Barchard v. Kohn

29 L.R.A. 803, 157 Ill. 579
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 29 L.R.A. 803 (Barchard v. Kohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barchard v. Kohn, 29 L.R.A. 803, 157 Ill. 579 (Ill. 1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The question in the case is, whether the appellant, Borrmann, mortgagee in the chattel mortgage, had a right to take possession under his mortgage of the goods set off as exempt to William Kohn, the judgment debtor and mortgagor, or whether, by taking judgment upon the notes secured by the mortgage and levying the execution issued thereon upon the mortgaged property and allowing a part of the proceeds of the sale made under the executions to be applied upon the judgment, he thereby waived his right to proceed under his mortgage against the portion of the mortgaged property not sold under the executions and set off as exempt to the judgment debtor. The question arises out of the ruling of the trial court, excluding the chattel mortgage when offered by the defendants as a justification of the alleged trespass and admitting it only in mitigation of damages, and also out of the action of the court in instructing the jury, that, as a matter of law, the chattel mortgage did not justify the defendants in seizing the goods in question.

As the mortgage was not recorded, and provided for the sale of the goods mortgaged in the ordinary course of business, it was void as to creditors, but it was good as between the parties to it. (Gregg v. Sanford, 24 Ill. 17; Forest v. Tinkham, 29 id. 141; McDowell v. Stewart, 83 id. 538; Jones on Mortgages — 4th ed. — sec. 138; Greenebaum v. Wheeler, 90 Ill. 296; Deering & Co. v. Washburn, 141 id. 153).

The main case which holds, that an attachment of the mortgaged property by the mortgagee for the mortgage debt is a waiver of his lien under the mortgage, is Evans v. Warren, 122 Mass. 303. The decision in that case was placed upon the ground substantially, that the liens created by mortgage and by attachment upon the same property are essentially different and cannot co-exist, for the reason, that, under the Massachusetts statutes, the equity of redemption of personal property is not subject to attachment, and hence if the mortgagee causes an attachment to issue against the mortgaged property, it is a waiver of the mortgage lien. The cases, which hold, that the attachment operates as a waiver of the plaintiff’s rights under the mortgage, do so upon the general grounds, that a person cannot avail himself of inconsistent remedies in relation to the same matter, and, having chosen and carried into effect one remedy, he cannot resort to a different one, involving a repudiation of the grounds upon which the first one was based; that the suit on the mortgage and the attachment suit are inconsistent, because the one proceeds upon the ground that the mortgagee is the owner of the property, and the other upon the ground that the mortgagor thereof is owner; that, when the debt mature's, the mortgagee has the right to take the property under the mortgage, he having the legal title subject only to a right of redemption; and that, by bringing the attachment suit, he elects to treat the property as the property of the debtor, and can not, by seeking to enforce his mortgage, assert an ownership and right of possession in himself antedating the attachment.

The reasoning in Evans v. Warren, supra, was held to be unsatisfactory and its doctrine was repudiated in Byram v. Stout, 127 Ind. 195. In the latter case, the mortgagee in a chattel mortgage brought an action to foreclose it; and a junior mortgagee set up, as a defense, that the complainant had previously brought suit upon the evidences of debt secured by his mortgage, and had therein issued a writ of attachment and levied it upon the mortgaged property, and had thereby released his mortgage lien; but the court held that the attachment was not a waiver of the mortgage lien and did not estop the mortgagee from claiming under his mortgage, basing its decision mainly upon the ground that, in Indiana, the mortgagee in a chattel mortgage is a mere lienholder. (Jones on Mortgages, sec. 565). In support of the conclusion, that the mortgagee of personal property is a mere lienholder, Indiana decisions are there ref erred to, holding that personal property under mortgage may be levied upon and sold by execution subject to the mortgage lien.

The case of Howard & Co. v. Parks, 1 Tex. Civil App. 603, follows the case of Byram v. Stout, supra, holding that a mortgage lien upon personal property is not waived by suing out an attachment upon the debt secured by the mortgage, and that in Texas a chattel mortgage has the effect of a lien on the property.

, There can be no doubt, that the Chattel Mortgage act of Illinois recognizes a lien as existing under the mortgage upon the property mortgaged. Section 1 thereof speaks of a mortgage, trust deed or other conveyance of personal property “having the effect of a mortgage or lien upon such property.” (2 Starr & Cur. Ann. Stat. page 1630).

We have held that a court of equity has jurisdiction to foreclose a chattel mortgage. (McCauley v. Rogers, 104 Ill. 578; Dupuy v. Gibson, 36 id. 197; Gaar, Scott & Co. v. Hurd, 92 id. 315). A bill in equity could not be filed to foreclose such a mortgage, unless a lien was thereby conferred which could be enforced against the property. If, therefore, an attachment of the mortgaged property, in a suit upon the debt secured by the chattel mortgage, is not a waiver of the right to proceed under the mortgage where the mortgage is a lien upon the property, such an attachment will not be a waiver in this State when the subsequent proceeding, begun to enforce the mortgage, is a bill in equity to foreclose. In such case, there is no inconsistency between the two remedies, as both certainly recognize the mortgagor as owner.

Where a chattel mortgage is properly acknowledged and recorded, a third person, who is a creditor of the mortgagor, may levy an attachment or an execution upon the property in the possession of the mortgagor subject to the mortgage. (Beach v. Derby, 19 Ill. 617; Pike v. Colvin, 67 id. 227; Durfee v. Grinnell, 69 id. 371).

We have also held, that a chattel mortgage is a conditional sale; that, when there is default in the performance of the condition, the title of the mortgagor vests in the mortgagee; and that the mortgagee, upon default or condition broken, being invested with the legal title, may bring replevin, or trover, or reduce the property to possession, and proceed to sell under the power in the mortgage. (Pike v. Colvin, supra; Durfee v. Grinnell, supra; Cleaves v. Herbert, 61 Ill. 126; Simmons v. Jenkins, 76 id. 479; Arnold v. Stock, 81 id. 407; Greenebaum v. Wheeler, 90 id. 296; Rhines v. Phelps, 3 Gilm. 455). But even in this class of remedies the inconsistency, relied upon as the basis of the theory of waiver, is more seeming than real.

In Howard & Co. v. Parks, supra, whichwas a statutory action for the trial of the right of property, in which it was sought to foreclose and enforce a contract lien upon personalty, the court say: “We are of opinion that * * * this lien was not waived by suing out an attachment upon the debt secured by such lien. We see no such inconsistency in the two suits as that the suing out of the attachment should have this effect.”

In the case at bar, there was no attachment of the property covered by the chattel mortgage in the proceeding upon the note secured thereby; the property was levied upon under an execution issued upon a judgment entered upon the note so secured.

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29 L.R.A. 803, 157 Ill. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barchard-v-kohn-ill-1895.