Wisconsin Valley Trust Co. v. Hotel Wausau Co.

251 N.W. 218, 214 Wis. 73, 1934 Wisc. LEXIS 40
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 251 N.W. 218 (Wisconsin Valley Trust Co. v. Hotel Wausau Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wisconsin Valley Trust Co. v. Hotel Wausau Co., 251 N.W. 218, 214 Wis. 73, 1934 Wisc. LEXIS 40 (Wis. 1934).

Opinions

The following opinions were filed December 5, 1933:

Fowler, J.

The only question for determination is the priority of the rights to the personal property described in the mortgages by reason of the possessory acts first taken by the'second mortgagee.

The position of respondent is that under the rule of Chynoweth v. Tenney, 10 Wis. 341, *397, the mortgages did not create a lien on after-acquired personalty, but only constituted a license to the mortgagees to take possession of the property, which continued until revoked by the mortgagor; that until possession was taken by a mortgagee no lien was acquired; that by the acts of the second mortgagee it took possession of the personal property covered by the mortgages and thereby acquired a lien which was the only lien thereon, and that this lien was not affected by the subsequent acts of the trustees under the first mortgage, because the second mortgagee’s possession terminated the possession of the mortgagor and under their license the first mortgagees could only take possession from the mortgagor.

The position of the appellants among others taken is that conceding that the rule of the Chynoweth Case, supra, makes void a mortgage of after-acquired personal property, the second mortgagee, having accepted a mortgage by its terms- expressly subject to the first mortgage, is estopped from asserting invalidity of that mortgage.

The position of the appellants seems tó us well taken. They fortify it by citing the rule of Baierl v. Riesenecker, 201 Wis. 454, 227 N. W. 9, 230 N. W. 605, wherein it was [78]*78held in effect that where one takes a bill of sale expressly subject to a chattel mortgage which is not filed, without which under our filing statute it would be void as to a subsequent purchaser even though the purchaser had notice of its existence, the purchaser under the bill of sale takes subject to the chattel mortgage because he is estopped from the recital in the bill of sale from attacking the validity of the mortgage. All he acquires by such a bill of sale is the equity in the chattels after satisfaction of the first mortgage.

The situation here is analogous and the same reasoning that was held to estop the purchaser under the bill of sale applies to estop the second mortgagee from asserting rights superior to those of the first mortgagees. All that the second mortgagee acquired was the equity remaining after satisfaction of the first mortgage.

Respondent’s counsel contend that the Baierl Case, supra, holds that the mere recital in a bill of sale of the existence of a chattel mortgage did not estop the purchaser from attacking the validity of the mortgage. There is a statement in the opinion to that effect. But in the second mortgage here involved there was more than a mere recital of the existence of the first mortgage as is below indicated. Counsel further claim that the basis of the ruling in the Baierl Case was the fact that the amount of the chattel mortgage debt was deducted from the agreed purchase price of the property, and it is true that such deduction was made. But the reason that the deduction operated as an estoppel is that it made the purchase subject to the mortgage, and gave the purchaser only the equity of redemption. An express recital that the purchase was so subject manifestly would have the same effect. The opinion in the Baierl Case cites in support of its ruling cases holding that a grantee is estopped from denying the validity of a mortgage to which his deed recites that the conveyance to him is subject. The opinion states, page 460, “that the basis of estoppel, whether [79]*79the mortgage is assumed or the property purchased subject to itj is found in the fact that the purchaser has recognized the mortgage as a valid obligation.” The recognition of the valid obligation in the Baierl Case resulted from the deduction of the mortgage debt from the purchase price of the property, but an express recital that the purchase was subject to the mortgage would have had the same effect as the deduction of the purchase price was held to have had. Where there is such a recital it is presumed that there was such a deduction.' It is clearly pointed out in the opinion in the Baierl Case, that what one gets when he purchases subject to chattel mortgage void because not filed is what is left after the mortgage is satisfied, or the right to satisfy the mortgage to which the conveyance is subject and then take the property. By the same token all that a second mortgagee under a mortgage void because on after-acquired personalty gets is the right to subject the property mortgaged to the satisfaction >of his debt after the first mortgage is satisfied by payment of the debt either by himself or the mortgagor. In the instant case we have in the second mortgage more than a mere recital .of an existing mortgage. We have a recital in the second mortgage that the second mortgage is “subject, however, to the first deed of trust;” and a covenant to defend the title to the property except as against the first trust deed. There is also a covenant in the first mortgage that the mortgagor would “not hereafter create or suffer to be created any debt or charge which would be prior to the lien . . . (of the first mortgage) upon any property which now is or which shall hereafter become subject to the lien” of the first mortgage. From all which it appears that the intention of the parties to the mortgages was that the security of the second mortgagee was and was to be kept inferior to that of the first mortgagees, and its interest and rights in the property described in the mortgage were and were to be kept subject to the interests of the first [80]*80mortgagees therein. As stated at the close of the opinion in. the Baierl Case:

“The doctrine of equitable estoppel is frequently applied to transactions in which it is found that it would be unconscionable to permit a person to maintain a position inconsistent with one in which he has acquiesced.”

The doctrine is a doctrine of equity. The respondent is appealing to equity in support of its claim. It would be inequitable to permit it to secure rights superior to those of the first mortgagees when it is apparent from the recitals of the second mortgage and the bonds it secures and the covenant of the first mortgage above mentioned that the rights conferred by the second mortgage were understood by all parties to be subject in. all respects to the rights conferred by the first mortgage.

The appellants fortify their position further by citing the rule of the Massachusetts court in Federal Trust Co. v. Bristol St. R. Co. 222 Mass. 35, 109 N. E. 880, wherein it was held, notwithstanding the rule which obtains in Massachusetts that a mortgage of after-acquired personal property does not create a lien thereon, that when street cars acquired after the execution of a mortgage were sold pursuant to a decree of court reciting that they were sold subject to the mortgage, the purchaser was estopped from claiming the mortgage did not create a lien on the property purchased. This ruling was made on the express assumption that the cars were personal property included in a mortgage describing particularly described real estate and after-acquired real and personal property.

It is pointed out in Federal Trust Co. v. Bristol St. R. Co. 218 Mass. 367, 105 N. E. 1064, that there is no distinction between purchasing under a decree subject to a mortgage and purchasing by conveyance so subject.

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Bluebook (online)
251 N.W. 218, 214 Wis. 73, 1934 Wisc. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisconsin-valley-trust-co-v-hotel-wausau-co-wis-1934.