Continental Gin Co. v. Pannell

1916 OK 877, 160 P. 598, 61 Okla. 102, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 819
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 17, 1916
Docket7647
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1916 OK 877 (Continental Gin Co. v. Pannell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Gin Co. v. Pannell, 1916 OK 877, 160 P. 598, 61 Okla. 102, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 819 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

*103 Opinion by

EDWARDS, 0.

Tins case involves the ownership of certain gin property.' The record discloses that the plaintiff held two chattel mortgages upon such property, securing the payment of two certain notes. The first note was dated September 13, 1906, due November 15, 1907. Various payments had been made, the last being on December 16, 1908. The second note was dated October 1, 1907, due October 1, 1908, no payments having been made thereon. Chattel mortgages were executed, securing each of said notes. On January 15, 1913, the plaintiff posted notices advertising the property covered by said chattel mortgages for sale on February 1, 1913, and on said last date plaintiff offered the said property for sale and purchased the same at such sale. At the time of sale the defendant J. M. Pannell was in possession of said property, claiming to be the owner thereof by purchase from the First National Bank of Ryan, and was present and forbade the sale. On December 13, 1913, the plaintiff filed this action in replevin in the ordinary form against J. M. Pannell and the First National Bank of Ryan, Okla. On July 25, 1914, the plaintiff filed an amended petition, making additional parties defendant, and adding to its action in replevin a count alleging the wrongful detention and conversion of the property by defendants, and praying a return of the property or its value. On B’ebruary 22, 1915, plaintiff filed a seeonu amended petition, bringing forward the counts of the first amended petition and pleading more in detail the said causes of action and for the first time setting out the notes and mortgages. The defendants, for answer, deny that there was ever any valid or legal foreclosure or sale of the property described in plaintiff’s petition, whereby any right, title, or interest in and to said property was vested in the plaintiff, and, further, that if the plaintiff ever had any cause of action, the same was barred by the statute of limitations. Upon the trial of the ease in the lower court the plaintiff offered in evidence its notes and chattel mortgages, together with numerous other exhibits, including considerable correspondence between the plaintiff and the bank, through which the defendant Pan-nell claimed to derive his title. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the defendant demurred, which demurrer was by the court sustained.

It is argued by the defendants in error that the pleading of the notes and mortgages in the amended petition, and the count praying for the value of the property in case delivery could not be had, changed the cause of action, and set up a new and independent ground for recovery. But we construe the pleadings on the part.of the plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, to state a cause of action in replevin based on the notes and mortgages for the possession of, or for the value of, the property described in the mortgages ir. case a delivery could not be had. As to the matter of amendment in alleging the notes and mortgages, this being discretionary with the trial court, the action of the court will not be interfered with, in the absence of a clear showing of abuse of discretion. Swope & Son. v. Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co., 6 Okla. 736, 52 Pac. 924; Hawkins v. Overstreet, 7 Okla. 277, 54 Pac. 472; Z. J. Fort Produce Co. v. Southwestern Grain & Produce Co., 26 Okla. 13, 108 Pac. 386; Robinson v. Stiner, 26 Okla. 272, 109 Pac. 238; Culp v. Steere, 47 Kan. 746, 28 Pac. 987; Snider v. Windsor, 77 Kan. 67, 93 Pac. 600.

The case then resolves itself into this: Was the mortgage sale valid or invalid? If invalid, the statute of limitations had barred the note falling due on October 1, 1908, and upon which no payment had been made, and the plaintiff would be entitled, at the time of filing his suit, on December 15, 1913, to a lien only for the amount evidenced by the note upon which the last payment was made December 16, 1908; and this, we think, would be true, although the notes were not pleaded in the original petition, but were first set up in the amended petition. On the other hand, if the mortgage sale was valid and the plaintiff, as purchaser, took good title, it would have two years from the date of the conversion of the property within which to bring action for such conversion.

Plaintiff in error contends that the chattel mortgage sale of February 1, 1913, is valid, notwithstanding the fact that at the time of the sale the property was in the adverse possession of Pannell. The defendant in error, on the contrary, argues that where mortgaged personal property is held adversely, before sale of such property can be legally made by the mortgagee, he must first obtain .possession of the property; that a sale of chattels by a mortgagee out of possession is void. The parties also differ as to whether the notes and mortgages are Indian Territory or Texas contracts, on the theory that if Indian Territory contracts, the Arkansas law in force before statehood will control, and if Texas contracts, the laws of that state govern, and, not being pleaded nor proven, will be presumed to be the same as the laws of this state. But, we do not regard this distinction as vital, for the reason that a different rule prevails for the construction of chattel mortgages where the contracts are executed in one state upon, property in another. In such case the general rule is that the lex *104 situs governs. The rule is stated in 6 Cyc. 1060-1062, in these words:

“It sometimes happens that the nature, validity, construction, and effect of a mortgage has to be determined in a jurisdiction other than that where the contract was made. Where the place of contract and the locus of the property mortgaged coincide, the laws of that jurisdiction will govern the interpretation of the mortgage on the doctrine of comity. In cases where the property is situated in one jurisdiction and the mortgage is executed in another, the law of .the place where the property is situated will usually govern.”

In Jones on Chattel Mortgages, sec. 305, it is said that:

“The lex situs governs when a mortgage is executed in a state other than that in which the property is situated. * * * As a general rule, personal property is governed by the law of the domicile of the owner, and not by the law of the situs of the property; but a transfer of such property by way of mortgage is an exception to the rule, and the lex situs and not the lex domicilii, governs chattel mortgages. The theory that the voluntary transfer of personal property is to be governed everywhere by the law of the owner’s domicile proceeds on the Action of law that the domicile of the owner draws to it the personal estate which he owns wherever it may happen to be located. But this Action is by no means of universal application, and as Judge Story says, ‘yields whenever it is necessary for the purposes of justice that the actual situs of the thing should be examined.’ ”

In Third National Bank v. National Bank of Commerce (Texas Civ. App.) 139 S. W. 665, where a chattel mortgage executed in Missouri, upon property situated in Texas, was under consideration, the court says:

' “It is well settled that the lex situs governs when a chattel mortgage is executed in a state other than that in which the property is situated. Jones on Chattel Mortgages, sec. 305; Wharton on Conflict of Laws, sec. 317.”

In re Brannock (D. C.) 131 Fed.

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 877, 160 P. 598, 61 Okla. 102, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-gin-co-v-pannell-okla-1916.