Hall v. Aitkin

25 Neb. 360
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 Neb. 360 (Hall v. Aitkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Aitkin, 25 Neb. 360 (Neb. 1889).

Opinion

Reese, Ch. J.

This was an action to recover the purchase price paid for a team of horses sold by plaintiff in error to defendant in error. It was alleged in the petition that plaintiff in error had no title at the time of the sale, the team being under mortgage to the Aultman <& Taylor Company, •a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Ohio, and that since the purchase by defendant in error the mortgagee had deprived him of possession, by taking the property and foreclosing the mortgage.

The answer filed by plaintiff in error admitted the sale ■of the property, substantially as alleged, but denied the extent of the consideration, and denied all the other allegations of the petition.

A trial was had to a jury, which resulted in a verdict in favor of defendant in error for the sum of $275, and upon which judgment was rendered. The 'cause is brought [362]*362to this court by proceedings in error, defendant below being plaintiff in error here.

The motion for a new trial and the petition in error contain a large number of assignments of error, but we shall notice only such as are presented by the plaintiff’s brief, following the order therein adopted.

There is no dispute but that the property was taken by the Aultman & Taylor Company, and sold as upon the foreclosure of a mortgage. The evidence shows that-,, about four months after the purchase of the property by defendant in error from plaintiff in error, defendant in error had the team in question hitched to his wagon and tied to a hitching post in the city of Kearney, and without his knowledge or consent an agent of the mortgagee unhitched the horses from the wagon and took them to a barn, where they were kept until they were sold upon the •street.

Upon the trial a witness by the name of Sharp was called by defendant in error, who was interrogated as to his knowledge of the team, and for the purpose of identifying them as being the team mortgaged. During his examination the following question was asked him:

Q,. (Handing.) “Examine that mortgage and ascertain the date of it, and state if you can identify it?”

To this question plaintiff in error objected, and -objected to the paper being used for any purpose by the witness,, unless it was introduced in evidence.

The witness stated that he had never seen the mortgage-before, and could not identify it. He was then asked if the ages of the horses described in the mortgage corresponded with the ages of the horses sold. The answer was, They would not be quite two years old when this mortgage was given. It would lack from November until spring. They were put in as yearlings, but were coming two years old.” To this plaintiff in error objected, and moved to strike out as incompetent, immaterial, and be[363]*363cause there was no proof of the existence, at any time, of an original of which this paper is alleged to be a copy. The objection and motion were overruled. We quote further: ''Plaintiff here offers in evidence, for the purpose of identification of the mares in controversy, a certified copy of the chattel mortgage from Charles Masters and B. E. Masters to the Aultman & Taylor Company. Defense object as improper, incompetent, and no proof of the existence of an original. - Overruled. • Defeiise excepted.

Q. (Handing Exhibit A again to witness.) Examine' the ages of the two horses described there, called colts in the mortgage, and state to the jury, on that examination,, how they compared in age and color with the mares you saw in the possession of Mr. Aitkin in June last?

" Defense objects as immaterial and irrelevant. Overruled. Defense excepts.”

The objection here presented seems to be to the introduction of a certified copy.of the mortgage instead of the original.

In this action of the court we can see no error.

Section 14 of chapter 32 of the Compiled Statutes provides, in substance, that to make a mortgage effective,, where possession is not taken by the mortgagee, it is necessary that the mortgage, or a true copy thereof, shall be filed in the office of the county clerk. It appears that the-original was so filed, and the instrument introduced in-evidence was a certified copy of such original. By the filing of the original, it became a part of the record in the county clerk’s office, and of course could not properly be removed.

Section 408 of the civil code provides that, " duly certified copies of all records and entries or papers belonging to any public office, or by authority of law filed to be kept therein, shall be evidence in all cases of equal credibility as would the original records or papers so filed.”

The offer made by the attorney for defendant in error [364]*364was of a certified copy of the chattel mortgage, and the record shows the proper certificate was attached to the instrument introduced.

John W. Shahan, the county clerk of Buffalo county, was called as a witness, who testified that he was the custodian of the records and of chattel mortgages filed in the office of the county clerk, when he was asked the following question:

Q,. State if you find any chattel mortgage filed from Chace Masters and • B. F. 'Masters, to the Aultpian & Taylor Company ? If so, state the date of the filing.
A. Here is a chattel mortgage from Chace Masters and B. F. Masters to the Aultman & Taylor Company, dated November 21, 1883, and filed December 7, 1883.
“ The same is here marked exhibit B, and offered in evidence by the plaintiff. Defense object, as it does not purport to be a mortgage, but simply a copy and not a certified copy of anything. Nor does it purport to be an original, nor has there been any proof that any ever existed. Overruled. Defense excepts. A true and correct copy of said exhibit B is hereto attached.”

So far as we are able to see, exhibit B is a copy of exhibit A, hereinbefore referred to. And whether it is or not, is not deemed material. There seems to have been no proof offered that the mortgage exhibited was not executed by the persons whose names appear thereon, nor that it was not the original mortgage. The copy attached to the record as exhibit'B is a copy of the instrument introduced. We are, therefore, unable to say whether the mortgage produced by the clerk, and offered in evidence, was the original or not. Neither can we say whether it was duly certified or not.

A Mr. Clapp was called by defendant in error, who, over plaintiff's objection, testified that he took possession of the property by the direction of Savidge and Nevins, the agents of the Aultman & Taylor Company, and [365]*365stated, in substance, that his authority for taking possession was the certified copy of the mortgage which was introduced in evidence as exhibit A, or, at least, one very similar thereto. This testimony was objected to, for the reason that a certified copy of' the mortgage filed would not constitute sufficient authority for taking possession of the team; that the instrument executed by the mortgagor was the only authority by which he could have acted. We-think this objection has been sufficiently met by what wo have-already said.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Neb. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-aitkin-neb-1889.