First National Bank v. Hart

241 P. 675, 137 Wash. 110, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1121
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1925
DocketNo. 19539. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 241 P. 675 (First National Bank v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Hart, 241 P. 675, 137 Wash. 110, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1121 (Wash. 1925).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

A noticed motion herein to dismiss was passed to the merits and is now denied by reason of our determination on the merits.

This complicated affair grows out of the claimed rights under several conflicting chattel mortgages and a conditional bill of sale.

In April, 1923, Hart, the mortgagor, and also the vendee in the conditional sale contract involved herein, who had been operating a dairy ranch near Kalama, Cowlitz county, also began operations on a place known in the record as the Marion Smith place, about two miles north of Kelso. He purchased certain cattle from Holbrook, one of the mortgagees involved herein, and gave his notes which Holbrook assigned to Jackson. To secure these notes, Hart gave a chattel mortgage on the fifty head of cattle purchased from Hol-brook, and also on fifty head of cattle which Hart removed from Kalama to the Marion Smith ranch. This chattel mortgage was not filed for record nor indexed until long after the execution and filing of the mortgage given to the respondent bank, which was given priority herein by the trial court.

When Hart removed from Kalama, he brought with him a total of ninety-three head of cattle, fifty of which were included in the Holbrook mortgage. Leichhardt owned a dairy ranch about one mile south of Kelso. Prior to July, 1923, he had contracted to sell the ranch *112 and cattle to the DeLongs, appellants herein. About July 1, Hart negotiated with the DeLongs a deal whereby they cancelled their arrangement with Leich-hardt ; and as a consideration therefor, Hart gave De-Longs a note for $8,000, secured by a mortgage on sixty head of cattle on the Marion Smith place. At the time this mortgage was given, there were one hundred and sixty-seven head of cattle on the Smith place, being sixty-seven head in addition to the one hundred head covered by Holbrook’s mortgage. When the DeLongs took this mortgage they knew of the Holbrook mortgage. The DeLongs did not file their mortgage for record within ten days after its execution, but did file it for record about twelve days after its execution.

After the cancellation of the- DeLong-Leichhardt deal, Hart contracted to purchase the Leichhardt ranch and cattle. A conditional sales contract was executed covering, among other things, seventy-one head of Leichhardt’s cattle, then on the Leichhardt place. This conditional sales contract was not properly recorded and. indexed as a conditional sales contract of personal property is required to be, and we give it no further consideration than was given by the trial court, which held that it was null and void as to respondent bank, and which determination was certainly correct.

After the consummation of the deal between Hart and Leichhardt, Hart moved his dairy operations to the Leichhardt ranch, moving some one hundred and thirty-seven head of cows from the Marion Smith ranch to the Leichhardt ranch. In September, 1923, some forty head were moved back from the Leichhardt place to the Smith place. On December J, 1923, Hart executed, and on December 5, delivered, to the bank a note for $5,000; and, as security therefor, a chattel mortgage in the sum of $5,000 on one hundred and twenty-seven *113 head of cows, the cattle on the Leichhardt place. This mortgage was duly filed within ten days after its execution. About December 20, following, an additional band of seventy-five head of cattle were taken from the Leichhardt place to the Marion Smith place.

In February, 1924, Holbrook started foreclosure proceedings by notice and sale. At that time, Hart had disappeared. At the same time, Leichhardt started to repossess the cattle covered by his conditional sales contract. A large number of cattle claimed by Holbrook to have been covered by his mortgage were driven from the Leichhardt place to the Marion Smith place by Holbrook and the sheriff. A large number were also driven from the Marion Smith place to the Leichhardt place by Leichhardt; and each of these parties were endeavoring to get possession of the cattle which they claimed were covered by their mortgages and bill of sale respectively. The respondent bank thereupon intervened, and had the foreclosure removed to the superior court. Before these foreclosures were instituted, some forty head of cattle had disappeared from Hart's herd, some probably by death, and some by sale.

The DeLong mortgage is very indefinite and imperfect in description. It describes the property intended to be mortgaged as follows:

“The following personal property described as follows: Sixty head of cattle, or thirty head of cows and thirty head of heifers all being guernseys. Said cattle are now all on what is known as the Marion Smith place. [The mortgage then includes some other property not here involved.] . . . The grantors expressly represent and agree that they are the sole owners of all the above described personal property and that the same is free and clear of all incumbrances, and that the same is now in . . . possession in said county.''

*114 It will b© observed that there is no description given of the cattle except “thirty head of cows and thirty head of heifers, all guernseys,” and “located on what is known as the Marion Smith place.” It is not even stated that they are in the county where the mortgagors resided, nor that they were in their possession, but the statement as to whose possession they were in was left blank.

The mortgage from the Harts to respondent bank contained a fairly accurate description of the cattle mortgaged to the bank with some few exceptions, and also located them as being on the Hart dairy ranch, situated in the northeast quarter of section 3, Township 8 North, Eange 2 West, Willamette Meridian, and specifically stated that the cattle mortgaged were in the possession of the mortgagors in Cowlitz county.

Appellants contend that the mortgage of respondent is junior and inferior to their mortgage, because taken with actual knowledge of the existence of the mortgage to appellants, and because of the failure on the part of respondents to make a sufficient showing of good faith. Appellants also contend that the Holbrook mortgage is secondary to theirs because the cattle in the Hol-brook mortgage were imperfectly described, and that Holbrook received forty-eight more head of cattle from the sheriff than his mortgage authorized.

Appellants are in no position to attack the determination of the rights of Holbrook, nor of Leichhardt, because they only gave notice and bond to respondent bank. While this is an equity case, and we will review the matters as to the parties before us, we will not review on appeal anything concerning any of the other parties to this tangled litigation, not brought before us properly on appeal. Mogelberg v. Calhoun, 94 Wash. 662, 163 Pac. 29.

*115

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 675, 137 Wash. 110, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-hart-wash-1925.