Court Opinion

ID: 7368246
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:53:47.849185+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:49.905286
License: Public Domain

SOMERVILLE, J. —
The plaintiff in execution has levied on 150 bushels of corn raised by the defendant debtor on his only farm in Lamar county in 1912. Prior *609to the rendition of this judgment, the judgment debtor had mortgaged to the claimant “two hales of rent cotton from my farm in Lamar county, Alabama, for the 1912 crop, first picked, weighing 500 pounds each, and 200 bushels of com of my 1912 crop from my said farm."
The only question presented is upon the sufficiency of the description of the corn in the mortgage, as against the judgment creditor.
“As against third persons the mortgage must point out the subject-matter, so that the third person may identify the property covered, by the aid of such inquiries as the instrument itself suggests.” — 6 Cyc. 1022; Jones on Chat. Mort. § 55; Stickney v. Dunaway, 169 Ala. 464, 53 South. 770.
The only element of uncertainty in this mortgage, at the time it was given, lay in the contingency that the mortgagor might raise on the place named a mass of corn in excess of 200 bushels, in which event, no separation or delivery having been made by the parties, it could not be ascertained by inquiry or otherwise what particular corn was covered by the mortgage. — 6 Cyc. 1025, and cases cited in note 34. But, when it was shown that the entire crop of corn thus raised and subject to this description was less than 200 bushels, the subject-matter became definite and certain, since there was no occasion for its separation from a larger mass; and inquiry, which was surely suggested by the mortgage itself, could not ha,ve failed to inform any third person that this corn, and only this, was covered by the mortgage and description.
The case of Hurt v. Redd, 64 Ala. 85, differs from the instant case only in the circumstance that the mortgagor had the exact number of chattels named. But, had there been less, the mortgage would have been good pro *610tanto. — Watson v. Pugh, 51 Ark. 218, 10 S. W. 493. It results from these principles that the trial court erred in excluding the mortgage, which, being in evidence, would have required an instruction to the jury favorable to the claimant.
Reversed and remanded.
Anderson, C. J., and Mayfield and Thohmas, JJ., concur.