Windle v. Citizens Nat. Bank Kolterman

216 S.W. 1020, 204 Mo. App. 606, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 158
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 1020 (Windle v. Citizens Nat. Bank Kolterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Windle v. Citizens Nat. Bank Kolterman, 216 S.W. 1020, 204 Mo. App. 606, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 158 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

STURGIS, P. J.

The plaintiff was denied any recovery in this suit in replevin for four horses and a set of harness and appeals. The pleadings are conventional, the plaintiffs claiming ownership and right of possession and the defendants doing the same. The material facts are not disputed. The plaintiffs in their firm name are *608 engaged in buying and selling horses and mules at Joplin, Mo., and are the original owners of two of the horses and the set of harness in controversy. In April, 1917, a man representing himself to be J. W.'Hughes, offered to buy of plaintiffs the two horses and the set of harness. The price was agreed upon and a note for that amount secured by a chattel mortgage on the horses and harness so purchased and two other horses which said J. W. Hughes claimed to own was signed and executed in the name of J. W. Hughes. The two horses and harness were then delivered to him by plaintiffs.

A short time thereafter the plaintiffs learned that the property mortgaged was being sold and dissipated and brought this suit. It developed at the trial that Hughes real- name was W. L. Hughes and not J. W. Hughes who was a farmer living in the country nearby. This same W. L. Hughes had previously become indebted to the defendant bank in the name of and representing himself to be Gr. H. Bell, another farmer of that county. For some other crime said W. L. Hughes was arrested and held in jail at Pittsburg, Kansas. Defendant’s cashier went there May 31, 1917, and by paying another debt of W. L. Hughes induced him, in payment of its debt contracted in the name of G-. H. Bell, to give defendant a. bill of sale and-possession of all the property in controversy, the defendant not knowing of plaintiffs’ mortgage or the means by which he got possession of the two horses and harness from plaintiffs. Both plaintiffs and defendants acted in good, faith and each innocently dealt with W. L. Hughes under a false name assumed by him. When defendant attempted to secure payment of its debt, contracted by. W. L. Hughes under the name of C. H. Bell, by taking the property in controversy it caused the records to be searched and found no mortgage against this property given by Wl L. Hughes, because plaintiffs mortgage then on record appeared to be from J. W. Hughes.

The defendant bank insists that when it took the bill of sale it was dealing with W. L. Hughes in his right name, that plaintiffs’ mortgage given in the name of J. *609 Wj. Hughes was not binding on or notice to. it of any encumbrance against this property, that J. W. Hughes and W. L. Hughes are entirely distinct grantors and that in dealing with W. L. Hughes and his property defendant was not bound to look for or take notice of a mortgage from J. W. Hughes. On the other hand plaintiff insist that as they owned part of this property and sold it to J. W. Hughes, or a man representing that to be his name, and that as this man by and in the same name mortgaged the property back to them to secure the purchase price, then anyone dealing with them did so with constructive notice of their mortgage. It must be remembered, however, that only part of the mortgaged property was sold by plaintiffs to J. W. Hughes.

Not inquiring into the source of W. L. Hughes’ title but considering him merely as owner, we think defendants’ contention correct that a mortgage of personal property made by the owner in a fictitious name and placed on record is not constructive notice to one dealing with the owner in his true name. The defendant cites in support of this rule of law, Mackey v. Cole, 79 Wis. 426, 48 N. W. 520, and two Missouri cases, New Eng. Nat. Bank v. Northwestern Nat. Bank, 171 Mo. 307, 327, 71 S. W. 193, and Crawford v. Benoist, 97 Mo. App. 19, 70 S. W. 1908, both of which follow Mackey v. Cole, supra. Plaintiffs contend that this point was not necessary to a decision in the Missouri cases and that the court’s remarks on this point were obiter. A reading of these cases, however, leaves no doubt as to the views of the court on this auestion. Such, too, is the great weight of authority. In 5 R. C. L., p. 413, 414, this .is stated: “The weight of authority is that a mortgage on personal property made by one who was not the owner of the property, or executed by the owner in a fictitious name, although placed on record, is not constructive notice to anyone dealing with the owner in his true name. The reason of this rule is that such conveyances in fictitious names lie outside of the chain of title and therefore im *610 part no notice. So where a mortgagee advances money to-the person in possession of the property he is not obliged to look for the mortgages on Ms interest in the property in any fictitious name nor in the name of anyone acting for Mm.” [Sec. 11 C. J. 540, sec. 228.] In Johnson v. Wilson & Co. (Ala.), 34 So. 392, the law is stated thus: “In other words, the record of a mortgage executed in the name of A. W. Dixon is not notice that J. W. Dixon executed it. . The names are as entirely different as are the names of J. W. Dixon and J. W. Smith. Had Dixon assumed the name of J. W. Smith, and executed the mortgage, signing that name instead of his true name, it could hardly be .doubted, although he bound himself, that the record of it would not have operated as . notice to the plaintiffs.” [See, also, Wunschel v. Farmer’s State Bank (Tex.), 203 S. W. 924; and Lembeck & Betz Eagle Brewing Co. v. Barbi (N. J.), 106 Atl. 552.] As to the horses owned by W. L. Hughes other than those purchased by him in the name of J. W. Hughes and mortgaged back in the same name for the purchase price the law clearly is that the plaintiffs’ mortgage given in such name was not notice to defendant and plaintiff cannot recover same.

As to the two horses and harness which plaintiffs sold, in form at least, to J. W. Hughes and took back this mortgage in the same name, there is much reason for holding' that such mortgage is constructive notice. The Supreme Court of Nebraska ill Alexander v. Graves, 25 Neb. 453, 41 N. W. 290, 13 Am. St. Rep. 501, decided this very question in favor of the mortgagee as against an innocent purchaser on the same facts here presented. The court said: “It would seem that the sale and delivery of the property to Davis, under the assumed name of McCoyl, transferred the title of the property to him, which was immediately transferred back by the mortgage. The mortgage was valid. Bv it the title was transferred to plaintiffs as fully as it bad been received by the purchaser from them. Plaintiffs acted in good *611 faith, and immediately thereafter, and before the purchase by defendant, placed the mortgage on record in the proper county.” This case finds support in Wogan v. Citizens Bank (Kan.), 149 Pac. 411. In Jones on Chattel Mortgages (5 Ed.), sec. 247A, the general rule as to recorded mortgages given in a fictitious name not being constructive notice, as held in the leading case of Mackey v. Cole, supra, is recognized, but the Nebraska case of Alexander v. Graves, supra, is also treated as being good law to the effect that where a man purchases property in a.n assumed or fictitious name and at once mortgages same to secure the purchase price, then such recorded mortgage does give constructive notice. The mortgage conveys the same title the mortgagor got by his purchase and by the same name. It is said in the ouotation from 5 R. C. L.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 1020, 204 Mo. App. 606, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/windle-v-citizens-nat-bank-kolterman-moctapp-1919.