Wells v. Booth

ANDERSON, P. J.

Th-is is an action for possession of personal property,- aided by claim and delivery, to recover certain *281livestock to which plaintiff asserts right to possession by reason of two chattel mortgages, signed by both defendants 'Booth and Blasingame. Blasingame asserts right to possession of the stock by reason of a contract with defendant Booth to pasture, feed, •and care for the livestock, which contract he claims to have fully performed, and that no paid of the consideration for such pasturing and care has ever been paid, and that, by virtue thereof, he is entitled to possession of the property involved by reason of an agister’s lien thereon. The evidence shows that the cattle involved were purchased by Booth, and a mortgage given thereon to a bank in Sioux City or Omaha, after which the cattle were taken to Dewey county and placed with Blasingame. After such mortgage indebtedness became due, Booth and Blasingame went to Stock Growers’ Bank of Timber Lake and requested said bank to advance money to take up these mortgages and provide further money for the ’expense of running’ the stock. To obtain such) loan from! saidi bank, Booth and Blasingame made • property statements, . whereupon the bank loaned them $53,040,. for which notes were executed and 'signed by Booth and Blasingame. To secure the notes a chattel mortgage was executed by them covering the cattle involved, which ’mortgage was.also signed by both of them. Booth and ’ Blasingame then entered into an agreement by which it was provided that- Blasingame’s liability’on the notes and mortgages should be limited to -his interest in the cattle, which • was to be a one-half interest in the profit arising from the transaction after the cattle were sold and the indebtedness against the cattle and the expense of running the same paid. When said notes- became due, both Booth and Blasingame were unable to pay, and the notes were renewed. The renewal notes were signed by Booth alone. The notes and mortgages signed by Booth and Blasingame were held and were neither paid nor canceled. The mortgage sigmed by Blasingame contained this provision:

• ’ “It is mutually agreed that this mortgage and the lien thereof shall cover and secure said- indebtedness until fully paid, and all extensions and renewals of the note or notes above described.”

The indebtedness being -unpaid; the plaintiff, who had taken the notes and mortgage by assignment, brought this action to obtain possession of.the property for purposes óf’foreclosure. Defendant Blasingame claims to be entited to an’ agister’s lien. Trial *282was had to the court and a jury, and, at the close of the evidence, the court, pursuant to- motion, directed a verdict for plaintiff upon all the issues. Judgment was duly entered. From this judgment and an order denying motion for a new trial, defendant Blasingame appeals.

[ t, 2] From the evidence it clearly appears that defendant Booth originally purchased the cattle from, a Sioux 'City bank, and that he gave to such bank, notes and a mortgage to secure the same. It also appeared without dispute that these notes and mortgage were in turn transferred by assignment to- the plaintiff, Wells, who thereupon brought this action for the possession of the security for purposes of foreclosure. It further fairly appears that defendant Booth and appellant, Blasingame, both signed the notes and the mjortgage given to the Stock Growers’ Bank, and which mortgage was secured upon the very cattle involved.- Appellant Blasingame assumes to claim a want of knowledge as to the transactions regarding his signing of the notes and mortgages in question, but it will appear that nowhere in appellant’s answer or his testimony is there any claim: of fraud or deception practiced upon him, in order to procure his signature upon the documents mentioned. That being true, it must be assumed that everything he did in connection with signing of such papers he -did with full knowledge of all the facts. We think it elementary that no mortgagor can have a lien upon property mortgaged superior to that of the mortgage which he himself has given. Wright v. Sherman, 3 S. D. 290, 52 N. W. 1093, 17 L. R. A. 792. In Sargent v. Usher, 55 N. H. 287, 20 Am. Rep. 208, the court says:

“Any person, to whom any horses, cattle, sheep, or other domestic animal shall be intrusted to be pastured or boarded, shall have a lien thereon for all proper charges due for such pasturing or board, until the same shall be paid or tendered.”

In this case it was held that an agister, to wh|om was entrusted for keeping -by mortgagor mortgaged- horses, acquired no lien on them superior to that of a prior recorded mortgage, and that the lien of the mortgage would prevail. Hanch v. Ripley, 127 Ind. 151, 26 N. E. 70, 11 L. R. A. 61; Denison v. Shuler, 47 Mich. 598, 11 N. W. 402, 41 Am. Rep. 734; Ingalls v. Green, 62 Vt. 436, 20 Atl. 196; Bank of Neb. v. Lowe, 22 Neb. 68, 33 N. W. 482; McGhee v. Edwards, 87 Tenn. 506, 11 S. W. 316, *2833 L. R. A. 654. It seems to be almost universally established that .an agister’s lien can never becomie superior to that of a chattel mortgage, duly filed or recorded. Under the undisputed facts in this case, and the law as wle believe it to be, we think the trial ■court d-id1 not err in 'directing, a verdict for plaintiff upon all the issues, and entering judgment accordingly.

The judgment and order of the trial court are affirmed'.

No'te — Reported in 192 N. W. 489. See American Key-Numbered Digest, (1) Evidence, Key-No. 66, 22 C. J. Sec. 74; (2) Chattel Mortgages, Key-No. 138(1), 11 C. J. 396.

On priorities between agister’s lien and chattel mortgage; see notes in 17 L. R. A. 792, 1 R. O. L. 1081.