Wood v. Weimar

104 U.S. 786, 26 L. Ed. 779, 14 Otto 786, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2079
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 19, 1881
Docket83
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 786 (Wood v. Weimar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Weimar, 104 U.S. 786, 26 L. Ed. 779, 14 Otto 786, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2079 (1881).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Waite

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit in replevin begun by Wood, the mortgagee of a stock of goods in a hardware store'at St. Joseph, Michigan, against Weimar, a sheriff, who had sqized the mortgaged property under certain writs of attachment, issued by the Circuit Court of Berrien County, Michigan, against Charles A. Stewart, the mortgagor. The case was tried by the court under a stipulation of the parties waiving a jury, and comes here on the facts and a bill of exceptions. The facts are very inartificially presented ; a part appearing in the findings of the court incorporated into the opinion of the judge and mixed up with his reasoning in deciding the case, and the rest in two stipulations filed in the progress of the trial, one of which was.omitted from the record as originally sent here, but has been brought up since. An objection is made to our considering these stipulations ; but we think the case stands upon agreed statements as to part of the facts and findings as to the rest.

The facts thus appearing material to the questions presented by the assignments of error may be stated as -follows: —

On the 25th of May,.1875, Stewart mortgaged, his stock of goods to Wood to secure the payment of a debt of $10,465.46, and interest, on or before Nov. 2.5,1875. This was done in good faith and without any intention to hinder or defraud cred *788 itors. The mortgage was filed in the town-clerk’s office the day it was executed, in accordance with the requirements of the Michigan statute. . The mortgaged property remained in Stewart's possession after the mortgage, and he continued his sales from the stock in the usual course of business. There was no express agreement between the parties that this might be done, neither was it prohibited. The mortgage contained the usual power of sale in case of default, and authorized the mortgagee to"take possession at any time, if he deemed himself insecure.

The mortgage purported on its face to be executed to secure a debt owing to Wood. The debt was represented by seven notes, none of which were described. Of these notes, five only actually belonged to Wood. The five all bore date May 25, 1875, the same as the mortgage, and were payable to Wood’s order. One for $1,263.48, payable one mo,nth after date, with interest at ten per cent, and another for $250, also payable one month after date, with interest from June 22 at ten per cent, were taken in good faith for interest supposed to be'past due on a mortgage of lands in Berfien County for $5,000, dated Dec. 22,1868, and payable in five years, executed by Stewart to one Terwilliger. This, mortgage, together with the note it secured, Wood bought in good faith, supposing it to be valid and subsisting, on the first day of May, 1875, after its maturity, and paid for it $5,000 and accrued interest. Both the note and mortgage were delivered to him when his purchase was made, and he had them with him at the time the .chattel mortgage was taken. Stewart gave the notes to Wood under the impression that he owed the interest they represented, and the transaction .securing their payment by the chattel mortgage was in entire good faith.

Full payment of interest to June 22, 1872, was indorsed on the Terwilliger note on the 29th of August of that year. On ' the next day, the 30th of August, Terwilliger released twenty acres.of land covered by the mortgage; and on the 19th of October afterwards there was recorded. in the records of Cook County, Illinois, what purported to be a deed, with covenants of warranty, except as to certain incumbrances, dated Sept. 21, 1872, and executed by Charles A. Stewart to Terwilliger, conveying one undivided half of certain lands in Chicago, “ in *789 consideration of the sum of five thousand dollars, which is paid by way of the release of a mortgage for that sum, recorded in liber No. 4 of mortgages, in the office of the register of deeds of Berrien County, . . . the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged.” There was no other evidence except the record tending to show that this deed was ever delivered to Terwilliger, or that he knew of its being recorded. Wood had no knowledge of the deed when he bought the mortgage. The note was never surrendered to Stewart, and the mortgage was never-discharged on the records of Berrien County. Wheii Wood took the chattel mortgage he understood that Terwilliger claimed to own an interest in the Chicago lands in common with Stewart; and on the 27th of May, two days after the chattel mortgage was executed, Stewart made another deed to Terwilliger for an undivided half of the Chicago lands, which he delivered to Wood as agent for Terwilliger. ■ In connection with these facts, the court below said in its findings': “But although there is some confusion about the facts as to- whether the mortgage debt of $5,000 was understood by Stewart and Terwilliger as having been paid, on the whole evidence it should be regarded as paid as to creditors.”

To prove the deed from Stewart to Terwilliger, bearing date Sept. 21, 1872, a copy from the records jof Cobk County, certified by the recorder under his seal of office,-was offered in evidence. There was'no other authentication. This deed w;as objected to, “ for that it was incompetent, immaterial, and irrelevant.” The objection was overruled and the deed admitted. Exception was taken, -which was in due form embodied' in a bill of exceptions and made part of the record.

As to twm other of the notes to Wood, one for $800 and the other for $1,890, the first payable one month from date-,, with1 interest at ten per cent, and the other one month from date, with interest at the same rate after June 18, it was found that after the commencement of this suit Wood realized from other securities which he held for the payment of the debt of which these notes represented the interest, enough to satisfy-both,, less the sum of $477.

As to another note given to Wood for $669-91, payable in six months from date, no special facts are found.

*790 The sixth note was for $8,300, payable one day after date, Jan. 1, 1873, with interest at ten per cent, to the order of Elizabeth Stewart. The payee of the note had died intestate before the execution of the chattel mortgage, and no administrator had been appointed on her estate. She left no creditors, so far as the proof shows, but several heirs. One of the heirs was Cornelia Stewart, and all the others united in an' assignment of this note to her. Wood was in some way related to Elizabeth and Cornelia Stewart, and Cornelia Stewart had - indorsed, the note to him to collect or get security. When he t.ook the chattel mortgage he had the note'and the assignment from the heirs in his possession. There was due on the note at the timé $4,092.12, and Charles Stewart wished to secure it by the chattel mortgage. What was done was for the benefit of Cornelia Stewart.

■ The seventh note belonged to Harriet A. Stewart; but upon this no questions arise here, as the judgment below was in favor of Wood for all he claimed.

When the attachments under which Weimar claims were put on the property, Charles ’A. Stewart was in possession.

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Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 786, 26 L. Ed. 779, 14 Otto 786, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-weimar-scotus-1881.