Chynoweth v. Tenney

10 Wis. 397
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 10 Wis. 397 (Chynoweth v. Tenney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chynoweth v. Tenney, 10 Wis. 397 (Wis. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court,

PaiNU, J.

The decision of this case depends upon the effect to be given to a chattel mortgage, given by the appellant, which describes the property in these words: "All my stock of harnesses, whips, saddles, and other mer[399]*399chandize, now on hand manufactured, or such as shall he manufactured, or bought and contained in the shop or store occupied by me,” &c. It contained also a power of entry and seizure on default, &c.

The defendants, as agents of the mortgagees, took possession, subsequently, of the property in the shop, which, however, the proof showed to have been bought by the mortgagor, and placed there after the execution of the mortgage.' The appellant then replevied it. The material question in the case fairly arises on the first instruction asked by his counsel, which the court refused to give. It was this: if the jury found the property in question was manufactured after the execution of the mortgage to Hartley 1& Co., and from materials also purchased after its execution, that in that case the said mortgage as to those articles was inoperative and void, and would not justify the defendants in taking said property from the plaintiff, against his will.” '

The effect to be given to conveyances which purport to grant property to be there after acquired by the grantor, has of late occupied the attention of courts to a considerable extent, and does not seem to be entirely settled. The maxim of the Common law, that “a man cannot grant or charge that which he hath not,” if applied to it without qualification, would readily determine it. But the counsel for the respondents have assailed this maxim, and have contended with great force, that it ought not to be applied in this case. The position taken is, that while the authorities establish that as between the grantee and creditors of the grantor, or subsequent purchasers from him, the conveyance does not pass such after acquired property, yet that they do not establish it as between the parties to the conveyance, and that'as between them it should be held operative. In support of this position, the various authorities on the subject are commented on, with much force and discrimination, in the printed argument of [400]*400the respondents, and we have examined their position with that attention which the importance of the question demands. It appears, undoubtedly, that the question, in most of the cases, has arisen between the grantee and subsequent purchasers or creditors of the grantor. But this was not so in all. And even in those where such was the case, while the courts have sometimes alluded to the use that might be made of such conveyances, if sustained, to defraud creditors, yet in no one which has fallen under our observation, has the decision assumed that the question should be decided differently, in favor of creditors, from what it should be when occurring between the parties. On the contrary, the grounds upon which those decisions are based, seem to preclude.this idea. They are not based upon the ground of fraud. If they were, ' that would be a sufficient ground in itself, and would have relieved the courts from the necessity of inquiring further into the legal effect of such conveyances to pass the property. They were based upon the ground, that according to the maxim alluded to, the conveyance was not operative to pass the property. The creditor or subsequent purchaser held it, not because fraud made it void as against him, but because as between the parties to the conveyance, it had, and could have, no effect to transfer the property. When those decisions, therefore, in favor of the creditor, are placed upon the very ground that it was impossible in law for the grantor to convey the property, and so he did not convey it, they would seem to leave no room to say, even when the question occurred between the parties, that it was possible to convey it, and it was conveyed. If this can be said as between the parties, then some other reason must be given for the decisions in the case of creditors. It must be said, not that the grantor could not convey, but that the conveyance was void as against them. For it seems clear that when the question turns upon the possibility of such a conveyance being effec[401]*401tual to transfer after acquired property, it cannot be said in one case to be possible, and in another impossible. For the possibility of it relates, in both cases, to its effect between the parties. And the maxim alluded to, upon which all the opinions rest, evidently relates entirely to the effect of the conveyance between the parties, without being founded upon any considerations growing out of the rights of third persons. We think, therefore, after carefully examining the authorities cited, that the question as to the effect of such a conveyance, st> far as actually transferring after acquired property is concerned, must be decided in the same way, whether it arise between the parties to the instrument or otherwise.

The case of Lunn vs. Thornton, 50 E. C. L., 379, was a case where the question arose between the parties, and the grantor was allowed to sustain an action of trover against the grantee, for taking after acquired property, attempted to have been conveyed by a bill of sale. The plea presented the precise question whether a conveyance could transfer property to be thereafter, acquired by the grantor; and the court laid down the rule, which seems fully sustained by all the authorities, some of which will be hereafter referred to upon another point, that such a conveyance was inoperative to transfer the property, without some new act on the part of the grantor ratifying it, after he had acquired it. See, also, Head vs. Goodwin, 37 Maine, 182.

But it is insisted that the plaintiff is estopped from denying the right of the mortgagees. That it is analagous to the case where one sells a specific article of personal property without title, and afterwards acquires title; or where one sells real estate and and warrants the title, having no title at the time, but afterwards acquires it. In each of these cases the grantor is estopped from setting up his after acquired title against his previous grant. And it is said this case comes within the same principle. . At first sight, this'seems plausible, and it re[402]*402quires an effort of the mind to distinguish the cases, but we think they" are fairly distinguishable. An estoppel prohibits one from setting up the truth against some act or statement of his own, upon which another has acted in such manner that he will be injured if the truth is afterwards allowed to be shown. It may be supported, therefore, in the cases above supposed, upon two grounds. In the first place, the party who sells a specific article of - personal property, then in existence and expressly designated, or a piece of real estate, asserts that he then has an existing title, and the vendee purchasing relying on this assertion. He has a right to rely on it. If it is untrue in fact, he is not bound to know it. And it would clearly be contrary to every principle of justice to allow the vendor to set up an after acquired title against his conveyance. But this reason does not exist in case of a conveyance of the kind in question. There it appears on the face of it that the grantor has no title. And the grantee is bound to know that, in law, the conveyance is inoperative. This ground of estoppel, therefore, fails. The other ground is derived from the' implied warranty of title in the sale of personal property, and the express one in the sale of real estate.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Wis. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chynoweth-v-tenney-wis-1860.