Eddy, Fenner & Co. v. Caldwell

7 Minn. 225
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 Minn. 225 (Eddy, Fenner & Co. v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddy, Fenner & Co. v. Caldwell, 7 Minn. 225 (Mich. 1862).

Opinion

Py the Court

Atwater, J.

This was an action brought by the Respondents to recover possession of a span of horses, if which they claimed to be the owners, and alleged that the Defendant had wrongfully taken the property from the possession of the Plaintiff. The Defendant admitted the taking, and justified under a chattel mortgage, executed by one Keough in favor of C. S. Cave and D. W. C. Dunwell, and alleged that said Keough sold to said Cave and Dunwell the said horses with other property described in said mortgage, and that as sheriff of Ramsey County he took the horses under the direction of the mortgagees named in said mortgage, and by virtue of the authority therein contained. The reply denied the principal allegations in the answer, and alleged that the Plaintiffs purchased the horses of one Kellogg without notice of the mortgage.

There was a jury trial and verdict for the Defendant. The Plaintiffs moved for a new trial, and the motion was granted. From the order granting a new trial, the Defendant appeals.

Three grounds were urged in the Court below upon which it was claimed a new trial should be granted, to wit:

[228]*2281. Because of the insufficiency of'the evidence to justify the verdict, and that it is against law.

2. Because of errors in law occurring at the trial, and excepted to by the Plaintiffs.

3. Because of newly discovered evidence material to the Plaintiffs, &c.

We will consider these in their order.

In order to determine whether the first ground of err"or ds well founded, it will be necessary to consider what were the issues formed by the pleadings. The answer sets out at length the indebtedness of Keough to Cave and Dunwell, and the execution of the chattel mortgage by the former upon the property in question, (with other,) as collateral security therefor. That default was made by Keough in the payment of Mb note, and that in pursuance of the power contained in the mortgage, the Defendant took the property by direction of the mortgagees.

' The reply denies that the Plaintiffs have any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the ownership of the property by Keough, as to his indebtedness to Cave and Dunwell, and as to the execution by him of the note and chattel mortgage mentioned in the answer. They also deny in the same manner the allegations in the answer respecting default in payment of the note by Keough, and the taking by Defendant Caldwell, under direction of Cave and Dunwell, of the property in question, and also expressly deny that the property and horses mentioned and described in the complaint, are or ever have been mentioned or described in said chattel mortgage, as alleged in Defendant’s answer or otherwise, and aver that said Dunwell and Cave did not nor did either of them ever own or have possession of said horses. The reply then alleges the purchase of the horses by Plaintiffs of Kellogg, and want of knowledge of the mortgage, or the claim of Cave and Dunwell under the same to the property, and deny that the value of the property is over $300. There is no question of fraud in regard to the mortgage raised by the reply.

I have thus particularly stated the issues raised by the pleadings, for the reason that considerable proof appears to have [229]*229been offered in regard to a point which does not seem to be properly in issue by the pleadings, or at least, immaterial, that of notice on the part of the Plaintiffs, of this mortgage, at the time they purchased the horses of Kellogg. And incidental to this point and involved in it, the further one, that the mortgage does not sufficiently describe the property, and should not have been admitted in evidence.

I think the objection, that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict, is not well taken under - the issues. The Defendant proved by Cave and Dunwell the execution of the note and mortgage, and the consideration therefor, to wit, that the same was a balance of the purchase money, on the sale of the horses, with other property, to Keough. It also appeared that the mortgage was duly filed in the office of the Register of Deeds of Ramsey county. It was also proved that these horses were a part of the property mortgaged, and that Defendant took them- from the possession of the Plaintiffs under and by virtue of the power contained in the mortgage. On all these points the proof was clear and uncontra-dicted. The existence of these facts was put in issue by the reply, and in regard to the sufficiency of the evidence to establish them, there can be no question.

In regard to the question of notice, on the part of the Plaintiffs, I think there was some evidence proper for the consideration of the jury, that the Plaintiffs, or one of them, had notice of the mortgage., Cave swears that he had a conversation with Eddy after the sheriff had taken the horses, and after they were replevied. “ He said he knew they were the same horses we had had in our stables, but he had heard the mortgage was released. Eddy had made application to purchase these horses of me. It was before the mortgage.” It also appears that he asked Kellogg if there was a mortgage upon the horses. It also appeal ed that the horses were purchased by the Plaintiffs at considerable less than their true value. It is true that Eddy says he first heard of the mortgage after he purchased the horses. That the conversation he had with Cave was after the horses were taken. This, however, does not account for the statement in regard to the release of the mortgage, nor in regard to his knowledge that [230]*230Cave owned the horses. Nor upon cross examination does he • deny that he made the statements which Cave testifies to. These were all circumstances which the jury might consider, and we think it could not properly be said there was no evidence on this point tp support the verdict. Woodbury vs. Larned, 5 Minn., 345.

There is another consideration which is not without weight in this connection. Every reasonable intendment must be made in support of the verdict. Where an objection is made in this Court, that the verdict' is contrary to the evidence, the record should show that the whole evidence is before this Court. The record here does not show that this is the case, and the Court may well presume, if indeed it is not bound to do so, that there was evidence produced on the trial sufficient to sustain the verdict.

But there is another reason which renders this question of actual notice immaterial in the/view which we take of the facts disclosed by the record in this case. The answer alleges that the mortgage was executed ou the 14th day of August, 1857, and'that the same was filed for record on said day in the office of the register of deeds of Ramsey county, in which the property was situated. This fact was proved if) evidence, and there does not appear to be any conflict of testimony on that point. In Lienau vs. Moran, 5 Minn., 482, we held in substance that the filing of a chattel mortgage under the old law, [pomp. Stab., p. 348, sec. 3), was constructive notice to all parties of the mortgage. If that be true, the question of actual notice becomes immaterial. If the mortg -ge was in fact void for any reason, whether because the property in question was not covered by it, or because it was fraudulent, notice, either actual or constructive, could be of no consequence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Minn. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddy-fenner-co-v-caldwell-minn-1862.