Butts v. Lucia
Butts v. Lucia
Opinion of the Court
G. W. Crowder mortgaged to R. F. Butts a certain mule; the mortgage authorizing Butts to take possession and make sale in event default was made in payment of the debt for which the lien was given. The instrument was duly filed for registration, and subsequent thereto Crowder sold and delivered the animal to appellee. Butts filed suit in the justice court against appellee; the entry on the docket stating that it was “suit for possession of one dark brown mare mule.” A writ of sequestration was sued out; plaintiff in the affidavit therefor stating that he was the owner of and entitled to the possession of the animal. Upon trial in that court he recovered judgment for-the title and possession thereof. Upon appeal to the county court and trial without a jury, judgment was rendered for Lucia. The judgment recites that the suit was for title and possession, but in the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law it is twice recited that it was a suit for possession. . Plaintiff’s debt was due at the time suit was instituted.
It is, of course, well settled in this state that a mortgagee has merely a lien, and the mortgagor has the title and right of posses *687 sion. It therefore follows that the mortgagee cannot recover of the mortgagor the title and possession of mortgaged property; but in nearly all chattel mortgages provision is made for speedy and inexpensive foreclosure, without resorting to legal proceedings, by conferring upon the mortgagee the right to take possession and make sale upon default.
Lucia having bought from the mortgagor with constructive notice of the mortgage afforded by its registration, he took the animal subject to the right of Butts to foreclose by taking possession and making sale thereof upon default. The sale of the animal to Lucia in no wise impaired this right, and Butts could foreclose as provided in the mortgage, or by regular foreclosure suit. In exercising his right of foreclosure under the provision noted, he was entitled to possession of the animal pending sale, and the court erred in refusing him this relief. If his suit was for title and possession, a recovery of the title should, of course, have been denied; but that portion of the relief which he sought and to which he was entitled, i. e., possession, should have been granted. Having obtained possession, he must then make sale of the animal, as required by the terms of his mortgage.
Reversed and remanded.
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- Butts v. Lucia.
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