Court Opinion

ID: 6648927
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:52:21.732078+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:34.044100
License: Public Domain

Ryan, C.
Isaac Silverstein, in January, 1889, was a retail merchant at Chadron, Nebraska. On the 7th day of the month named he executed to Cahn, Wampold & Co. a mortgage upon his stock to secure the payment of $1,258, due January 8, 1889. This mortgage was filed for record at 3 o’clock P. M. of the aforesaid 7th day of January. *777On the day last named there was executed by Isaac Silver-stein a mortgage to Frankenthal, Frendenthal & Co. on the same stock of goods to secure payment of the sum of $1,472, due January 8, 1889. This mortgage was filed for record at 10:30 o’clock A. M. of January 7 aforesaid, being about four , and one-half hours before the mortgage to Cahn, Wampold & Co. was filed. Silverstein, on January 7, 1889, made another mortgage to Austrian, Wise & Co., to secure payment of the sum of $1,356.72, due January 8, 1889. This mortgage was filed for record one minute later than was the mortgage to Frankenthal, Frendenthal & Co., to which, by its terms, it was expressly made subject. It seems that a mortgage had been made on January 5, 1889, by Mr. Silverstein to the Bank of Chadron on the same property above referred to as having been mortgaged, and that the bank had immediately thereunder taken possession of the mortgaged property. The claim of the bank was satisfied by sales of a part of the goods mortgaged, and this suit was instituted in replevin by Cahn, Wampold & Co. against James C. Dahlman, sheriff, and Clement J. Davis, constable, of Dawes county, Nebraska. From the fact that the bank filed an answer it is inferable that the officers named were still in possession of the stock mortgaged at the time this action was begun. What were the averments of its answer are wholly matters of conjecture, unless resort is had to a copy substituted for the original answer shown to have been lost from the files. On motion of Cahn, Wampold & Co. this substituted answer was stricken from the files, so that even this reflected light as to the original answer is denied us. Before judgment was rendered, the bank and Clement J. Davis, constable, having been dismissed as parties, the firms of Frankenthal, Frendenthal & Co. and of Austrian, Wise & Co., respectively, filed answers whereby the priority of each firm over plaintiffs’ mortgage, by virtue of the mortgage of each of said firms, was as*778serted and judgment was prayed accordingly in each of said' answers. Motions were made to strike each of these answers from the files, which were overruled, and exceptions were thereupon duly taken; but each' of said motions was afterwards followed by a reply putting in issue the averments of said answers. It is insisted there was error in permitting Frankenthal, Frendenthal & Co. and Austrian, Wise & Co. to answer, and in refusing to strike out the answer of each. No ground is pointed out upon which such error can be predicated, and we have been unable to find any such error. The firms with whom plaintiffs’ litigation was had were, upon the face of the record of their mortgages, entitled to a priority of right of possession over the right of plaintiffs There was no error in admitting them as parties in this action to test the existence of such relative priorities. The evidence justified the finding of the court as to the value of the property in dispute, though there was evidence from which properly it could have been adjudged that such value was greater or was less than it was actually found. In view of these conditions the finding upon this point cannot be disturbed.
It is urged that the costs should not have been taxed against the plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs should have been allowed for the keeping and taking care of the property which was in dispute. It is possible that the items referred to might have been adjusted as costs in this case,.and that upon motion for that purpose the taxation of costs generally would have been changed by the trial court. To a review of the question whether or not the trial court should have done so, a motion to that end should have been presented to, and acted upon by, that court precedent to its presentation in this court. (See Real v. Honey, 39 Neb., 516; Bates v. Diamond Crystal Salt Co., 36 Neb., 904.)
There are other parties to this controversy, for instance Joseph Lipson, a judgment creditor of Isaac Silverstein; *779but as no argument is made specially as against the rights of such other parties, they are omitted from the foregoing discussion in the interests of perspicuity. The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Post, J., not sitting.