C. D. Allen on June 12, 1917, as security for a note due November 1, 1917, which mortgage was filed for record July 2, 1919. This mortgage was not void for indefiniteness of description, and defendants' objection to its introduction was properly overruled. See former appeal, Collins v. Hodges Lbr. Co., 210 Ala. 6, 97 So. 424; Stickney v. Dunaway Lambert,169 Ala. 464, 53 So. 770; Connally v. Spragins, 66 Ala. 258.
The defendants purchased the property in question from the mortgagor, C. D. Allen. There was a prior mortgage on the property executed by said Allen to the Bank of York, filed for record November 8, 1916, and given to secure a debt due February 4, 1917. This mortgage was marked satisfied as of August 1, 1918, and said Allen's testimony was to the effect that the property sold to defendants embraced in said mortgage was sold for the purpose of satisfying this prior mortgage to the Bank of York, and that the proceeds were so applied. The exact date of the sale to defendants does not appear, but it is reasonably to be inferred from the evidence that it was after the due date of the mortgage to the Bank of York, which mortgage, in fact, was past due at the time of the execution of plaintiff's mortgage. Defendants offered in evidence the mortgage to the Bank of York, but plaintiff's objection to its introduction was sustained. Defendants further offered to show by said Allen, the mortgagor, that he was authorized by the mortgagee, the Bank of York, to sell the property to defendants, so that the proceeds of such sale might be applied in satisfaction of said mortgage. This mortgage contained the provision that, on default in payment thereof, the "Bank of York may take said property and sell the same privately and apply the proceeds to the satisfaction of said note and expenses necessary to the sale." At the time of the sale to defendants, therefore, the Bank of York could have possessed itself of the property and sold at private sale to defendants. The purpose of the testimony offered was in effect to show that the mortgagee had for this purpose constituted Allen, the mortgagor, as its agent, and comes within the influence of the principle recognized in the following quotation from Murray Co. v. McNealy, 86 Ala. 234, 237, 5 So. 565, 567, 11 Am. St. Rep. 33:
"These cases went upon the ground: That such sale and application of proceeds is the normal and proper purpose of a chattel mortgage, and within the precise boundaries of its lawful operation and effect. It does no more than to substitute the mortgagor as the agent of the mortgagee to do exactly what the latter had the right to do, and what it was his privilege and his duty to accomplish. It devotes, as it should, the mortgage property to the payment of the mortgage debt."
See, also, Abbeville Livestock Co. v. Walden, 209 Ala. 315,96 So. 237.
The mortgage to the Bank of York was prior to that of plaintiff and duly recorded. If defendants purchased at a fair and proper sale through the bank's agency, that would constitute a defense. The word "authorized" in the connection used in the question had a well-understood meaning, and there is no merit in the suggestion that the question was improper as involving a conclusion.
We are of the opinion the court erred in respect to the rulings on the evidence referred to, and its judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur. *Page 664