Court Opinion

ID: 3907536
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:36:44.971009+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:31.733382
License: Public Domain

This is a contest between Mrs. Morgan, claiming a landlord's lien upon certain automobiles, and the City National Bank and the Wichita State Bank  Trust Company, as the holders of chattel mortgages upon the automobiles in question. Peeler  Hardeman were the tenants of Mrs. Morgan, dealing in secondhand automobiles, and were indebted to her in the sum of about $5,000 rent for the building in which they conducted their business. It appears that Peeler  Hardeman had bought secondhand automobiles from time to time; that the banks had advanced them money for the purchase price and freight on the automobiles, and had taken chattel mortgages upon the property to secure the sums advanced. It is claimed that the mortgages were taken before the automobiles were moved into the building, and for that reason the banks' liens are superior to the landlord's lien. It may be admitted that this contention is sound if the chattel mortgages are valid.
The trial judge found that the automobiles were daily exposed for sale in parcels in the regular course of business, and that they constituted "goods, wares and merchandise," within the meaning of V. S. C. S. art. 3970, and were under the provisions of said article fraudulent and void. The evidence sustains the court's finding. There is nothing in either of the mortgages to indicate that the banks had any claim of title or right of possession to any of the property other than that usually given to mortgagees out of possession.
This case was submitted at the previous term of this court, and decision withheld pending the determination of the principal contention by the Supreme Court in the case of First National Bank of Stephenville v. Thompson from the Fourth district. The contentions urged here have been decided in that case adversely to appellant, and reported in 265 S.W. 884. It is there definitely held that automobiles which are kept for sale by the mortgagor are goods, wares, and merchandise within the meaning of the statute, and the effect of the decision is to condemn the banks' mortgages in this case as void under V. S. C. S. arts. 5655 and 3970.
It appears from the record that the court gave Mrs. Morgan a personal judgment against the banks for the value of certain automobiles which the banks had converted. Under her pleading she was not entitled to a judgment against the banks for conversion, and she confesses error in this court in that particular.
For that error, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded. *Page 1118