Court Opinion

ID: 6541304
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:15:54.312405+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:50.465807
License: Public Domain

Smith, J. The appellant was indicted for removing mortgaged property and pleaded “not guilty.” TJpon the trial the State offered in evidence the mortgage, which bore an indorsement, over the. signature of the mortgagee, “to be filed but not recorded.” At the same time the State proposed to show by the evidence of the mortgagee that he signed the said endorsement upon the back of said instrument; that the mortgage had not been satisfied; that the property mentioned in the indictment was the same property that was described in the mortgage, and that the defendant had removed said property beyond the limits of Crawford county, without the consent of the mortgagee, and within three years before the finding of the indictment. But the Court excluded the mortgage from the jury because the endorsement was not in the words, “this instrument is to be filed but not'recorded.” The jury returned a verdict of acquittal. The State has removed the case here, not for the purpose.of putting the defendant again upon his trial, which of course can not be done, but to obtain the decision of this Court, to the end’ that the criminal law may be correctly and uniformly administered. Gantt’s Digest, Secs. 2128-9. There is no question as to the execution and acknowledge’ment of the mortgage, nor as to the identity and removal of the property. But the act of March 10, 1877, provides that chattel mortgages may become a lien upon the property therein described and notice to all the world simply by being filed and left in the Clerk’s office. But in order to be thus filed, the mortgagee must indorse upon it “This instrument is to be filed but not recorded.” The Circuit Judge held that the precise words of the statute must be used or else no lien is created, because the filing, not for the purpose of recording, is unauthorized, except in so far as this particular act authorizes it. It is the duty of every Court, when satisfied of the intentention of the legislature, clearly expressed in a constitutional enactment, to give effect to that intention and not to defeat it by adhering too rigidly to the mere letter of the statute, or to technical rules of construction. And any construction should be discarded that would lead to absurd consequences, Sedgwick, Const. and Stat. Constr., 196; Wilkinson v. Leland, 2 Pet., 627; United States v. Kirby, 7 Wall, 482; Oates v. National Bank, 100 U. S. 239. In Nunn v. Goodlett, 10 Ark., 89, it was ruled that slight departures from the form of a bond prescribed by statutes would not avoid it, unless the statute expressly declared that such should be the effect of a variation. And in regard to the acknowledgement of deeds, this Court has several times decided that a literal conformity with the statute will be dispensed with, when there has been a substantial compliance with its requirements, as by the use of words of similar import. Jacoway v. Gault, 20 Ark., 190; Tubbs v. Gate-wood, 26 Id., 128. We are told in the Holy Writ that “the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.” And it is a maxim of our law that he who sticks in the letter of an instrument or a statute goes but skin-deep into its meaning. The memorandum required to be endorsed upon the mortgage is simply a direction to the Clerk not to record at length. And it is unreasonable to suppose that the Legislature attributed any mysterious virtue or efficacy to the formula they have prescribed. The mortgage with its indorsement should have been permitted to go to the jury.