On the 2d day of July, 1888, the defendant executed a chattel mortgage to the plaintiff to secure the sum of $700. It covered a printing-press and some other personal property. It provided for payment within five years from the date of the mortgage, with semi-annual interest, with the-right to pay $100 and interest at any time. It provided that in case of nonpayment the mortgagee could enter the premises and take possession, and then contained the following clause: “And, in case the said Ada A. Johnson shall deem the said property or debt unsafe, it shall be lawful for her to-take possession of such property and sell the same, ” etc. On the 28th day of May, 1890, the plaintiff took the property, claiming that- she deemed herself unsafe, and sold it at public auction for $118.65. The expenses of the sale amounted to $38.50, leaving the amount unpaid $630.85. This action was brought to recover the deficiency. The complaint alleged, among other things, that the plaintiff deemed herself unsafe, and- had good reason for such belief. The answer denied those allegations, and alleged that the “plaintiff took possession of the property in bad faith, and from motives not contemplated or provided for in said chattel mortgage, or connected with the fact or feeling of the security or insecurity of said property or debt¡ to-wit, from-malice, and from a pressing need for money.” The plaintiff demurred to the-portion of the answer above quoted, and to another portion setting up a counter-claim, upon the ground that such a plea was not permissible in an action of tort. The last branch of the demurrer was abandoned on the argument. The demurrer was heard at a special term in Buffalo in September, 1890, and was overruled, with posts. Judgment was entered, and the plaintiff appealed to this court.
The terms of the mortgage were such that the right of possession of the property described in it remained -in the defendant until the debt fell due, unless the plaintiff deemed herself unsafe. She took the property claiming to have done so by virtue of this power conferred by the mortgage. The sole question upon this appeal is whether the plaintiff had a right to take the property under the circumstances, and inspired by the motives stated in the answer. The plaintiff’s contention is that as the answer admits the mortgage to be a valid instrument, and that as something remains unpaid thereon, she had a right to take the property, and that malice or bad faith constituted *379no defense. The learned counsel cites several authorities in support of this position, but all of them proceed upon the assumption that the mortgagee deemed himself unsafe. Such was Allen v. Vose, 34 Hun, 57, and all the cases cited. The argument of the learned counsel for the appellant seems to-proceed upon the theory that the taking of the property is conclusive evidence that the mortgagee deemed herself unsafe. In the absence of proof, it would be assumed that the taking was by virtue of the authority conferred in the instrument, and no bad faith would be presumed. But the demurrer in the-case at bar admits that the plaintiff took the property in bad faith, influenced by malice, and from a pressing need of money, and not because she felt unsafe. The plaintiff’s contention cannot be sustained, either upon principle or-authority. It is entirely clear that if a person takes property under such a clause in a mortgage, not because he deems himself unsafe or the debt insecure, but inspired by other and unjustifiable motives, he would not be protected by the power conferred in the instrument. Werner v. Bergman, 28 Kan. 65; Furlong v. Cox, 77 Ill. 293; Davenport v. Ledger, 80 Ill. 574; Boy v. Goings, 96 Ill. 361. The judgment must be affirmed, with costs. All concur.