This was an action in the district court for damages for conversion. There were a verdict and judgment for' the plaintiff and the defendants prosecute error. There were three counts or causes of action alleged in the petition, the first of which ivas abandoned on the trial and will not be further considered. The second charged a conversion of certain horses and the third a conversion of certain notes. There are a large number of assignments in the petition, but the main contention affecting the ultimate rights of the parties that is urged in the briefs and arguments of counsel is that the verdict and judgment are contrary to law and unsupported by evidence, and as this seems sufficient to dispose of the case, we shall omit to treat of the others.
The horses were mortgaged by the plaintiff to one of the defendants to secure an indebtedness by the former either to the latter or to one of his codefendants, we are not quite clear which, and were by consent of the parties *299put in the possession of one Olmstead for safe keeping. Whether Olmstead served as custodian for both parties or for the mortgagee alone is disputed and is, we think, immaterial. The horses were, with knowledge of the mortgagee, taken from the possession of Olmstead upon a prior mortgage or bill of sale executed by the plaintiff, but which plaintiff contends was void for some reason not appearing upon its face, and of which it does not appear that the mortgagee had knowledge or notice. We do not think, as plaintiff contends, that the mortgagee was bound before surrendering the horses to hunt up the former and notify him of the demand, nor that he was negligent in omitting so to do. Neither do we think that Olmstead was agent for the mortgagee in such a sense that he was bound to communicate his knowledge of the invalidity of the mortgage, if he had any, which he denies, and which, we think, the evidence does not establish, to his principal. Further than this, it is not contended that the instrument upon which the horses were taken was void as against the plaintiff, but only that it was so as against his creditors and his second mortgagee. We do not think that the latter was bound to embark upon what might have turned out to be an expensive and tedious litigation for the doubtful purpose of attempting to prove the moral turpitude of his mortgagor. Olmstead had previously been an attorney of the plaintiff and was familiar with his affairs, and it is clear that the horses were left in his possession for the protection of the latter. It is not disputed that he told the plaintiff in error that the instrument upon which the animals were demanded and delivered up was a lien upon them superior to the mortgage, or that the mortgagee surrendered them in good faith and in reliance upon such advice.
As to the second cause of action, there seems to have been an entire failure of proof. The notes which were alleged to have been converted were instruments voluntarily turned over by the plaintiff to be collected and their proceeds applied toward the payment of his in*300debtedness to the plaintiff in error, the Citizens State Bank, which they are insufficient to satisfy, and his real complaint is that the proceeds of them were not fully and accurately accounted for and so applied. If such were the fact, which we do not stop to inquire, an adequate remedy would have been an action for an accounting and to compel the surrender or cancelation of the instruments and indebtedness to which they Avere collateral to the extent to AAdiich the latter Avere or should have been discharged. To that extent and for that purpose his creditor liad a right to retain them, and for so doing it cannot be accused of conversion.
For these reasons, it is recommended that the judgment of the district court be reversed and a new trial granted.
Letton and Oldham, CC., concur.By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the judgment of the district court be reversed and a neAV trial granted.
Reversed.