The opinion of the court was delivered by
Johnston, J.:The testimony held by the court to be insufficient to send the case to the jury showed that the 250 steers sold to Martin on November 9, 1885, and the 109 steers sold in the following March, were undoubtedly the property of the Inter-State Galloway Cattle Company at the times of sale. If further disclosed that the company had never received payment for the cattle sold. When the first lot of 250 steers was sold, Martin executed a mortgage on them to secure the payment of the purchase-money, in which the cattle were described by marks and brands, and all must concede that the mortgage on its face was valid. When a sale of the remainder of the herd was made, in March, 1886, a mortgage was made to secure the payment of the purchase-money, and the cattle were then properly described by marks and brands, and that mortgage appears on its face to be valid. The two mortgages covered all the cattle sold by the plaintiff to Martin, and so far as the testimony shows, all the cattle which Martin owned or had in his possession. The mortgages were taken in good faith to secure the payment of the purchase-money, which has never been paid, and the mortgages have never been assigned, canceled or satisfied by the plaintiff. On November 1, 1886, when the defendant claims to have acqnired an interest in the cattle, the plaintiff’s mortgages were on file in the office of the register of deeds, in Lincoln county, where Martin resided, *684and anyone examining the records would have discovered that the mortgages were then in force and apparently valid.
*6851. Cattle company-chattel mortgage, embracing wholeherd-separation, unnecessary. *684The nature of King’s interest in the property is not clearly shown. Martin claimed that he drove the cattle to Jewell county to be fed, and it seems that some of his employés continued to care for the cattle after their removal to King’s ranch. There is testimony tending to show that King was informed of the mortgages given by Martin to the plaintiff, and some testimony tending to show that Martin obtained part of the money derived from the loan made by McClain. It is claimed by McClain that he made the loan to King, whom he did not know, without seeing the cattle, or without examining the records; and he further states that “it is a rare thing to make an examination in Kansas.” In addition to the notice disclosed by the records in Lincoln county, it appears that an additional mortgage was given by Martin to the plaintiff after the cattle had been removed to Jewell county, and that mortgage-was on file before any of the alleged negotiations had occurred between King and McClain. The conduct of Martin and King casts suspicion on them, and the time and manner in which the cattle were shipped by McLain, as well as the shifting of them from one side of the state line to the other when discovered, should be considered in determining the good faith of their transactions. There was testimony tending to show that the cattle were worth about $18,000 at the time they were taken by McLain, while according to his own testimony the amount of his lien was $10,000. The plaintiff did not even get the benefit of the 'surplus under the judgment that was given. In our opinion the demurrer to the evidence should have been overruled. If the mortgages given by Martin to the plaintiff can be upheld, then both King and McLain are charged with notice of the liens which they created, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover. To sustain the ruling of the court it is urged that because there was no separation at the time the sale was made to Martin and the mortgage executed by him on November 9, 1885, the mortgage is invalid. It is true that the 250 steers were not *685separated from the rest of the herd at that time. There were 361 in the herd, and Martin purchased 250 of an average of the 361, agreeing to drive the remaining 111 to his place in Lincoln county and keep them until called for. For the plaintiffs it is contended that by this agreement they held the cattle as tenants-in-common, and the interest of each was fixed in proportion to their respective shares — that is, Martin owned and plaintiff of the herd, and therefore no difficulty could arise in the matter of selection. If it is granted, however, that the mortgage first given was invalid in law, it would at least constitute a valid equitable lien as •between the immediate parties, which could be enforced in accordance with their intention. Long before the rights of King or- McLain, if they had any, intervened, the second sale was made, and Martin became the owner of the entire herd. The mortgage then made covered the rest of the cattle, and the two together covered the entire herd. After he became the owner of all, and had mortgaged all, the necessity for separation no longer existed. No rights intervened between the filing of the first mortgage and the execution of the second; and the first, creating at least an equitable lien, was cured of any defects in the description or for lack of separation by the subsequent action of the parties. The agreement and action of the parties indicate that they intended Martin to become the owner of all the steers, and that he should mortgage all to secure the payment of the purchase-price ; and by relation, the second mortgage cured the invalidity of the first. The mortgage on the 109 head was dated at the same time as the one first given, Martin taking them as of November 9, 1885, upon the same terms and conditions as the first were purchased upon, and relieving the plaintiff from any charge for feeding the 109 head while Martin had them in his possession. We are only following the purpose and action of the parties when we treat their several actions as a single transaction. If the company had sold 250 steers out of the herd to Martin on one day, and taken a mortgage *686back on that number, and on the following day had sold the 111 steers and taken a mortgage on them, it would hardly be questioned but that it should be treated as a single transaction, and that, as all were mortgaged, no selection or separation would be necessary. As no rights intervened during the time that elapsed between the tw.o sales, the case supposed does not differ from the one we are considering. Taking these transactions together, as they should be considered, the mortgages include all the steers sold to Martin, and so far as the testimony shows, all that he owned or had had under his control, and hence the description cannot be regarded as insufficient. (Brown v. Holmes, 13 Kas. 482; Shaffer v. Pickrell, 22 id. 619; King v. Aultman, 24 id. 246; Mills v. Lumber Co., 26 id. 574; Sims v. Mead, 29 id. 124; Crisfield v. Neal, 36 id. 278; Schmidt v. Bender, 39 id. 437.) All the steers which Martin had purchased or which he owned having been mortgaged, there could be no difficulty in identifying the property covered by the mortgages.
*6882. Evidence-jury. *686We may look beyond the description in the instruments for purposes of identification. In general, a description which will enable third persons, aided by such inquiries as the mortgage itself suggests, to identify the property, is sufficient. If the defendant had examined the records of Lincoln county, as it was his duty to do, he would have found the two mortgages dated November 9, 1885, in which the cattle were described by their ages and the marks and brands which they bore, and wherein it is stated that they are the cattle purchased from the plaintiff. If he had pursued the inquiry suggested by the instrument, he would have discovered that Martin had purchased the entire herd of cattle, and had mortgaged them all to the company to secure the payment of the purchase-price; and that all the cattle which Martin had purchased or held in his possession were those particularly described by marks and brands in the mortgages which he had given. He could not possibly have been deceived in respect to the property intended to be mortgaged, nor could he be prejudiced by the failure to separate the cattle when the first *687purchase was made. If he had examined the records of Jewell county, where the cattle were held at the time the mortgage to him was executed, and where King, who claimed to be the owner, resided, he would have learned the history of the transactions between the cattle company and Martin; but instead of examining the records of either Lincoln or Jewell counties, as ordinary prudence even would dictate, he claims to have invested $10,000 in a roving herd of cattle that he had never seen, the owner of which he does not know, and without examining the records to ascertain whether this stranger had a title to the cattle, or whether there were any existing liens upon them. The contention of the defendant that the lack of separation when the first, purchase was made invalidated the mortgages, if good, goes too far for his purpose, and virtually denies his own claim of title. If that fact rendered the mortgage void, it would for the same reason invalidate the sale to Martin; and as a person cannot sell or mortgage property which he does not own, neither Martin nor King could convey any interest in the cattle to the defendant. But as we have seen, the purchase of all the cattle rendered the separation unnecessary, and the mortgaging of all removed any doubt as to what property was intended to be covered by the mortgages. If the defendant had taken the description contained in the mortgages and gone to Martin for explanation, and to the place where the cattle were kept, and there examined them to see if they bore the marks and brands described in the mortgages, and pursued the inquiries which the mortgages suggested, he must have been satisfied that the Inter-State Galloway Cattle Company held an existing lien upon the steers offered to him as security for his loan, and that neither King nor Martin had any right to mortgage, sell, or otherwise dispose of them. If the plaintiff showed upon trial that it owned all or any of the cattle, or had any interest in them or in the surplus over and beyond any claim of the defendant, then the judgment is erroneous. Before the court can take a case from the jury upon a demurrer to the evidence, it “must be able to say that, admitting every fact *688that is proved which is favorable to the plaintiff, and admitting every fact that the jury might fairly and legally infer from the evidence favorable to the plaintiff, still the plaintiff has utterly failed to make out some one or more of the material facts of his case.” (Brown v. Railroad Co., 31 Kas. 1.) The evidence offered clearly tended to establish the issue prerented by the plaintiff, and should have been submitted to the jury. The judgment of the district court will therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
All the Justices concurring.