Lee Wilson & Co. v. Crittenden County Bank & Trust Co.

135 S.W. 885, 98 Ark. 379, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 135 S.W. 885 (Lee Wilson & Co. v. Crittenden County Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee Wilson & Co. v. Crittenden County Bank & Trust Co., 135 S.W. 885, 98 Ark. 379, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 139 (Ark. 1911).

Opinion

Frauenthal, J.

This was an action instituted by the Crittenden County Bank & Trust Company, .plaintiff below, against the Clements-Stevens Lumber Company and N. C. Coverdale, seeking to recover judgment upon a note and acceptance due by them to plaintiff, and to have the .same declared a lien on a lot of lumber, and for the foreclosure of such lien. At the time of filing the suit, plaintiff also sued out a specific attachment for the enforcement of said lien, which was levied upon the same lot of lumber. Lee Wilson & Company and the Kansas City Packing Box Company filed separate interventions in the case, in which they claimed to be the owners and in the possession of said lumber by reason of having purchased same from the said lumber company and executed bonds for the retention thereof.

Upon the trial of the case the chancellor found that the defendants were indebted to plaintiff upon said acceptance and note, and that the said lumber had been pledged to it for the payment thereof. A decree was entered in favor of plaintiff for the amount of said indebtedness, and the same was declared a lien, by reason of said pledge, upon said lumber; and a return thereof by the interveners was ordered, and in the event same was not returned it was decreed that judgment should be had upon the bond of said interveners for the value of said lumber.

The evidence adduced upon the trial of this case was virtually undisputed, and the case that is thereby presented is as follows:

The defendant Coverdale was engaged in the manufacture of lumber at Marion, Ark., and on September 17, 1909, he had stacked upon his yards 198,300 feet of gum lumber. This lumber was stacked in piles upon an acre of land which had been leased by said Coverdale. On said day he sold said lumber to the Lumber Company, and executed to it a bill of sale therefor, and also executed to it a written lease of the said acre of ground upon which said lumber 'was stacked. In order to make a payment to Coverdale upon said lumber, the Lumber Company on September 17 accepted a draft drawn by him upon it for $375, payable November 17, 1909, and some days later executed a note to him. for $500, due sixty days after date. In order to obtain the money upon said draft and note, the manager of the Lumber Company and Coverdale went to the plaintiff, which was engaged in the banking business, and agreed to sell same to the '.plaintiff. Plaintiff purchased the paper from Coverdale, who indorsed the same; and, in order to secure the payment thereof, it was agreed between-said parties that the said 198,300 .feet of lumber should be pledged to it. The cashier of plaintiff testified that at first he refused to purchase the paper, but the manager of the Lumber Company said to him that he was perfectly safe in handling the paper, and that he could have the lumber as security until it was paid. “I said, ‘About the possession of that lumber ?’ and turned to Mr. Coverdale, and asked him if he would hold the lumber on the yard for the bank until the acceptance was paid. He said ‘Yes,’ and it was agreed that Mr. Coverdale should hold the lumber on the yard for the bank until same was paid.” This agreement was made at the office of the bank. Some days later the cashier of the bank walked over to where the lumber was, and looked at it, and probably did this on several other occasions. But' there was no actual change made in the location of the lumber, nor were there any marks or other outward indicia of change of ownership placed upon it. Nor did Coverdale place any marks upon the lumber, or in any way make any outward and visible evidence that the possession of the lumber had been altered or changed. The only testimony relative to any delivery o.r change in the possession of said lumber was that it was agreed between the parties that Coverdale should hold possession for the .plaintiff in order to secure the payment of said acceptance and note, and that thereafter the plaintiff’s cashier walked around and looked at said lumber on several different occasions.

On September 23, 1909, the Lumber Company sold to the intervener, Kansas City Packing Box Company, 150,000 feet of said ,lumber, upon which the intervener paid the sum of $1,125, with the agreement that upon final measurement it would pay any balance that might be due at the price at which it purchased.

Later, the intervener, Lee Wilson & Company, purchased the remainder of said lumber, paying thereon at the time $350, with a like agreement that upon actual final measurement it would pay any remainder that might be due at the price at which it purchased.

At the time these interveners purchased said lumber, the Lumber Company executed to them bills of sale for the lumber so purchased, and the parties went over and examined and counted the identical stacks of lumber which they respectively purchased, and at the time marked said lumber in their respective names. At -the time the interveners purchased the lumber, Coverdale was present, and made no statement that he was holding possession for the plaintiff, or that plaintiff had any interest whatsoever in said lumber. On the contrary, the manager of the Lumber Com-pan)r stated in the presence of Coverdale to the purchasing interveners that the Lumber Company owned the full title to said lumber, free of any lien. Some time later the interveners began to move said lumber, when this suit was instituted.

Upon this state of the case, we think that in order to secure the payment of the indebtedness to the bank, evidenced by said acceptance and note, which had been executed by it to Coverdale, the Lumber Company either mortgaged verbally or pledged the lumber involved in this suit to the plaintiff. It was simply agreed between the parties verbally that the lumber should be and remain as security for the payment of said indebtedness, and we think that the rights of the plaintiff to enforce its lien thereon as against innocent purchasers thereof would be the same whether it should be considered that the agreement was a verbal mortgage or a pledge. In either case it was necessary that the lumber should be delivered to and the possession thereof turned over to the plaintiff in order that its lien should be effective as against innocent purchasers thereof for value. In order that a mortgage shall constitute a valid lien upon chattels as against third persons, when the mortgagor retains possession thereof, it is necessary that it shall be in writing, duly acknowledged and filed for record; the filing of same for record being, by virtue of the statute, legal notice thereof to all persons. But where a mortgagee takes actual possession of the mortgaged property, such notice is given to third persons as effectually as the filing of such mortgage for record. It is therefore well settled under our law that if a mortgagee takes possession of the mortgaged chattels before any right or lien attaches in favor of third persons, his title thereunder would be .perfectly valid although the mortgage was not acknowledged or recorded. A valid mortgage may be created verbally as well as by writing; and therefore if the possession of property is actually turned over to one in order to secure the payment of indebtedness, it becomes as effective as a mortgage as if the agreement was in writing, and the possession of the mortgaged chattel would make such agreement valid and binding as to third persons. Applewhite v. Harrell Mill Co., 49 Ark. 279; Garner v. Wright, 52 Ark. 385.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W. 885, 98 Ark. 379, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-wilson-co-v-crittenden-county-bank-trust-co-ark-1911.