Talmage-Sayer Co. v. Smith

7 P.2d 536, 91 Mont. 289, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 28
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1932
DocketNo. 6,864.
StatusPublished

This text of 7 P.2d 536 (Talmage-Sayer Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talmage-Sayer Co. v. Smith, 7 P.2d 536, 91 Mont. 289, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 28 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendants Fred Dugan and the Billings Credit Adjustment Bureau have appealed from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Talmage-Sayer Company, a corporation, entered in an action for conversion instituted by the plaintiff against William H. and Elizabeth Smith, man and wife, and these appealing defendants.

The controversy out of which the action arose is as to whether certain cattle sold by the defendants Smith and others, seized and sold under foreclosure of a mortgage held by the plaintiff, were covered by mortgage to the plaintiff, or by mortgages held by these appealing defendants.

Prior to 1924, the defendants Smith were crop leasers on a ranch in Carbon county, owned by one Leroy Sturlin, of whom they had purchased certain cattle, in payment for which they had given him their note, secured by a mortgage on the purchased cattle and their increase, prospective crops, and other personal property.

Sturlin was indebted to the plaintiff, and, in satisfaction thereof, assigned the Smith note and mortgage to it. The Smiths were also indebted to plaintiff, and, in November, 1925, executed to plaintiff, as security for the combined debt, a mortgage on the property described in the Sturlin mortgage. It was not intended by the parties that any cattle owned by the Smiths, except those purchased from Sturlin, should be included in this mortgage. The mortgage describes three red cows branded V9, one Holstein, one White Face, two red and one roan, branded with a U over an S, thus particularly describing nine cows, and adds “5 Yearlings branded [reverse *292 LS quarter circle] and nine calves, being tbe increase from the above cattle.”

In March, 1927, Smith and wife mortgaged to a Columbus bank fourteen head of “mixed colored cows,” eight heifers, one and two years old, and four calves, all branded with the LS brand, and in June of that year they mortgaged to a Billings bank fourteen cows, four heifers, and five calves, all likewise branded, with the exception of two cows branded with a box X. This last mortgage describes one cow as a three year old and the others as seven and eight years old. The LS brand was acquired by Mrs. Smith in 1924.

In 1927 the defendant Dugan, the Credit Bureau being but his alter ego, secured an abstract of the chattel mortgages covering the property of the defendants Smith from the clerk of Carbon county. This abstract disclosed eleven of such mortgages, including the two to the Columbus and Billings banks, but did not include the mortgage to plaintiff, although it was duly filed in that county and kept in good standing by the filing of the required affidavits. Determining that all of the mortgages, except the two to the banks, were outlawed, Dugan purchased those two, and thus secured what he considered either first, or first and second liens, against the Smith cattle.

In the fall of 1928 Mrs. Smith sold sixteen head of cows and young stock, all branded with the LS brand, to one William Birkland, a neighbor, and received therefor two checks totaling $545. The day after the sale, Dugan proceeded to the Smith place with the sheriff for the purpose of seizing the cattle and selling them on foreclosure of his mortgages. The sheriff asked Mrs. Smith “where their stock was,” and she replied that “she had sold them to Mr. Birkland.” Asked concerning the proceeds, Smith admitted that they had the checks in the house, and, on demand, they indorsed and delivered the checks to Dugan, who thereupon “called off” the foreclosure.

Some months later the plaintiff placed its mortgage in the hands of the sheriff for foreclosure. The sheriff seized and *293 sold all property that he could find answering the description in the mortgage, including five cows branded with the LS brand; crediting the proceeds left a balance of over $800 due on the mortgage.

The sheriff testified that he asked Birkland about the cattle purchased from Mrs. Smith, but that he was not able to find them; however, Birkland paid to plaintiff the sum of $545, the value of the cattle, with the understanding that it would be returned to him if plaintiff recovered the purchase money from Dugan. Dugan refused payment, and this action was instituted.

The complaint alleges that Smith and wife, Dugan, and the Credit Bureau conspired together to defraud plaintiff of its mortgage security, and that plaintiff expended the sum of $150 in pursuit of its property, and $150 in attorneys’ fees. Dugan and the Credit Bureau, by answer, denied the allegations of the complaint, and, by cross-complaint, alleged that the cows sold on plaintiff’s foreclosure were not included in its mortgage, but were covered by the Dugan mortgages. They prayed that plaintiff take nothing by its action, and that they be awarded judgment against plaintiff for the value of the cows alleged to have been wrongfully seized.

Issue was joined by reply, and the cause tried to the court without a jury. Each side tendered proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law; those tendered by the plaintiff were adopted by the court, and thereon judgment was entered in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, except as to the claim for $150 expenses, on which there was no substantial evidence adduced.

The appealing defendants predicate error upon each of the adverse findings and the conclusions drawn therefrom, and upon the refusal to make numerous findings tendered by the defendants, but the specifications collectively raise only questions as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings and judgment and the power of the court to award attorneys’ fees in such an action.

*294 The testimony of the defendants Smith is to the effect that they had a number of cattle at the time they purchased the Sturlin herd; the former were included in the mortgages acquired by Dugan, the latter in plaintiff’s mortgage; these cattle ran together and were given the same care. Of the Sturlin cattle, two cows were sold with the consent of the mortgagee; one was butchered; the others, with the exception of one of the yearlings, died of blackleg, alfalfa bloat, and other ailments. The original stock, however, with a few exceptions, survived the misfortunes which overtook the Sturlin cattle.

Contrary to the patent facts, Mrs. Smith first denied that she signed plaintiff’s mortgage or knew of her husband doing so; she declared that the nine calves described therein were not offspring of Sturlin cattle. Thereafter she asserted that plaintiff’s mortgage note had been fully satisfied years before the trial by delivery of grain, and that Mr. Talmage had agreed to send her the canceled note and mortgage. She testified that all of the cattle sold to Birkland, with the exception of the one survivor of the Sturlin herd, were acquired elsewhere than from Sturlin prior to the purchase of the Sturlin cattle, or were the offspring of such cattle. However, it is clear that the “nine calves” included in plaintiff’s mortgage were among the cattle sold to Birkland. Mrs. Smith described each of the five cows sold under plaintiff’s foreclosure, and explained the origin thereof in such manner as to exclude those cows from plaintiff’s mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
7 P.2d 536, 91 Mont. 289, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talmage-sayer-co-v-smith-mont-1932.