Hume Bank v. Hartsock

56 Mo. App. 291
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 Mo. App. 291 (Hume Bank v. Hartsock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hume Bank v. Hartsock, 56 Mo. App. 291 (Mo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

— The plaintiff, an incorporated bank, brought an action of replevin against the defendant, who was sheriff of the county, to recover the possession of one hundred 'steers'1 which the plaintiff bank claimed to be entitled to under the provisions of a chattel mortgage executed by Coe and Franklin to it, and which had been subsequently seized by the defendant sheriff, under a writ of attachment against the mortgagors. The plaintiff had judgmentand defendant, has appealed.

At the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the [293]*293chattel mortgage already referred to, to the introduction of which the defendant objected, on the ground that “it was nót recorded in a series of books set aside for the recording of chattel mortgages or conveyances other than the conveyances of real estate,” which objections being overruled by the court, the defendant excepted. The action of the trial court in this regard constitutes the main ground of defendant’s appeal.

It appears from the evidence that, from about the year 1887 there had been kept in the office of the recorder of deeds for Bates county but one series of record books from serial number 89, in which books all deeds and other instruments affecting the title to real estate and all instruments of writing conveying chattels or personal property alone, were recorded, though each class of such instruments were recorded in separate books in the series, on the back of which the contents was indicated. Every book in the series showed on its back the kind or class of instruments which were therein recorded. The plaintiff’s chattel mortgage was recorded in' one of the chattel mortgage books of the series in which no conveyances of real estate were recorded. There was nothing else recorded in the book. It is objected by defendant that this was no recording at all of the plaintiff’s mortgage or, at least, that it was not recorded in the manner required by the' statute, and that, therefore, it imparted no notice and so was invalid as to defendant.

Section 5176, Revised Statutes, provides, that a mortgage of personal property shall not be valid against any other person than the parties thereto, unless recorded in such manner as conveyances of land are by law directed to be recorded. Section 7432 provides, that instruments in writing conveying chattel's or personal property alone, which, by law of this state are required to be recorded, shall be recorded in a series of [294]*294volumes separate from those used for recording conveyances of real estate. As has already been stated there was not kept in the recorder’s office a series of volumes for the recording of the instruments mentioned in the section of the statute just referred to, separate from those of the series used for recording conveyances of real estate. The question, then, is, whether recording these two classes of instruments in separate books of the same series is such .a departure from the requirements of the statute as to render chattel mortgages so recorded inefficacious.

The recording statute, as first enacted — section 3813, Revised Statutes, 1879 — divided the instruments of writing which it was the duty of the recorder to record into five classes and in. the first of which was included instruments concerning real estate and goods and chattels. Revised Statutes, 1855, section 10, p. 1313; Q-eneral Statutes, 1865, section 9, p. 159. The succeeding section, 3814, required that the several classes] of instruments of writing mentioned in the several subdivisions of section 3813 should be recorded in separate books according to the classification therein. In 1874 (Session Acts, 1874, p. 31) the legislature by an act which has been incorporated in the two last revisions of the statute, Revised Statutes, 1889, section 7432, subdivided the first class of the instruments mentioned in section 3813, Revised Statutes, 1879— now section 7430 — by declaring that those instruments concerning goods and chattels should be recorded in a series of volumes separate from those used for recording conveyances of real estate. Now, looking at sections 7430, 7431 and 7432 as they stand related in the statute, it would seem that the object the legislature had in view by their enactment was, to require that each class of such instruments as is therein mentioned should be recorded in separate books, and to [295]*295impliedly forbid the promiscuous recording of such instruments in one or more books. The language of these several sections plainly shows, as we think, that the paramount object of the legislature was, to require that separate books should be used to record each class of the instruments therein mentioned. And while section 7432 requires that the class of instruments concerning personal property shall be recorded in a series of books separate from those used for recording conveyances of real property, we think that if the several classes of such instruments are recorded in separate books kept for that purpose, as was shown to have been done in the case at bar, this is a substantial, though not a technical, compliance with the statutory requirement.

In opposition to this view, we are cited to Jennings v. Sparkman (39 Mo. App. 663), but an examination of that case will show that the question there was different from the one here. One of the questions there was, whether a deed of trust conveying both real and personal property should be recorded in one of the series of volumes of books that were kept separate from those used for recording conveyances of real estate as well as in the latter, and thus be twice recorded. It was, as we think, correctly ruled that the recording of the instrument in a book used for the conveyance of real estate satisfied the statute. It is, therefore, obvious that the question for decision here did not arise in that case.

We have given an attentive and careful consideration to the other cases cited in support of the first paragraph of the defendant’s brief, but do not find that either of them uphold his construction of the recording statutes. In this case the plaintiff’s mortgage was recorded in such a manner as was in substantial compliance with the provisions of the statute, and was sufficient to affect strangers to such mortgage with [296]*296notice so far as such statutory provisions are intended to direct inquirers in their search and examination for incumbrances; or, as was said in Lieby v. Wolf (10 Ohio, 84), whenever the state of the title on record would lead a searcher of incumbrances, who was using common prudence and care in investigating the title, to the knowledge of the fact, the law assumes that he acquired knowledge of it. Upon the facts of this case which are undisputed, we are unwilling to declare that the plaintiff’s mortgage was not recorded so as to meet the substantial requirements of the statute, and for that reason invalid as to the defendant.

The court, on its own motion, instructed the jury that the plaintiff, under the pleadings and evidence, was entitled to recover on the first count in the petition but not under the second %nd that they should find from the evidence as follows: First. The value of the property in suit. Second. The amount due the plaintiff on the notes described in the first count, principal and interest to date of sale of the cattle, less any payment thereon which you may believe from the evidence was made thereon, not made out of the proceeds of the sale of the cattle. Third. The expenses which plaintiff may have incurred in the keeping and sale of the cattle after they were replevied in this suit.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Mo. App. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hume-bank-v-hartsock-moctapp-1894.