Hickson Lumber Co. v. Gay Lumber Co.

63 S.E. 1045, 150 N.C. 282, 1909 N.C. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 17, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 1045 (Hickson Lumber Co. v. Gay Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickson Lumber Co. v. Gay Lumber Co., 63 S.E. 1045, 150 N.C. 282, 1909 N.C. LEXIS 43 (N.C. 1909).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The controversy presented by this appeal is clearly stated in the brief of the learned counsel for appellants, in these *284 words: “The only question which we desire to present on tbis appeal is whether the mortgage to James II. Pou covers the property specifically described in the mortgage to the Hickson Lumber Company by virtue of the following language contained in the Pou mortgage: 'also all the property, real, personal, or mixed, wheresoever thé same is situated, now owned by the Gay Lumber Company or shall be owned during the continuance of the liability hereinafter mentioned.’ We insist that it does not.” The Pou mortgage was executed 24 February, 1903, and duly recorded 6 March, 1903. The Hickson mortgage was executed 24 September, 1903, recorded 16 October, 1903, and embraces five tracts of land, therein described, and one locomotive, all of which property was acquired by the Gay Lumber Company after the Pou mortgage was recorded. The several tracts of land were conveyed by deeds to the Gay Lumber Company, by the grantors therein named, some little time before the execution of the Hickson mortgage and after the recording of the Pou mortgage. Upon the hearing the Hickson Lumber Company offered to prove that the tracts of timber described in the mortgage, and which were acquired subsequently to the execution of the mortgage executed to James H. Pou, were purchased with funds advanced for the purpose by the said Hickson Lumber Company. This evidence was excluded, and the appellant excepted.

For the purposes of this appeal, we will consider the fact offered to be proven as established.

The questions to be considered are:

First, the sufficiency of the terms .of the Pou mortgage to embrace after-acquired property.

Second, the validity of a mortgage which undertakes to bind after-acquired property.

Third, whether or not the fact that the Hickson Lumber Company furnished money to the Gay .Lumber Company, which money was used by the latter company in the purchase of these lands, gives the lumber company a priority over the lien of the Pou mortgage.

1. Although the after-acquired property clause in the Pou mortgage might have been expressed with greater fullness of language, nevertheless there is manifested an undoubted intention upon the part of the mortgagor to bring within the lien of *285 tbe instrument all property, both real and personal, which the mortgagor shall acquire at any time after the execution of the mortgage and during the continuance of 'the liability created by it. From its very nature, such a clause cannot usually describe with accuracy the property the mortgagor will thereafter acquire, for that is unknown. But upon the principle of “Id certum est quod certum reddi potest ” the after-acquired property may be easily identified and brought within the terms of the instrument.

The substance of the authorities is to the effect that when the mortgage is intended to. cover subsequently acquired property, either express terms should be used to that end or else it must clearly appear from the language of the deed that such was the manifest intention of the parties. Holroyd v. Marshall, 10 H. L. Cases, 191; Railroad v. Hamilton, 134 U. S., 296; Hammock v. Trust Co., 105 U. S., 77; Maxwell v. Dental Association, 77 Fed. Rep., 938; Parker Railroad, 33 Fed. Rep., 693.

. In Railroad v. Hamilton, supra, the mortgage included real and personal property “now or at any time hereafter owned or acquired” by the mortgagor. Similar terms are used in other mortgages, which have been sustained by the courts as sufficient to cover after-acquired property, as, for instance, “or which may be acquired during the existence of this security”; “then owned or subsequently acquired’’; “which is now 'owned or shall hereafter be acquired”; “now held or hereafter to be acquired.” Hammock v. Trust Co., supra; Parker v. Railroad, supra; Railroad v. Woeltper, 64 Pa. St., 366.

In Maxwell v. Dental Co., supra, it is said: “It may not be necessary to describe specifically the future property which it is intended the mortgage shall cover, but it is essential that the mortgage shall show that it is intended to apply to after-acquired property of the mortgagor.”

The unbroken current of authority is all in one direction, in requiring either express words or, in their absence, an unmistakable intention to embrace after-acquired property.

Our researches have discovered but one case where words similar to those in the Pou mortgage were held not to cover an after-acquired grant of lands, but we think the decision, which is extremely voluminous, as it covers many points, is evidently based upon the fact that the lands were granted on certain terms *286 or trusts, the object of which would be defeated if the property granted could be subjected to the mortgage lien. Meyer v. Johnson, 53 Ala., 323, and same ease, 64 Ala., 606. The consensus of authority leads us to conclude that the terms employed in the Pou mortgage are sufficient to embrace the after-acquired lands and personal property of the mortgagor.

2. The words used being sufficient, we will next consider the validity of such a mortgage.

It is well understood that at common law nothing can be mortgaged that is not in existence and does not at the time belong to the mortgagor, for a person cannot convey that which he does not own; but it is now well settled that equity will give effect to a contract to convey future-acquired property, whether real or personal. Equity considers that done which the mortgagor has agreed to do, and treats the mortgage as already attaching to the newly acquired property as it comes into the mortgagor’s hands. “It is settled that such a clause is valid,” says Mr. Justice Brewer, in Trust Co. v. Kneeland, 138 U. S., 419. “A clause in a mortgage which subjects subsequently acquired property to the lien of the mortgage is a valid clause,” says Mr. Justice Peclcham, in Bear Lake Co. v. Garland, 164 U. S., 15. Galveston v. Cowdy, 11 Wallace, 459; 1 Jones on Mortgages, sec. 153; Pingrey on Mortgages, sec. 453; Brown v. Dail, 117 N. C., 41; Perry v. White, 111 N. C., 197; Cooper v. Rouse, 130 N. C., 202.

The learned counsel for the appellant contend that “The mortgage to Pou is not upon a railroad, and the peculiar rules applicable to railroad mortgages cannot apply. The fact that a logging road is treated as a' railroad for some purposes does not convert a sawmill into a railroad. The use of the words cannot change the essential nature of things.” Although it appears that the mortgagor, while doing principally a lumber business, owned and operated a railroad twenty miles long, a part of the mortgaged property, we are not treating it, in the consideration of this case, as strictly a railroad corporation, within the common acceptation of that term. .

This principle of equity jurisprudence, as enforced by the

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 1045, 150 N.C. 282, 1909 N.C. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickson-lumber-co-v-gay-lumber-co-nc-1909.