Shaw & Shaw v. Cleveland

de GEAFFENRIED, J. —

1. One J. H. Thomas, a sawmill man, had a sawmill at Active, in Bibb county, which he operated by means of an engine upon which lie gave, in August, 1909, a mortgage to the Bibb County Banking & Trust Company to secure the payment of a certain note. When the note fell due, it was not paid, and the property described in the mortgage was sold under the power of sale contained in the mortgage, and the appellants purchased the engine at said sale.

Of course, as purchasers at said mortgage sale, the appellants acquired the same title to the engine which belonged to the Bibb County Banking & Trust Company, no more and no less.

When the Bibb County Banking & Trust Company took from Thomas the mortgage to which we have above referred, that company did not know that Thomas was *338in possession of the engine, except from what he told them. The evidence shows that the hank did not even know whether the engine, if in Thomas’ possession, was in Bibb or Chilton county. The bank, in taking the mortgage, simply relied upon the statement of Thomas that he owned such an engine and was in the possession of it. The bank, therefore, when it took the mortgage, was not in such a position as to be able to claim that (as between it and N. J. LaAvley, to whom some of the evidence tends to show Thomas sold the engine prior to the execution of the mortgage), the sale to Lawley AAras invalid because Thomas was left by Lawley in possession of the engine. It is our understanding that as between the vendor and the vendee a contract of sale, when complete in all its parts, is Aralid, although the vendor may be left in possession of the property. Such a sale may or may not be Adalid as to the creditors of the vendor existing at the time of the sale according* to the circumstances of each particular case.

As to the .existing creditors of the vendor, the retention of possession of the property by the vendor is a badge of fraud. Unexplained, such retention of possession is prima facie evidence of fraud as to such creditors ; but if the retention of possession is, in such a case, consistent Avith good faith and the absolute disposition of the property, such sale is valid as to' existing creditors. — Millard’s Adm’rs v. Hall, 24 Ala. 209.

In the present case it is not claimed that the sale to' Lawley, if in fact made in the spring of 1909, was fraudulent as to the Bibb County Banking & Trust Company. That position was not assumed by counsel for appellants on the trial in the court beloAV, and no such argument is advanced upon this appeal. There was an insistence that there was no such sale; that the defense thus sought to be interposed was an after*339thought. But there was uo insistence in the court below — and none is made here — that the sale, if made? was fraudulent and void as to appellants.

The evidence shows, Avithout dispute, that Thomas was in possession of the engine during all of the year 1909. The rule is familiar that the declarations of a party in possession of either real or personal property tending to explain the character or extent of such possession are ordinarily admissible as part of the res gestm of his possession. “The declarations of persons in possession of property, whether real or personal, serving-to characterize or limit the nature of the possession, are admissible in evidence as a part of the res gestae of the possession.” — 9 A. & E. Ency. Law, p. 12; Nelson v. Iverson, 24 Ala. 9, 60 Am. Dec. 442.

The declarations of Thomas, who was confessedly in possession of the engine, that he had sold the engine to LaAAdey, and that he was renting the engine from Lawley, made in the spring of 1909, before he executed the mortgage to the bank, Avere clearly admissible.

During the progress of the trial a Avitness, Jack Collins, was asked whether Lawley bought the engine from Thomas in the spring of 1909. The court, against the objection of appellants, permitted the witness to an-SAArer the question, and the question Avas answered by the witness in the affirmative. There was nothing in the question or the answer of the witness indicating that the question did not call for a collective fact within the knowledge of the witness, and the court properly admitted the testimony. Subsequent to the admission of the above testimony, the witness, on cross-examination, testified that he did not know of his own knowledge-that LaAAdey had bought the engine from Thomas; that all that he knew about it was that Thomas and Lawley told him. Said the witness, "Mr. Thomas told me he *340sold the engine to Mr. Law'ley; what 1 know is hearsay, just what they said (J. H. Thomas told me and what Mr. Lawley told me). Mr. Thomas told me and Mr. Lawley told me. Mr. Shaw (one of the appellants) Avas not present at any time when I was told by Thomas or Lawley that Thomas had sold the engine to Lawley.” Thereupon, says bill of exceptions, the appellants moved to exclude all of the above-quoted testimony “upon the ground that the same is immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent, and that neither one of the plaintiffs were present Avlien such conversation or talk took place.” The court refused this motion, and the action of the court in so doing is before us for review.

Whenever there is an objection to testimony as a whole and any part of such testimony is relevant and competent, the objection falls to the ground. The above italicized portions of the quoted testimony of the witness Avere, without considering the question as to whether those parts not italicized were or were not competent, clearly admissible as declarations of Thomas, the party in possession of the engine, made before the execution of the mortgage, explaining the character of his possession. For this reason, if for no other, the trial court cannot be put in error for overruling the motion of the appellants to exclude the testimony from the jury.

For the above reasons the appellants can take nothing on account of the eleventh, thirteenth, fourteenth, and tAventv-first assignments of error.

4. When a question is asked which calls for testimony which a party to the cause thinks objectionable, he should, before the question is answered, interpose an objection to such question. If he fails to do so, and the ansAver of the witness is responsive to the question, the trial court will not be put in error by an appellate court for .refusing to exclude, the answer of the wit*341ness to sucli question. The rule and the reasons for it-are too familiar to require the citation of authorities to-sustain it. It is therefore evident that the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth assignments of error present nothing to ns for review.

5. During the examination of a witness, Cleveland,, the appellee, without objection on the part of appellants, asked the witness if he knew whether Thomas paid him a part of the. money which Lawley paid Thomas for the engine. Replying to this question, the witness said, “He paid me $20 and he said that Mr. Lawley paid him $40.” The appellants moved to exclude this answer of the witness upon the ground that it was not -responsive to the question. The court overruled the motion, and the appellants reserved an exception. It is not, as we-understand this record, necessary for us to consider the question as to whether the court was or was not in error in refusing to exclude the above answer of the witness. Immediately after the above ruling of the court, appellee was permitted, without objection from appellants, to ask other questions relative to this same matter, and the answers of the witness to these questions cured the error, if in fact one was made.

. 6. During the progress of the trial it developed that the engine in question was bought by Thomas, who was the common source of title of both appellee and appellants, from M. Sable & Sons; that Thomas paid only a part of the purchase price of the engine in cash and gave Sable & Sons two notes, in which Sable & Sons reserved the title to the engine in themselves until the notes were fully paid, for the balance of the purchase money; that in the spring of 1909 Lawley bought these notes from Sable & Sons and held them assigned to him; and that Lawley died in the summer of 1909, leaving as his heirs some children, all of whom were of age. *342There was evidence from which the jury were authorized to infer that when Lawley became the owner of the notes he saw Thomas, and that Thomas sold Lawley the engine in satisfaction or discharge of said notes and the further sum of $40 in cash. The evidence for appellee further tended to show that when Lawley died one of his sons found the Sable notes among Lawley’s papers; that no' administration was ever had upon the estate of Lawley; and that, after his death, his heirs, all being of age, sold the engine to appellee and divided the purchase money among themselves. While the purchase-money notes — the Sable notes — were never recorded in Bibb county, it seems to us that these notes were, as to the issues upon which this case was tried, relevant and competent testimony. The fact that they were uncanceled in possession of Lawley at the time of his death did have a tendency — unexplained—to show that they were, at the time of his death, living, subsisting obligations of Thomas; but the fact that Lawley owned them at or about the time it is claimed Thomas sold him the engine also had a tendency to show that Thomas actually owed him, as claimed by the appellee, a sum of money at the time of the alleged purchase of the engine, and tended therefore to uphold the theory of appellee that, in the spring of 1909, Lawley bought the engine from Thomas, the consideration of the purchase being in part the satisfaction of a debt and the balance in cash. As the S'able notes were not recorded in Bibb county as required by law, they did not, under the evidence, furnish the appellee, if he had claimed the engine by virtue of the notes, a defense against the recorded mortgage through which the appellants claimed the property; but, as there was some evidence tending to show that Thomas was in fact indebted to Lawley at the time of *343the alleged purchase by Lawley from Thomas, they were admissible, and their probative force on that subject and on the question as to whether the indebtedness which they represented in fact formed a part of the consideration of the sale of the engine by Thomas to Lawley, if a sale was made, were questions for the jury. This matter was plainly, and Ave think correctly, put to the jury by the trial judge in his oral charge to the jury. On that subject the trial judge said: “If Sable & Sons had a lien on this property and transferred it to Lawley, and if LaAvley, before August 10, 1909, bought this property from Thomas in payment of these notes and $40 additional, or anything else that is fair and valuable of him, bought it from Thomas, then the property became his, and Thomas could not mortgage the property Avhich belonged to some one else, * * * Did he (Lawley) make a trade with Thomas for a given amount before August 10, 1909? If he did, then it belonged to Lawley, and not to Thomas, and the mortgage to the bank from Thomas after he had sold it to Mr. LaAvley would carry no title.”

The above considerations dispose of the twentieth, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, twenty-seventh, twenty-eighth, twenty-ninth, and thirtieth assignments of error adversely to appellants.

The mortgage through which appellants claimed title to the engine was, as above stated, executed on the 10th day of August, 1909. This mortgage recites that the mortgage is in renewal of another mortgage given on the property conveyed on August 12, 1908, and that the prior mortgage “is not paid till this one is paid in full,” The mortgage referred to as having been given on August 12, 1909, if one existed, was not introduced in evidence, and if it had any existence there is nothing to show that it was ever recorded, or that Lawley ever *344had any knowledge of its existence. Lawley, if he bought the property, bought it prior to1 the execution of the mortgage on August 10, 1909, wMch was introduced in evidence. It is therefore evident that any recitals in the mortgage which was introduced in evidence could not, by any possibility, have affected Lawley’s purchase of the engine, if he did buy it, and it is therefore evident that the trial court was free from error in refusing to give to the jury the written charge requested by appellants which is made the basis of the twenty-sixth assignment of error.

8. When an exception is reserved to a part of the oral charge of a trial court, an appellate court will read the part of the charge excepted to with the other parts of the oral charge, and if the part excepted to, read in connection with the remainder of the charge, correctly states the law as applied to the evidence in the case, then, even though the part excepted to may appear to be technically inaccurate, the exception fails. The bill of exceptions contains the whole of the oral charge of the court, and, read as a whole, it correctly states the law as applied to the evidence as set out in the bill of exceptions, and the exceptions reserved by appellants to portions of the oral charge were not well taken. It is also evident, from what we have above said, that we are of opinion that the court properly gave to the jury the two written charges which the bill of exceptions shows were given to the jury at the request of appellee.

9. We have above considered all of the assignments of error which appear to merit attention. There were some exceptions reserved to the rulings of -the trial court as to the admission of evidence on the subject of the value of the use or hire of the engine, which we have not considered because, as there was a. verdict for the appellee, the evidence admitted or excluded was of no valúe to appellants.

*345Neither are we of the opinion that, under the issues submitted to the jury, the appellants can complain because the trial court refused to allow them, by as full measure of proof as they desired, to show' that the engine sued for was personalty and not a fixture to real estate. The property was treated, through the entire trial, as personalty, and the trial judge, in submitting the case to the jury, stated explicitly to them that the appellee had no right of recovery unless the jury were reasonably satisfied from the evidence that Lawley 'bought the engine from Thomas prior to August, 1909, paying therefor a good and valuable consideration, and that Lawley and not Thomas was the owner of the engine on the day the mortgage was executed.

We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Affirmed.