Pierson v. Hickey

Citation16 S.D. 46,91 N.W. 339
PartiesPIERSON v. HICKEY, Sheriff.
Decision Date02 July 1902
CourtSupreme Court of South Dakota

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from circuit court, Yankton county.

Action by Frances L. Pierson against William Hickey, as sheriff of Yankton county. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals. Reversed.

Haney, P. J., dissenting.R. B. Tripp, for appellant. French & Orvis, for respondent.

FULLER, J.

The trial court having held the lien of an unfiled chattel mortgage superior to that of an execution, and entered judgment accordingly, the defendant appeals.

The judgment upon which the execution was issued was obtained on account of an antecedent debt contracted for the purchase of the property levied upon, and the trial court held that none but those who become creditors after the execution of an unfiled chattel mortgage are protected by the following statutory provision: “A mortgage of personal property is void as against creditors of the mortgagor, and subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers of the property in good faith for value, unless the original, or an authenticatedcopy thereof, be filed by depositing the same in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the property mortgaged, or any part thereof, is at such time situated.” Comp. Laws, § 4379. It is conceded that neither appellant nor the judgment creditor had any knowledge of the existence of the chattel mortgage at the time the property described therein was levied upon, and the important question presented here for the first time is whether the word “creditors,” mentioned in the statute above quoted, includes persons to whom the mortgagor was indebted at the time of the execution of the mortgage, as well as those to whom he may subsequently become indebted. In Kimball Co. v. Kirby, 4 S. D. 152, 55 N. W. 1110, the application of the statutory expression “in good faith for value” was limited to subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers; but it was not there determined whether the term “creditors” meant creditors generally, or only those who became such after the execution of the mortgage. By the use of the word “subsequent” it is clear that the legislature intended to qualify only the words “purchasers and incumbrancers,” and, as no restriction is placed upon the word “creditors,” all persons of that class are included, whether antecedent or subsequent to the execution of the mortgage. Section 4652 of the Compiled Laws defines the meaning of the word “creditor” to be “one in whose favor an obligation exists, by reason of which he is, or may become, entitled to the payment of money,” and to exclude from the protection of the statute all whose debts were in existence when the mortgage was executed would restrict the legislative policy, and require an unwarranted qualification of the word “creditors.” The injury that an unfiled chattel mortgage may occasion an antecedent creditor is likely to arise from the apparent unincumbered ownership of the property in the possession of his debtor, justifying the inference of perfect security, and inducing delay in the enforcement of his claim. Were none but subsequent creditors within the purview of the statute, the judgment creditor may also be injured by the levying of an execution on property described in a secret mortgage, instead of the unincumbered property of the judgment debtor; and to protect such, as well as subsequent creditors, is the...

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