Holloway v. Arnold

92 Mo. 293
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 Mo. 293 (Holloway v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holloway v. Arnold, 92 Mo. 293 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Norton, C. J.

This is an action in the nature of trover and conversion to recover damages for the alleged taking and conversion by defendant of certain personal property, consisting of hogs and cattle. The defendant in his answer admits the taking of the property, and justifies his action in -virtue of a chattel mortgage on said property, executed by plaintiff to him, to secure the payment of a debt therein mentioned, which mortgage contained the following provision:

“If the said George W. Holloway shall sell or attempt to sell * * * said property at any time before said indebtedness is fully paid and discharged, whether the same be due or not, then it shall be lawful for the said J. H. Arnold, or any one in his name, to take possession of said property wherever it may be found, and sell the same in any manner that he shall think fit.”

[296]*296It is then averred in the answer that, of the property so mortgaged, plaintiff, in violation of the terms, sold certain hogs and attempted to sell certain cattle, whereupon defendant took possession of the mortgaged property except a few head of cattle, and sold the same and applied the proceeds as a credit on plaintiff’s note.

Plaintiff in his reply avers that after the execution and delivery of the chattel mortgage it was agreed that the conditions of the mortgage should be waived so far as to allow plaintiff to sell all or any portion of the hogs and cattle mentioned therein, and apply the proceeds on the debt secured by it; that after this agreement with plaintiff defendant sold part of the hogs for one hundred dollars, which, in pursuance of said agreement, he tendered to defendant and which he (defendant) refused to receive, in violation of said agreement.

On trial by the court, a jury being waived, judgment was rendered for defendant, from which plaintiff has appealed, and assigns for error the action of the court im giving and refusing to give instructions. The refused instruction is as follows :

“1. If you believe from the evidence that the defendant, Jas. H. Arnold, procured a constable or other officer of the law to go in and upon the lands of plaintiff, without writ or legal process issuing from any judge or court whatever directing thereto, and take therefrom and from the possession of plaintiff’s agent, the cattle and property mentioned in the petition in this case, or any part thereof, and remove the same to some other place and sell it, then the chattel mortgage mentioned in defendant’s answer and introduced in evidence in this case is no defence to this action, and you must find for the plaintiff in a sum equal to the value of the property so taken, as shown by the evidence at the time the same was taken by defendant.”

The following are the instructions given :

“1. Although the mortgage may have been de[297]*297posited with the recorder, not for immediate record, but to be held until the trade between the parties was completed, and then on notification to be recorded, still, if between the time of such deposit and the completion of the trade, the property described in the mortgage had been intrusted to the care of plaintiff, and they, the defendant and plaintiff, made a verbal modification of the mortgage to the effect that the mortgagee might sell the whole or any part of the mortgaged property and apply the proceeds on the debt without further consent, or sell the hogs and use the proceeds, then such verbal modification is valid and binding upon the parties in this suit.”

££2. If the court finds that defendant did consent verbally that plaintiff might sell the hogs and apply the proceeds in payment of the note, and plaintiff sold them for that purpose and intended to apply the proceeds in payment of the note, then such consent justified the plaintiff in making the sale, and defendant has no right to take the property, and the finding should be for plaintiff. If the consent given by defendant was only that plaintiff might sell the hogs and apply the proceeds in payment of the note, and the plaintiff sold them, not for that purpose, but for the purpose and with the intent to apply the money arising from the sale to his own use or in the purchase of other property, then such sale was a breach of the mortgage and verbal consent, and defendant had a right to take the property and sell the same.”

£ £ 3. If defendant consented that plaintiff might sell the hogs and use the proceeds, then the finding must be for plaintiff.”

In order to pass on the action of the court in giving and refusing instructions, reference to the evidence is proper. The evidence was conflicting as to whether, after the execution and delivery of the mortgage and its deposit with the recorder, it was modified by an agreement between plaintiff and defendant, that plaintiff [298]*298might sell all or any portion of the property mortgaged and apply the proceeds on the debt secured by it. The evidence also tended to show that defendant did not take possession of the property till after plaintiff had sold some of the hogs and attempted to sell some of the cattle. It also tended to show that some time after the sale of the hogs, and before defendant took possession, plaintiff offered to pay the proceeds to defendant, which •he declined to receive. It also tends to show that after defendant took possession the property was advertised .for sale and was sold at a fair price at public vendue, and the proceeds applied as a credit on the note securéd by the mortgage. It does not appear that any force or threats were used in taking possession of the cattle, or that the agent of plaintiff having them in charge interposed any objection. In view of. these facts, which the evidence tended to establish, the court did not err in refusing the instruction inasmuch as it required the finding to be for plaintiff, even though the court may believe that he sold the hogs and attempted to sell the cattle in violation of the stipulation in the mortgage and without defendant’s consent.

In support of the instruction we have been cited to section 705, Jones on Chattel Mortgages, where, after saying that upon default the mortgagee may take peaceable possession, and that the law will not allow him to commit or threaten a breach of the peace and then justify his conduct by a trial of the right of property, it is added that: The mortgagee becomes a trespasser by going on the premises of the mortgageor, accompanied by a deputy sheriff having no legal process, and taking possession without the active resistance of the mortgageor. To obtain possession under such a show and pretense of authority is to trifle with the obedience of citizens to the law and its officers.” The only case referred to as the basis for the text, as above embraced in quotation marks, is that of Thornton v. Cochran, 51 [299]*299Ala. 415, which is wholly unlike the case in hand, for there it appears that the mortgagee had given the sheriff an indemnifying bond to levy, and went with the deputy sheriff to the premises of the mortgageor and told him they had levied on ánd taken possession of so much of the crop. What was then done was done colore officii. It does not appear in the case before us that the person who went with defendant, though a constable, was taken for that reason, or as an officer, or that anything was done whatever by color of his office.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Mo. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-v-arnold-mo-1887.