Court Opinion

ID: 6542979
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:17:16.948793+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:53.078413
License: Public Domain

Hemingway, J. Whether certain oral proof admitted by the court was admissible, and whether the purchaser of the legal title at execution sale took subject to secret antecedent equities, are questions that we deem it unnecessary to determine. If each were solved favorably for the appellee, the judgment could not stand if the deed and contemporaneous agreement be construed against his view of them; for it is conceded that if they constitute a conditional sale, the title is in the appellant. That these instruments upon their face alone, without proof of extrinsic facts and circumstances, disclose a conditional sale, was ruled by this court in the case of Stryker v. Hershey, 38 Ark. 264. Regarding that as settled, we are called to determine their legal character in the light of the proof of extrinsic circumstances. We must therefore look to see what there is in it to give the instruments a character different from that indicated upon their face. It is, in substance, that the parties made an agreement; that the agreement, as made, was reduced to writing ; that the writing was read over and signed as a correct memorial of the agreement; and that one of the parties, and perhaps the other, understood that it was a mortgage. There is no proof that anything was agreed upon which was not correctly incorporated in the writing, •or that the latter contained anything that was not in fact agreed upon. The effect of the evidence is that the parties thought that the agreement which they made came within the legal definition of a mortgage, when in fact it lacked the essential elements of such an instrument, and its provisions stamped it as a conditional sale. The essential element of a mortgage not appearing in the instruments is an indebtedness from Rogers to Latham; for, as was held by the court in the case cited, if the deed was intended as security for a debt, they constituted a mortgage, otherwise a conditional sale. The extrinsic evidence furnishes no proof of this element. There is no direct proof of an indebtedness, and no proof of circumstances from which the law could imply it. It does not appear that either party undertook or intended that Rogers should become the debtor of Latham; or that there was any such disparity between the price paid and the value of the property as would indicate an intention to secure a debt, and not to transfer the estate; or that, after the deed was made, the parties dealt with the property as belonging to Rogers, and as held by Latham only as. a security. The inference is that the parties understood the transaction to be a mortgage, not because the agreement made, or their intention if formulated into an agreement would in law have constituted, a mortgage; but because they misconceived the characteristics of a mortgage, and believed that to be a mortgage which in law is held to be a conditional sale. Opinion delivered July 1, 1892. In other words, while the parties made an agreement, which was accurately put in writing, that expressed their intent and meaning, they gave it a name inapt, according to legal nomenclature. This furnishes no reason to give it an effect different from that its terms indicate; and we conclude that there was nothing in the evidence of extrinsic facts to change the character of the transaction as shown upon the face of the writings. Reverse and remand, with directions to enter a judgment for plaintiffs in accordance with the prayer of the complaint.