The peremptory instruction given by the court to the jury, that upon all the evidence they should answer the issue in favor of the plaintiff, presents the question whether in any view of the evidence there was ground for defense to the plaintiff’s action.
The defendant appellant, in his brief and in his argument, concedes that under the general rule the execution and recording of a chattel mortgage or other lien on personal property in the county and state where the mortgagor then resided and where the property then was situated would ordinarily constitute notice to subsequent purchasers from the mortgagor in another state to which the property was subsequently removed without the consent of the mortgagee. The case was tried below on that theory, and we will consider the appeal in accord with that view. See G. S., 47-20; Anderson v. Doak, 32 N. C., 295; Hornthal v. Burwell, 109 N. C., 10; Sloan Bros. v. Sawyer-Felder Co., 175 N. C., 657, 96 S. E., 39; Whitehurst v. Garrett, 196 N. C., 154, 144 S. E., 835; Apple-*433white Co. v. Etheridge, 210 N. C., 433, 187 S. E., 588; Truck Corp. v. Wilkins, 219 N. C., 327, 13 S. E. (2d), 529; Finance Co. v. Clary, ante, 247, 41 S. E. (2d), 760; 10 Am. Jur., 729; Restatement, Conflict of Laws, sec. 275; 57 A. L. R., 714; 148 A. L. R., 380; Jones on Chattel Mortgages, 301; Motor Investment Co. v. Breslauer, 64 Cal. App., 230; Mercantile Acceptance Co. v. Frank, 265 P., 190; Shapard v. Hynes, 104 Fed., 449.
Without undertaking to controvert plaintiff’s position on this phase of the ease, the defendant calls attention to the evidence tending to show that before the conditional sale agreement was filed for registration on 5 June, 1946, the automobile had been permanently removed to Guilford County, North Carolina, where the mortgagor resumed his former domicile. It is contended that under the Georgia statute (Code 67-2501) (3320) mortgages and liens of all kinds, as against the interest of third parties acting in good faith and without notice, shall “take effect only from the-time they are filed for record in the clerk’s office,” and that in the ease at bar, prior to the time the lien was filed for record in Georgia, the property had been removed to North Carolina and had come to rest in this State in the possession of York; and that hence the lien should not be held, by virtue of its recordation, to attach to or become effective as to property then in North Carolina.
This is the view expressed by the Supreme Court of Wyoming on similar facts in Yund v. Bank, 14 Wyoming, 81. In that ease movable personal property was mortgaged in Oklahoma and before the instrument was recorded the property was removed to another state, where other liens attached. It was held that the subsequent registration of the paper in Oklahoma did not make it good against subsequent encumbrances in the state to which it was removed. The Court said, “The mortgage was void as against creditors of the mortgagor in Oklahoma unless filed (for record), and not being filed before the property was removed to the Indian Territory, it went there free of ’any lien as to creditors, and the subsequent filing in Oklahoma could create no lien upon it in a foreign jurisdiction.”
In Truck Corp. v. Wilkins, 219 N. C., 327, 13 S. E. (2d), 529, relied on by the appellee, it was said, “the general rule of comity, in the absence of a modifying statute, protects the lien of a retention title contract on personal property duly registered and indexed in the state wherein it was executed and the property was then located, after the removal thereof to another state without registration in the latter state.” It would seem from the language used that the lien which was made effective by registration and for that reason protected in another state, applied to property “then located” in the state where, it was registered; that is, to property there located at the time of the registration of the lien.
*434We are not inadvertent to the plaintiff’s position. It is pointed out that, in addition to the admitted evidence of the registration of the lien in Georgia, there was evidence that Charles M. York, whose parents reside in Greensboro, was only 17 years of age at the time the automobile was purchased from him by Ilodges; that the automobile bore a Georgia, license plate; that the only evidence of title York exhibited was an automobile registration card; and that the purcháser was advised as to York’s record. The plaintiff contends that under the circumstances, the failure to require production of certificate of title, or to make inquiry in Georgia as to encumbrances was evidence of such negligence on the part of Hodges and the defendant as to defeat defendant’s claim of acting in good faith and without notice. But, as we think for the reasons hereinbefore set out the case should be remanded for another hearing, we need not discuss the evidence for and against the defendant on this point. Nor need we determine whether the plaintiff’s delay in recording its lien on property so mobile delivered into the possession of one whose stay in Georgia was more or less transient, was evidence of negligence on the part of the plaintiff. The record is not clear as to the issuance or custody of the certificate of title in Georgia.
Charles M. York has not been made a party to this action, and as both . plaintiff and defendant claim title to the automobile under him, the rights of the parties herein are unaffected by, his nonage.
Upon the evidence offered we think the court below was in error in giving the peremptory instruction complained of, and that the case should have been submitted to the jury with appropriate instructions as to the principles of law applicable to the evidence presented. As there must be a new trial we deem it unnecessary to consider the other exceptions noted and brought forward in defendant’s appeal.
New trial.