Kimball v. Sattley

55 Vt. 285
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 Vt. 285 (Kimball v. Sattley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimball v. Sattley, 55 Vt. 285 (Vt. 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Yeazey, J.

June 21, 1880, the National Life Insurance Company held a mortgage on defendant’s farm to secure the payment of $11,000, expressed in promissory notes, then overdue, this mortgage being dated in 1874. It also held on same date, June 21, a chattel mortgage on some stock and other personal property on the farm, as further security for a part of this debt. The defendant was in possession when the ■ mortgages were given, and has so continued ever since, and on the day named conveyed to this company, by a chattel mortgage in form, but executed with all the formality required in the execution of a mortgage of real estate, certain personal property on said farm, and as stated therein, “ also, all the grass and oats and corn now growing on two hundred and thirty acres of said farm,” to further secure $2,000 of said indebtedness. This mortgage was duly recorded June 23d, in the records of mortgages of personal property. On the 3d of September, 1880, after the grass and grain had been harvested and stored in barns on the farm, certain creditors of the defendant caused it to be attached as his property. The defendant afterwards disposed of this hay and grain under the authority of the mortgagee, a part by sale, and a part by consumption on the place. Thereupon the plaintiff, who was the attaching officer, brought this suit in trespass and trover against the defendant who was the mortgagor.

The question is as to the effect of the mortgage given June 21. [290]*290It was a good conveyance between the parties; but did it create a prior lien in the mortgagee as against said attachment ?

As to the grain described in the mortgage, the mortgagee’s lien was superior under the chattel mortgage aqt; because the owner of land may make a valid mortgage of his crop that he has planted and before it is harvested as well as after. This is upon the principle that, although the crop intended to be conveyed is not at the time of the mortgage in actual matured existence and in that form actually belonging to the mortgagor, yet it potentially belongs to him as an incident of other property then in existence and belonging to him. In the language of Chief Justice Hobart : “ Land is the mother and root of all fruits. Therefore, he that hath it may grant all fruits that may arise upon it after, and the property shall pass as soon as the fruits are extant.” Grantham v. Hawley, Hob. 182 ; Evans v. Roberts, 5 Barn. & Cress. 836 ; Jones on Chattel Mortgages, s. 140, and cases cited in the notes thereto. The doctrine of potential possession is restricted to cases where the property producing the product, growth or increase belongs to the mortgagor, and is not extended to mere possibilities or expectancies of acquiring property without any present interest in it. The Vermont Chattel Mortgage act provided at the time this mortgage was executed that “ all personal property not exempt from attachment . . . shall be subject to mortgage,” &c. It is contended that this clause, italicised for convenience of reference here, operated as a restriction or limitation as to personal property that might be mortgaged. We think that clause was never intended to have that effect. The object of the act was not to make chattel mortgages lawful, because they were lawful before by the common law, but to make the public record take the place of possession, and thus overcome the rule in this State that a mortgage of non-exempt property, without change of possession, is invalid as against a subsequent attaching creditor or purchaser. The necessity extended only to non-exempt property, and so we think these words were inadvertently and unnecessarily incorporated at first. In the Revision of 1880, they were left out without changing the scope of the act. The general rule is that any property which is capable of absolute sale may be mortgaged. [291]*291Dorsey v. Hall, 7 Neb. 460. Or as expressed by Powell, page 25 : “ Everything which may be considered as property, whether, in the technical language of the law, denominated real or personal property, may be the subject of a mortgage.”

The more important question is whether the mortgage was valid as to the grass, as against this attachment. The plaintiff contends it was not, on the ground that growing grass is not personal property. He claims there is a fundamental distinction between the products of land resulting from the annual labor of man in sowing as well as reaping, and such products as result from natural growth without planting.

Although the cases are not uniform, there is abundant authority holding or recognizing the distinction to the effect that crops, like corn, wheat, rye, potatoes, &o., called fruotus industriales, are considered as the representatives of the labor and expense bestowed upon them, and regarded as chattels while still growing; and as such go to the executor instead of the heir, and may be seized on execution as chattels, and may be sold or bargained by parol; while growing grass and trees and fruit on trees, called fructus naturales, are, in contemplation of law, a part of the soil of which they are the natural growth, and descend with it to the heir, and until severed cannot be seized on execution, and under the Statute of Frauds cannot be sold or conveyed by parol.

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Related

Barton Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Hamblett
178 A. 900 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1935)
Rogers v. Whitney
99 A. 419 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1917)
Tolman v. Union Casualty & Surety Co.
90 Mo. App. 274 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1901)
Woodward v. Laporte
70 Vt. 399 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1898)
Adams v. St. Johnsbury & Lake Champlain R. R.
57 Vt. 240 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Vt. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-sattley-vt-1883.