Schatz v. Kintyre Farmers Co-Operative Elevator Co.

202 N.W. 855, 52 N.D. 290, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 28
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 N.W. 855 (Schatz v. Kintyre Farmers Co-Operative Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schatz v. Kintyre Farmers Co-Operative Elevator Co., 202 N.W. 855, 52 N.D. 290, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 28 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

*292 BüRKE, J.

This is an action for the conversion of grain upon which the plaintiff claims to have a thresher’s lien. A jury was waived and it was tried to the court, who made findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of the plaintiff, upon which judgment was duly entered. The facts are as follows: the plaintiff threshed grain for and on the land farmed by one Alex Kauko, in both Logan and Emmons Counties, North Dakota, and filed claims for threshers’ liens in both counties. The defendant bought the grain threshed upon said lands, and plaintiff, after a demand on the defendant for said grain, and a refusal of the defendant to deliver the same, brought this action for damages against the defendant for the conversion of said grain. The liens so filed alleged that the threshing was done for Alex Cauko and were filed and indexed by the register of deeds in said counties under the letter C and not under the letter K. The defendant inquired of the register of deeds of said counties whether there were any liens against Alex Kauko, or on his crops, and was informed by such officers that there were none.

Lars 0. Kleppe, Manager of the defendant elevator company, Erank Simon, one of the bankers in Kintyre, ■ North Dakota, and John A. Diehl, who lived in Kintyre for about fifteen years, during which time he was in the grain business, machinery business, and banking business, all testified that they knew Alex Kauko, knew his signature, did business with him, and that he spelled his name, Kauko, and that they never saw it spelled any other way. Two notes signed Alex Kauko were identified and introduced in evidence, showing that Alex Kauko spelled his name, Kauko. There was no evidence that the name was ever spelled Cauko, and, while it was admitted that the name Kauko was pronounced Cowko, there is no evidence that the, defendant knew that Cauko was pronounced Cowko.

The learned trial judge states in memorandum opinion, “that all parties except the debtor seems to have acted in good faith, and the sole particular question in the case is who shall lose the money involved?” *293 This appeal presents that one question — “wbo shall lose the money' involved?” If the thresher’s lien is valid, properly filed, and indexed, so as to be constructive notice, the lower court must be affirmed, otherwise, the decision must be for the defendant. It is conceded, and this court has uniformly held, that statutory liens must contain all the information required by the statute and be filed and indexed according to law. The Threshers’ Lien Law, § 6855, Comp. Laws, 1913 provides that:

“Any person entitled to a lien . . . shall, within thirty days after the threshing . . . file - in the office of the register of deeds of the county in which the grain was grown a statement in writing, verified by oath, showing the amount and quantity of grain threshed, the price agreed upon for threshing the same, the name of the person for whom the threshing was done and a description of the land upon which the grain was grown.”

Section 6819, Comp. Laws, 1913, provides that:

“It shall be the duty of the register of deeds to file and index any statement or lien upon personal property required by law to be filed in his office, the same as a mortgage upon personal property, the person filing the lien being treated as mortgagee and the person against whom the lien is filed as mortgagor.”

Section 6165, Comp. Laws, 1913 provides that:

“Every register of deeds with whom any such mortgage is filed must endorse a number upon the same in regular order together with the time of receiving the same and must enter the name of every party thereto in a book kept for that purpose alphabetically, placing mortgagors and mortgagees under a separate head and stating in separate columns, opposite each name, the number indorsed upon the mortgage, the date thereof 'and of the filing . .

In the case of a thresher’s lien, these three sections must be complied with, or it is not constructive notice. The statement filed must contain every provision that the law requires and it must be filed in the office of the register of deeds and indexed alphabetically the same as a chattel mortgage. The requirement of the name of the man for whom the threshing is done is important, for, without the name, it can not be indexed alphabetically, or at all. It will not help the situation if the first letter of the surname is wrong as in this case, for it is then *294 indexed under the wrong letter. There is no other record of liens, or of chattel mortgages, except the index and the mortgages and liens which are on file can only be found by referring to the index.

This is the first time this question has been before this court, although the lien record in this case is more defective than the record in the case of Gilbert v. Gale, 50 N. D. 414, 196 N. W. 314, and the case of Turk v. Benson, 30 N. D. 200, L.R.A.1915D, 1211, 152 N. W. 354. In the first case the court held that a judgment lien upon the land of “A. N. Pearson” is not constructive notice, under the doctrine of idem sonans, to one and the same person as “Andrew Pehrson”, and the same is true in the second case as to a judgment against “William J. Bidout” upon a search for “William G. Bidout.” In both cases the first letter of the surname is correct and if the same were true in the case at bar, it would at least be indexed under the proper letter and in the examination of the index, the searcher might have found information which would have put him upon inquiry to search further.

The plaintiff claims that since Kauko and Oauko are pronounced Oowko, that it is the same name and that under the doctrine of idem sonans it was the duty of the defendant to search the index under the letter “0” as well as the letter “It”. Why should this burden be placed upon the defendant ? The Threshers’ Lien Law is enacted for the benefit of the thresher and by complying with this law enacted for his benefit, he has a lien against all the world. In this case the plaintiff knew Kauko; he did his threshing in both Emmons and Logan counties ; he kept a record of the grain threshed and it was his dirty to learn from Kauko the correct spelling of his name so that it could be properly indexed, alphabetically the same as a chattel mortgage, and, having failed to do so, his liens as filed and indexed were not constructive notice. The doctrine of idem sonans does not apply when the first letter of the surname is the wrong letter, although it may have a sound of some other letter. The case of Boyd v. Boyd, 128 Iowa, 699, 111 Am. St. Rep. 215, 104 N. W. 798, is a case in point. The court says:

“It is not contended by appellant that where a judgment debtor takes title to real estate in a name other than his own, and hence other than the name designated in the judgment, and afterwards mortgages the property to an innocent third person, the judgment is the para *295 mount lien. It seems to be their thought that, as 'Sheffey’ and 'Chef-fey’ are or may be pronounced alike, the instant case should be ruled by the doctrine of idem so neons. But this cannot be.

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Related

J. I. Case Co. v. Sax Motor Co.
256 N.W. 219 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)
Carlson v. Powers Elevator Co.
238 N.W. 548 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)
Murie v. National Elevator Co.
236 N.W. 269 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)
Breyer v. Gale
207 N.W. 46 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
202 N.W. 855, 52 N.D. 290, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schatz-v-kintyre-farmers-co-operative-elevator-co-nd-1925.