First State Bank of Ardmore v. King McCants

1913 OK 327, 133 P. 30, 37 Okla. 744, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 20, 1913
Docket2780
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1913 OK 327 (First State Bank of Ardmore v. King McCants) 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
First State Bank of Ardmore v. King McCants, 1913 OK 327, 133 P. 30, 37 Okla. 744, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 277 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, O.

The particular questions in this case .are as to which of two mortgagees has the superior right to certain mortgaged chattels, and whether or not, in a replevin suit by one of the mortgagees for the mortgaged chattels, the other mortgagee can, with leave of court, intervene and have his rights determined.

On December 6, 1906, one T. J. Jordan gave to defendants in error King & McCants, who will hereafter be called in-terveners, a mortgage on certain live stock situated in the Southern district of Indian Territory, in what is now Carter county, Olda. This mortgage was indorsed on the back, “This instrument is to be filed, but not recorded,” and was on said December 6, 1906, filed in the office of the clerk of the United States Court in compliance with the law of .Arkansas on the subject, then in force in Indian Territory. On November 29, 1907, King & McCants filed the statutory renewal affidavit required by the law of Arkansas, which had the effect of continuing the lien of the mortgage and notice thereof, as against all persons, for one year. On January 4, 1908, the First State Bank of Ardmore, plaintiff in error herein, who *746 will hereafter be called plaintiff, obtained a mortgage from Jordan on the same property, which was duly filed under the laws of the state of Oklahoma in Carter county. On December 31, 1908, the said First State Bank brought a suit, as plaintiff, in the district court of Carter county in replevin, and obtained possession of the live stock covered by both mortgages, in addition to considerable property not covered by the mortgage of the interveners. After receiving possession of the. property, the plaintiff bank proceeded to sell the same under the terms and power of sale contained in its mortgage. While this suit was pending, King & McCants filed, with leave of court first obtained, their petition in intervention, setting up their - prior mortgage, together with the renewal affidavit, and alleging a superior lien as to certain -of the property involved in the suit. At a trial in the district court, without a jury by agreement of the parties, the court found the issues in favor of the in-terveners, and that as to a certain horse and some cattle that the lien of their mortgage was prior and superior to that of plaintiff; that defendant Jordan owed interveners $190 balance on their mortgage, and that plaintiff had sold the property covered by interveners’ mortgage and had the proceeds thereof in a like sum in its possession; and that therefore interven-ers were entitled to judgment against the plaintiff for the said amount of money. Judgment being entered accordingly, the plaintiff -brings this writ. of error and relies here upon the two -propositions mentioned at the beginning of this statement.

(1) The principal question is: Did plaintiff’s mortgage, taken at a time when interveners’ mortgage was a valid subsisting lien on the same property, and confessedly prior and superior to plaintiff’s later become superior to the first mortgage, because when suit was brought the year of extension under the renewal affidavit had expired without the filing of 'a second renewal affidavit by interveners?

ITad this entire transaction occurred- — that is, had both mortgages been executed and suit brought under the Arkansas law, thus fixing entirely the rights of both parties under that *747 law — the question would be answered in the affirmative on the authority of McKennon v. May, 39 Ark. 442, and Crawford v. Trigg (Ark.) 15 S. W. 185, and National L. S. Com. Co. v. Taliaferro, 20 Okla. 177, 93 Pac. 983, following those cases. The Supreme Court of Arkansas had consistently held contrary to principle and the weight of authority, as admitted by that court in Crawford v. Trigg, supra, that a second mortgage, taken while the first was a valid lien and notice to all the world by virtue of being filed, became superior to the first, if at the time of suit the first mortgage had then been on file more than one year without a renewal affidavit. This holding was a logical sequence of the rule announced by that court that as to subsequent purchasers or incumbrancers in good faith actual notice of a prior mortgage was no notice at all; that the only notice that would bind or affect a subsequent purchaser or mortgagee was the notice arising out of a compliance with the statute. Main v. Alexander, 9 Ark. 112, 47 Am. Dec. 732; Watkins v. Wassel, 15 Ark. 73; Hannah v. Carrington, 18 Ark. 85; Wright v. Graham, 42 Ark. 140; Hobbs v. Young, 30 Okla. 271, 120 Pac. 946. In other words, that a man might see his neighbor take a mortgage and pay the consideration, and then take a second mortgage, and if he could get it filed before his neighbor’s he would be a subsequent incumbrancer in good faith. This ruling, as has 'been suggested, led to the one in point here, and is contrary to the great weight of authority.

In this case, however, whatever rights the second mortgagee has flow from the law prevailing at the time he took his mortgage; it is an Oklahoma contract, into which the law in force at the time entered. That law, as construed by the courts, said to him when he took his mortgage that a subsequent purchaser or incumbrancer was not such in good faith under the statute (section 4422, Comp. Laws 1909), if he took with notice of the prior incumbrance. Campbell et al. v. Richardson et al., 6 Okla. 375, 51 Pac. 659; Strahorn-Hutton-E. C. Co. v. Florer & Bannerman, 7 Okla. 499, 54 Pac. 710. Our *748 statute on this subject comes from Dakota. Campbell et al. v. Richardson et al., supra, and the Oklahoma territorial Supreme Court followed the construction placed on it by the Dakota Supreme Court in Walter A. Wood M. & R. Machine Co. v. Lee, 4 S. D. 495, 57 N. W. 238.

When plaintiff took his mortgage, interveners’ mortgage was a valid subsisting lien, and being of record in compliance with the registration laws was notice to all persons, including plaintiff. This is conceded by plaintiff, but the contention is made that, with the failure of interpleaders to file the second renewal affidavit when required, that thereafter their- mortgage was void as to plaintiff; we do not think so. Plaintiff took with notice and in hostility to the first mortgage, and under the law of his contract he never became a subsequent incum-brancer “in good faith for value” as against the first mortgage.

Almost this identical question is presented and so decided in Howard v. First Nat'l Bank, 44 Kan. 549, 24 Pac. 983, 10 L. R. A. 537, under practically the same statute. In that case the second mortgage was taken while the first was clearly alive under the Kansas -statute, but when the matter got into suit the contention was made that an attempted renewal affidavit was void, and that therefore the first mortgage had expired and let the second one in to the exclusion of the first. After stating this contention the court says:

“We don’t care to discuss the sufficiency of the affidavit, ■as we believe with the trial judge that under the circumstances of this -case the renewal affidavit it not a material matter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 327, 133 P. 30, 37 Okla. 744, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-of-ardmore-v-king-mccants-okla-1913.