DocketNumber: No. 23868
Judges: Anderson
Filed Date: 2/18/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant, Edward W. Felt, filed his bill in the chancery court of Amite county against appellees J. T. Covington, Aaron Holmes, and the Gloster Bank & Trust Company. The cause was heard on bill, answers and proof and a final decree rendered dismissing appellant’s bill,-from which he prosecutes this appeal.
One question in the case, the decision of which renders it unnecessary to decide any other question argued, is the priority as between a chattel mortgage held by appellant and one held by appellee the Gloster Bank & Trust Company, both executed by the appellee Aaron Holmes.
The appellant’s mortgage is prior in date. Appellee Aaron Holmes executed the mortgage held by appellant in favor of appellee J. T. Covington. Appellant purchased from appellee Covington the note secured by said
“Summit, Miss., 10 — 16—19.
‘1 Chancery Clerk, Liberty, Miss.: Please cancel deed' of trust from Aaron Holmes to J. T. Covington dated April 11, 1919, paid in full.
“[Signed] J. T. Covington”
By some means unknown to the parties to this cause, and not revealed by the evidence, this direction to the chancery clerk to cancel said deed of trust was pasted on the margin of the record where said deed of trust was recorded. Some time afterwards appellee the Gloster Bank & Trust Company took a chattel mortgage from appellee Aaron Holmes- on the same property as that covered by said mortgage so held by appellant. At the time of taking its mortgage appellee Gloster Bank & Trust Company had no actual notice of the existence of said mortgage held by appellant. The question is, Which of these two mortgages is prior in right? and the solution of that question turns on whether the said writing pasted on the margin of the record of appellant’s mortgage amounted under the statute to a cancellation.
The statute, section 2781, Code of 1906 (section 2285, Hemingway’s Code), is in this language:
“Any mortgagee or cestui que trust, or the assignee of any mortgage or cestui que trust, of real or personal estate, having received full payment of the money due by the mortgage or deed of trust, shall enter satisfaction upon the margin of the record of the mortgage or deed of trust, which entry shall be attested by the clerk of the chancery court and discharge and release the same, and shall bar all actions or suits brought thereon, and the
It will be observed that the statute authorizes the cancellation of mortgages by the entry of satisfaction upon the margin of the record of such mortgages, but provides that such entry of cancellation ‘ ‘ shall be attested by the clerk of the chancery court.” It was intended by this statute to provide an easy and inexpensive method for the cancellation of mortgages and deeds of trust. The statue is mandatory as to the attestation by the clerk of the cancellation. It provides that “it shall be attested by the clerk.” The requirement of attestation was for the purpose of preventing unauthorized or fraudulent cancellations. Subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers are not affected with constructive notice unless the statute is complied with. Such a cancellation may be likened in its effects to an unacknowledged deed or mortgage. Such deed or mortgage is not entitled to record. Likewise an unattested cancellation of a mortgage is not entitled to be placed upon the record where the mortgage is recorded or elsewhere.
We hold, therefore, that such a cancellation is not constructive notice to subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers for value in good faith.
Reversed and remanded.