Citation Numbers: 116 S.E. 166, 185 N.C. 76
Judges: Olaeic
Filed Date: 3/7/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This action was to recover the sum of $200 on account of defendants having received for their own use from one Shaw Blount three bales of cotton on which plaintiff held a chattel mortgage.
On 6 February, 1919, Shaw Blount executed to N.W. Hardison a mortgage on the real estate of said Blount, and on 19 November, 1919, said Blount executed to plaintiff a chattel mortgage which was duly recorded, covering the crops to be raised during the year 1920 on the same land covered by the mortgage on the realty. About 1 February, 1920, Hardison, as mortgagee, took possession of the property under *Page 80 the power in his mortgage and under an oral agreement Shaw Blount, the mortgagor, became his tenant for the year 1920. Hardison thereafter furnished some supplies to run the farm that year, and demanded the crop in the fall which was turned over to him. The mortgage deed on the realty had fallen due 1 November, 1919. Verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff. Appeal by defendants. The court charged the jury that "the existence of the real estate mortgage given by Blount to the defendant Hardison would not constitute the relation of landlord as between them, or, if the jury should find the facts to be as testified by them that would not (77) constitute the relation of landlord and tenant between Hardison and Blount." The court also charged the jury: "The plaintiff contends that in this case there was a registered chattel mortgage on these three bales of cotton purchased by the defendant Hardison from Shaw Blount; that the evidence tends to show that there was a chattel mortgage given by Shaw Blount on the cotton to be raised on the land in question which was executed on 19 November, 1919, and duly registered, and that the three bales of cotton purchased by Hardison from Shaw Blount were raised on that land and covered by that chattel mortgage. The plaintiff further contends that there were three bales of cotton, that the mortgage value was about 13 cents a pound, which would make the bales worth about $225, which was the price paid for cotton at that time, and was the market value. Now, if you find the facts to be so from this evidence you will answer the issue $225."
The mortgage on real estate, executed February, 1919, to Hardison by Blount, fell due on 1 November, 1919. The plaintiff took the chattel mortgage 19 November, 1919, after maturity of the said mortgage deed. It was held in Crinkley v. Egerton,
But in Crinkley v. Egerton, supra, and in the cases approving it, it was contracted for in the mortgage, as registered, that the mortgagee was entitled, as additional security, to the landlord's lien on the rents. InJones v. Jones,
It is true that in Ford v. Green,
The holder of a chattel mortgage, duly registered, on these facts, has priority under the terms of the Connor Act, C.S. 3309, which provides: "No conveyance of land is valid as against creditors or purchasers for a valuable consideration from the donor, bargainor, or lessor, but from registration thereof"; and, of course, such chattel mortgage is superior to the subsequent oral agreement by which the mortgagee became landlord and the mortgagor tenant. Whatever force this agreement had as between the parties could not avail against the registered chattel mortgage by one who was owner and in possession at the time it was executed and which specified that the crops were to be raised by Blount "on his own land, which was in his own possession," and the crops were in fact raised by Blount on the land thus described.
The exact point was passed upon in Killebrew v. Hines,
The complaint was for the sum of $200, but the court in its (79) discretion had the right to amend the demand increasing it from $200 to $225, "either before or after judgment," and of course before or after verdict "when the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense by confronting the pleadings or proceedings to the fact proved." C.S. 547.
No error.
Cited: Wheless v. Edwards,