Southern Bank & Trust Co. v. Mathers

106 So. 402, 90 Fla. 542, 1925 Fla. LEXIS 632
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 106 So. 402 (Southern Bank & Trust Co. v. Mathers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Bank & Trust Co. v. Mathers, 106 So. 402, 90 Fla. 542, 1925 Fla. LEXIS 632 (Fla. 1925).

Opinion

Brown, J.

-Burns, an automobile dealer of Miami, needed $6,250 in order to pay for and obtain delivery of a car load of automobiles then in the hands of the carrier. He obtained this money from the First National Bank on two notes, aggregating that amount, dated October 28,1922, due in 30 days, endorsed by Mathers. On the same date he made a thirty-day note to Mathers for $6,250, providing for interest and reasonable attorney' fees, and executed to Mathers a mortgage on seven automobiles to secure the same. It was provided in the note that it, and the mortgage securing same, were given to secure the payment of the notes which Burns had given to the Bank and which Mathers had endorsed, and that if Burns paid his notes to the bank, the note and mortgage to Mathers should thereupon be'satisfied and cancelled.

The notes fell due November 27 and were not paid by Burns. The latter died on November 29. Mathers paid Burns’ notes to the bank some days later. The mortgage was filed for record on December 1. On December 2, letters of administration were issued by the County Judge’s Court to the Southern Bank and Trust Company,’which, on the same date, obtained an order for the sale of the assets of the deceased then in its possession, upon giving ten days ’ notice. It seems that three of the seven automobiles constituted substantially all of the assets. On December 20 Mathers filed a bill for the foreclosure of his mortgage on the three automobiles and for injunction of the sale which the administrator bank was preparing to make under said order, making said Southern Bank and Trust Company and the Maxwell Motor Sales Company parties defeiidant. It was alleged that the latter claimed some right or interest in the property. The *545 bill alleged that if the property was allowed to be sold, it would be scattered and depreciated in value, and complainant’s security lost or impaired; also that the automobiles were not sufficient value to pay complainant’s mortgage, and asked that same be sold to pay the costs, a reasonable attorney fee, the amount .due complainant under the mortgage, and the balance, if any, to be paid into the custody of the court, or as might be then ordered by proper decree. A temporary injunction was granted staying the sale as prayed. The two defendants filed answers alleging that Mathers did not actually pay the two notes of Burns to the bank until December 8, and denied that the property was insufficient to pay complainant’s claim, and denied that the complainant had any right or priority under said mortgage as against the defendants, the mortgage not having beeu recorded until after the death of Burns, and the mortgagee not having taken possession of the property. The Maxwell Motor Sales Company denied claiming any title, right or lien in the property, but claimed an indebtedness on an account against Burns for goods shipped to him on different dates from October 6 to October 27, 1922, due and payable November 15, 1922, proof of which had been filed with the administrator. These answers denied that complainant’s security would be impaired by the administrator’s sale, and incorporated demurrers attacking the equity of the bill on various grounds. The material questions raised are hereinafter considered.

The cause was submitted on bill and answers to W. I. Evans, Esquire, who had been agreed on and duly appointed as referee, and came on for hearing. July 17, 1923. On August 3 the referee made his findings, which were mailed to all of the attorneys for all parties defendant on that date, according to certificate made thereon by the referee, and which is not denied. On the same day the referee rendered a final decree, in accordance with his findings, *546 making the temporary injunction permanent and ordering the administrator to pay the amount ascertained to be due complainant Mathers on the mortgage debt, together with interest and an attorney fee of $700 (being approximately 10 per cent of the debt), and on failure of the administrator to pay the same, a foreclosure sale of the described property was decreed as prayed in the bill. This decree was dated August 3, entered August 4, and from it both defendants appeal.

Section 3838 of the Revised General Statutes of 1920, reads:

“No chattel mortgage shall be valid or effectual against creditors or subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration and without notice unless it be recorded, or unless the property included in it be delivered to the mortgagee and. continue to remain truly and bona fide in his possession. ’ ’

The provisions of this section are quite similar to those of 3822, relating to transfers and mortgages of real estate. Both use the identical language as to the classes to be protected against unrecorded transfers or mortgages, to-wit: “creditors or subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration and without notice. ’ ’

Although recording statutes usually provide that an unrecorded mortgage is void as to creditors, the prevailing-doctrine makes the mortgage on persofiality as well as realty void only against those creditors who obtain a lien on the mortgaged property before the instrument is filed for record. Rogers v. Munnerlyn, 36 Fla. 591-600, 18 South. Rep. 699; Carolina Portland Cement Co. v. Roper, 68 Fla. 299, 67 South. Rep. 115; 11 C. J. 515.

No lien having been obtained by the only other creditors shown by the record in this case, the above doctrine disposes of the controlling question in the case. The mortgage having been filed within four days after Mathers’ liability as endorser accrued, and within two days after the death of *547 the mortgagor, and before an administrator was appointed, no unreasonable delay or laches in filing the mortgage is shown, even if the appellant were in a position to raise that question. The delay was not prejudicial to the Maxwell company, for its credit sales to Burns had been made before the mortgage was executed, and the purpose and effect of Mathers’ endorsement of Burns’notes and taking the mortgage to secure him (Mathers), was not to impair, but to increase, Burns ’ assets above what they were when the Maxwell Company extended credit.

There is nothing in the statute prescribing or limiting the time within which the record of the mortgage must be made, and it may be recorded after the debt secured is due, though of course it would not be valid as against subsequent purchasers for value without notice, or creditors who had obtained liens, before recordation. ‘ ‘ There might be eases in which it would appear that there had been unreasonable delay in having the record made, or cases in which the death of the mortgagor prior to the record, and after the lapse of ample time for it during his life, would become of consequence; and in these eases, denoting laches, a more rigid application of the statute might be proper.” Reese v. Taylor, 25 Fla. 283, 288, 5 South. Rep. 821. But there was no laches here of which these appellants have any right to complain — not even the failure to record until two days after the death of the mortgagor. It has been held that a mortgage, executed and delivered during the life of the mortgagor, may be recorded after his death. Jones on Mortgages, 7 ed. Sec. 509; 11 C. J. 532; Williams v. Jones, 95 N. C. 504.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 So. 402, 90 Fla. 542, 1925 Fla. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-bank-trust-co-v-mathers-fla-1925.