Holmes v. Sprowl

Wells, J.

1. The plaintiff claims to maintain this action of trespass as mortgagee of one1 third part of a schooner taken and carried away by the defendant. The mortgage was made on the thirteenth of March, 1846, and recorded on the same day. The defendant, as a deputy sheriff, attached one third of the schooner, on the twenty-second day of September, 1846, as the property of the mortgagor. By the Revised Statutes, c. 125, § 32, no mortgage of personal property shall be valid, except between the- parties, unless possession is-given and retained, or unless it is recorded by the clerk of the town, where the mortgager resides.

•Section 33 provides, that “the clerk, on payment of his fees, shall reeord all such mortgages, that ^hall be delivered to him, in a book kept for that purpose, noting, in the book, and on the mortgage, the time when the same was received, and *75it shall be considered as recorded when left, as aforesaid, with the clerk.”

The object to be accomplished was the recording of the mortgage, to give notoriety to the transaction. By the noting in the book, and on the mortgage, the time when the mortgage was received, it was to be considered as if it was recorded when left with the clerk. The subsequent recording had relation back to the time of noting, and the mortgage was to be considered as recorded at the time stated in the noting. The phrase “and it shall be considered as recorded when left, as aforesaid, with the clerk,” must mean, that the reception of it and the noting by the clerk should be considered as having the same effect as if the recording took place at the time of the delivery, and that it would be valid, although it was not recorded until a subsequent time. If it is recorded, that is a compliance with the law, and if it is wholly extended upon the record, and the time stated, before third persons acquire any right to the property, the interest of the mortgagee is secured. If a mortgagee would go hack to an earlier time, than that stated upon the record when his mortgage was recorded, and claim from the time when his mortgage was first left, he can only do so, by showing the time noted in tire book and upon the mortgage.

In Handly v. Howe, 22 Maine, 560, the attachment was made before the mortgage was recorded. There was no noting, except upon the back of the mortgage, of the time when it was delivered to the town clerk. The noting in the book not having taken place, it was decided that the deed could not be considered as recorded when left.

The plaintiff’s mortgage having been duly recorded, and the time when entered upon the record, his right under the mortgage was then protected from the attachment made after-wards by the defendant.

The title of the plaintiff cannot be affected by the enrollment and registry of the schooner in the name of the debtor and the other part owners. Those acts do not appear to have *76been done by the plaintiff, or by his procurement or with his knowledge.

2. If the interest of the plaintiff and the other part owners should be considered joint, so that they ought to have united with him, in the action, that is an objection which should have been taken in abatement. In an action of tort, brought by one tenant in common of personal property, when the injury is joint, unless the non-joinder of the other co-tenants is pleaded in abatement, the objection can only be taken by way of an apportionment of damages. Lathrop v. Arnold, 25 Maine, 136; 1 Chit. Plead. 53.

3. It does not appear by any evidence in the case, that the mortgager retained the right of possession in the property mortgaged, and was entitled to it when this action was brought. No copy of the mortgage has been furnished to us. We presume then, that the mortgagee had the right of possession, and if so, he can maintain trespass for the talcing of the property. Woodruff v. Halsey, 8 Pick. 333; Paul v. Hayford, 22 Maine, 234; Welch v. Whittemore, 25 Maine, 86.

4. It is stated in argument, that the plaintiff receipted for the property attached, as the property of the debtor, and it is contended, that he is estopped to set up property in himself.

But the receipt is lost, and no evidence is produced of its contents. We are therefore unable to determine whether its terms would create any estoppel against the plaintiff.

According to the agreement of the parties, the action is to be defaulted.

Note. — Howard, J. took no part in this decision.