
    Illinois Trust & Savings Bank, Administrator, Respondent, vs. Alexander Stewart Lumber Company, Appellant.
    
      April 17 —
    September 29, 1903
    
    (1) Amendment of pleading: Withdrawing admission: Discretion. (2-9) Chattel mortgages: Title of parties: Conversion: Sale by mortgagor: Rights of vendee: Subrogation: Application of payments: Confusion of goods.
    
    
      1. A question having arisen between the vendee of a chattel mortgagor and the latter’s mortgagee as to whether proceeds of the mortgaged property in his hands are subject to the lien of the mortgage, and if so to what extent, and the mortgagee having brought suit to vindicate his claim in that regard, charging such vendee with liability for money had and received to the amount unpaid upon the mortgage indebtedness, and sometime before suit brought such vendee, upon the order of the mortgagor, having paid the mortgagee a sum of money ostensibly on account of such proceeds, and the parties having joined issue in the action in such foranas to admit that such payment was to apply on such mortgage indebtedness and that the matter in respect thereto was not and would not be a subject of dispute between them, and prior to the trial, which took place several years after the action was commenced and also after issue was joined, in the meantime the plaintiff and the mortgagee, the only person knowing the facts, in regard to how the payment came to be applied to an unsecured indebtedness of the latter to the former, as it in fact was, without the consent of such vendee, having been examined under oath in respect to the issues made by the pleadings, the result being such as to confirm the defendant’s opinion that there was no controversy and would be none as to such payment having been in fact made upon the mortgage indebtedness, and just prior to the trial the mortgagor, a material witness for the defendant in case of a change of attitude by the plaintiff in respect to whether such payment was made on such indebtedness, having died, — just before the trial was to be-entered upon, upon a showing of all such facts, and further that plaintiff’s concession as to such payment having been made on the mortgage indebtedness was made upon the faith of information obtained by his attorneys from a written statement furnished by defendant to the plaintiff, but without any claim that the latter was ignorant of the contents of his pleading at any time, the court permitted such pleading to be amended, withdrawing the admission and charging that the payment was made and money applied upon an indebtedness other than that secured by the mortgage: Held, while not deciding whether the court’s ruling under the circumstances was prejudicial error, a determination thereof being omitted because of its not being vital to the appeal, that the question is one the solution of which in support of such ruling is a .matter of serious difficulty.
    2. A chattel mortgagee holds the legal title to property involved, qualified by the mortgagor’s right to redeem the same at any time before he shall have made default and the property shall have been reduced to the former’s possession.
    3. A chattel mortgagor in possession, is the general owner of the property involved, his ownership resting upon the equitable right to clothe himself with the full legal title.
    
      4. The title of a mortgagee, though legal, is in fact special, in that till the right of redemption is extinguished his property interest is limited to the amount due upon the indebtedness.
    5. While the general property of a chattel mortgagor in the chattels involved continues, he may sell or mortgage the same, conveying a good title thereto subject to the primary incum-brance.
    6. While the title of a chattel mortgagee remains subject to the right of redemption, if the property involved be converted by the mortgagor or any one else having an equitable right to the same, subject to the mortgagee’s special property therein, the measure of the former’s recovery of damages is the amount due and unpaid upon the mortgage indebtedness.
    7. A vendee of a chattel mortgagor upon being called upon to pay off the mortgage indebtedness, is entitled to have applied thereon all sums of money paid upon the same out of the proceeds of property covered by the mortgage, that has been converted into money, whether included in the sale to such vendee or not, and is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee in any other security he may have'for the payment of the mortgage indebtedness, to save him from loss, there being no superior equities.
    8. If the mortgagor of chattels without the consent of the mortgagee confuses the same with other property of the same character belonging to a third person, and the latter, by consent of such mortgagor, converts the common property into money knowing the facts, actually or constructively, such third person is liable to the mortgagee as for money had and received, but only to the extent of the sum due upon the mortgage indebtedness, he having a right to the benefit of all other mortgage security to save himself against loss, as before stated, ■ there being no superior equity.
    9. If in the event last mentioned the third person pays to the mortgagee a sum of money out of the proceeds of all or a part of the mortgaged property to apply upon the mortgage indebtedness, he is entitled to have the same applied thereon regardless of any agreement such mortgagee and the mortgagor may make to which he is not a party.
    [Syllabus by Marshall, J.]
    'Appeal from a judgment of tbe circuit court for Marathon county: James O’Neill, Judge.
    
      Reversed.
    
    The substance of the pleadings upon which the action was ■.tried, omitting formal allegations and those sli owing legal capacity to sue, was as follows:
    
      Complaint: February 1, 1891, plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the legal possession of 1,700,000 feet, board measure, of pine lumber and a quantity of other products derived from the manufacture of pine saw logs located in the millyard of E. K. Buttrick, all being of the value of $15,500. On or about -the last day of February, 1891, defendant converted all of such property to its own use and converted the ■same into money, receiving the full amount of said value, •and retained the same. Thereupon plaintiff elected to hold ■defendant liable for said proceeds as and for money had and received by it for his use, and before the commencement of this action duly demanded payment of the same, which, was refused.
    • Answer: March 31, 1890, defendant contracted with J. E. Kathan in effect as follows: The latter sold to the former the lumber, lath and shingles to be manufactured from 5,000,000. feet of logs of a specified mark for $7 per thousand feet piled in the millyard at the place of manufacture, and one half the •excess thereof received upon a resale of the same, provided ■the circumstances would permit of the deal being closed out •by January 1, 1891, otherwise the defendant agreed to pay Kathan interest on the value of the lumber at $7 per thousand feet until sold. The logs were manufactured into lumber and the products piled in the millyard as contemplated by such agreement, during the season of 1890, and defendant paid to Kathan $38,777.33. The latter superintended such •operations, and after the sawing season was over he rendered -to defendant a statement of the amount of products on hand, showing that there were 5,000,000 feet of the lumber, mill run, and a quantity of lath and shingles, besides some cull lumber, all piled in the millyard of E. K. Buttrick, at Khine-lander, Wisconsin. July 10, 1890, Kathan and wife mortgaged to Walter A. Scott the standing timber on certain lands and the saw logs that might be cut therefrom, it being stipulated in the mortgage that the timber should be cut from the lands, made into saw logs and the saw logs manufactured into lumber and the lumber piled at the place of manufacture and so marked as to identify the same as having been produced from said timber and as being covered by said mortgage. The mortgage was given to secure a loan of $10,000 and the interest thereon. It contained all the provisions usually inserted in chattel mortgages in respect to protecting the mortgagee’s interest in the property after being converted into personalty, and the enforcing of the security in respect thereto. The instrument was duly executed so as to be entitled to record as a real-estate mortgage. The standing timber was cut, converted into lumber and other products, and the same were piled in the millyard as agreed upon as aforesaid. On the entire products made from all the logs involved in such transaction, there were 420,000 feet of lumber marked as mortgaged lumber. That and the manufactured products covered by the mortgage, made from the marked logs, up to the time of the sale of the lumber hereinafter mentioned, remained in the millyard under the control of Ifathan by Scott’s consent. He was authorized by Scott to sell the same at not less than $8.50 per thousand feet. January 22, 1891, under such authority, Kathan included all the mortgaged lumber with that involved in the deal between himself and defendant in a sale to the IT. Whitbeck Company, the entire consideration to be paid to defendant. Scott was, conversant with the transaction and acquiesced therein. January 22, 1891, there was a settlement between Scott and Kathan and the defendant, and the amount going to each out of the proceeds of the sale was ascertained, that to be paid to Kathan for Scott on account of the mortgaged lumber being adjusted at $6,428, which sum was paid, the money reaching the possession of defendant. At the close of the sawing season of 1890 there remained, covered by the mortgage, 300,000 to-400,000 feet of saw logs and 5,000,000 feet of timber, all being of a sufficient value to secure payment of the balance of the mortgage indebtedness. Scott in fact never had any interest in the lumber sold as aforesaid, except as to 420,000 feet piled by itself in the millyard and designated as mortgaged lumber.
    The complaint and answer were both amended pleadings. The original complaint was served September 3, 1898, several years after the action was commenced. The original answer was served September 14, 1898. It was framed with reference to the allegations of the complaint, in effect admitting payment of $6,428 upon the mortgage indebtedness in February, 1891. The purpose of the amendment of the complaint was to withdraw such admission. The motion to do so was opposed and the ruling in favor of plaintiff excepted to. The facts brought to the attention of the court, upon which such ruling was based, in addition to those heretofore stated, are as follows: The admission in the complaint as to a payment having been made upon the mortgage indebtedness was embodied in the complaint wholly through ignorance of the attorney who drew it of the facts. He acquired a false impression in respect thereto' which was not corrected till after the receipt of the amended answer. He was not informed by the plaintiff that any such payment had been made, but gained the impression to that effect from a statement of account made by defendant to plaintiff. In fact, no payment whatever upon any account was made in January, 1892. A payment of $6,428 was made February 1st, not on the indebtedness mentioned in the complaint, but on account of a written order given by Kathan upon the defendant to the plaintiff to apply on other indebtedness. Conclusive evidence of the facts as stated will be produced upon the trial. The action was commenced September 3, 1892. Service of the complaint was delayed by consent of the parties and in view of a possible settlement till September 3, 1898. The. case was not tried till some three years thereafter. During all that time defendant’s counsel supposed from the pleadings that there was no.controversy as to $6,428 having been paid upon the mortgage indebtedness. They prepared for trial of the cause with that view. In the meantime both Nathan and Scott were examined, during which there was no suggestion of any dispute as to payment having been made as stated. During Scott’s examination he testified to having received $6,428 in answer to questions plainly indicating that they had reference to a payment upon the mortgage indebtedness. lie said he received the same in February, 1891, and that he received it npon the Nathan order. Nathan died a few days before the trial. In the meantime there had been a change of venne. Immediately after the death of Nathan, May 6, 1901, plaintiff’s attorneys notified defendant’s attorneys of their desire to amend the complaint by withdrawing the admission that $6,428 was paid upon the mortgage indebtedness. When the case was finally brought on for trial, June 24, 1901, with all such facts before the court, plaintiff was allowed to amend the complaint as desired.
    The cause was tried by the court. According to the decision filed the evidence was to the following effect: During the season of 1890, 4,122,960 feet of pine saw logs were manufactured at E. N. Buttrick’s sawmill in Rhinelander, Wisconsin, the products thereof consisting of abont 5,650,000 feet of merchantable lumber, mill run, including lath and shingles reduced to a lumber equivalent, being, under the direction of J. E. Nathan, by consent or agreement of all parties interested, piled in Mr. Buttrick’s millyard, where the same remained until sold as hereinafter mentioned. The title to 3,324,880 feet of such logs, under the contract between defendant and Nathan mentioned in the pleadings, was in defendant. The title to the balance of the logs, 1,498,080 feet, was in Nathan, subject to the Scott mortgage mentioned in the pleadings. The marks on the mortgaged logs were not recorded in the district where the same were cnt and manufactured. The mortgage was filed in the office of the proper city clerk and duly recorded in the office of the proper register of deeds, and a copy thereof was filed in the office of the lumber inspector of said district, hut the same was not recorded. Defendant had notice of the existence of such mortgage. It provided that the products of the Scott logs should be piled separately from the products of any other logs and should he so marked as to indicate that they were covered by such mortgage. The title to all the other lumber was in the defendant under its contract with 'Kathan. Defendant was bound by its contract to pay Kathan for said other logs a sum equal to $7 per thousand feet for the merchantable lumber made therefrom, ninety cents per thousand for the lath, and $1.25 per thousand for the shingles of certain specified grades, and the cost of manufacturing the culls, by the time agreed upon if the lumber was then sold, and if not then sold with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from such time till the same should be sold, and also to pay him one half of the excess received from the lumber over such amount. Kathan, without knowledge or consent of Scott but with the knowledge of defendant,, neglected to follow the stipulations of the mortgage by having the products of the mortgaged logs piled separately from all others. Whereas there were 1,656,724 feet of such products, there were piled as stipulated in the mortgage but 420,000 feet. The rest of such products were intermixed and piled with those from defendant’s logs. Scott did not know thereof till after the lumber was sold and he had received a portion of the proceeds as hereinafter mentioned in the belief that 420,000 feet of lumber represented all the products of the mortgaged logs. He consented to the sale thereof by Kathan and defendant with the other lumber, on condition that an amount equal to $8.50 per thousand feet •on 420,000 feet, of the proceeds of the sale, should he paid to him. Some time prior to the sale Kathan. gave Scott an order on defendant for any sum that might be found payable by the latter to Kathan on the log and lumber deal between them, and such order was deposited with the defendant and was honored as hereinafter stated. All the lumber in the millyard was sold by the defendant and Kathan January 22, 1891, and the proceeds thereof, February 9th thereafter, •came to the possession of defendant, such amount being :$49,026.83. The element included therein representing the mortgaged logs was $14,082.14. Shortly after such sale there was a settlement between defendant and Kathan in which it was determined that, after applying so much of said proceeds as were necessary to balance the payments made to the latter upon the log and lumber deal and the one-half to which defendant was entitled, there was left going to Kathan $6,428. A draft for that amount was sent to Scott. He received the same and by agreement with Kathan, but without the knowledge or consent of defendant, applied the money, first in discharge of a claim of $5,049.98 he had against Kathan for money loaned him and'used in his logging operations, and $1,330 upon the mortgage indebtedness. Scott still held under his mortgage timber and logs out of which he realized, March 2, 1892, $3,745 and August 2d thereafter $197.80. After applying such amounts upon the mortgage indebtedness there is left due Scott thereon $6,028.87 with interest on such sum from August 2, 1892, at the rate of eight per cent, per annum. Soon after the payment was made as aforesaid Scott complained to defendant that he had not received the amount out of the proceeds of the lumber to which he was entitled. There was never any settlement between Scott and Kathan or defendant in regard to the aforesaid claim, but defendant never acquired any interest whatever in the mortgaged logs or lumber. Defendant knew, when it participated in the sale of the lumber and received and appropriated the proceeds thereof, of the- rights of Scott.
    Upon such facts and others not necessary to mention it was held as a matter of law that Scott was entitled to hold defendant liable for money had and received, in a sufficient sum to discharge the balance due upon his mortgage indebtedness, and judgment was rendered accordingly.
    The defendant appealed from the judgment. Afterwards, in this court, upoii suggestion of the death of the plaintiff, the cause was revived in the name of the Illinois Trust & Savings Bank, as administrator of his estate.
    Eor the appellant there was a brief by Hurley & Jones, attorneys, and II. H. Hayden, of counsel, and a reply brief by Hurley & Jones, attorneys, and M. B. Bosenberry, of counsel; and the cause was argued orally by M. B. Bosenberry and M. A. Hurley.
    
    Eor, the respondent there were separate briefs by Curtis •& Beid and Greene, Fairchild, North & Parker, and oral argument by A. II. Beid and Geo. G. Gi'eene.
    
   The following opinion was filed May 8, 1903:

Maeshall, J.

Error is assigned because the trial court permitted the complaint to be amended, withdrawing the admission that the $6,428 paid Scott by appellant was on account of the mortgage indebtedness. In our view that is immaterial. We will say, however, that whether the amendment was proper or not admits of serious doubt. The admission stood upon the record for years. The attitude of Mr. Scott and his attorney during that time did not furnish any ground for even a suspicion that it would be claimed upon the trial that the payment was not made on account of the mortgage indebtedness or that it was not in fact so applied. In the meantime he and Ilathan were examined under oath, the latter twice. Of course they would have been interrogated particularly on tie subject of sucl payment if it had been thought by respondent’s counsel that there was or would be any dispute about that matter. Such examinations not only did not suggest the existence or probability of such dispute,, but were well calculated to support the view that the truth of .the matter was as suggested in the complaint. At the .last moment, and upon the happening of the occurrence which rendered it impossible for appellant to know from the mouth of Kathan what occurred between him and Scott at the time the latter applied the $6,428 upon the unsecured debt, the latter was permitted to entirely change his attitude, — to* malee such change in face of the obvious situation that, since, when he received the money, he had yet a large amount of security for the $10,000 loan independently of any claim upon appellant, it was perfectly natural and competent for an arrangement to be made between him and Kathan to apply the payment upon the unsecured indebtedness, though made by appellant on account of the mortgage indebtedness,, and to at the same time recognize the latter’s right to have the same, as to it, regarded as at least a pro tanto discharge of the lien upon the fund produced by the sale of the mortgaged property, and that the death of Kathan rendered it impossible for appellant to meet the new situation presented by the amendment, was, to say the least, a great stretch of judicial discretion, notwithstanding the broad field within which such discretion is permitted to operate as held in the decisions of this court. Post v. Campbell, 110 Wis. 378, 85 N. W. 1032; Gates v. Paul, 117 Wis. 170, 94 N. W. 55.

There appears to be some difference of opinion between the learned counsel who presented here respondent’s side of the case. On the one hand counsel take the position that appellant never acquired any interest whatever in the mortgaged lumber or logs or the proceeds thereof. The learned court adopted that view and held that the payment of the $6,428 left appellant still liable, since, as claimed by respondent, the mortgaged dumber produced over $14,000, regardless of whether such payment was out of such proceeds or not; while other counsel freely admit that if such payment was in fact made out of such proceeds, so far as appellant was concerned, it could not have been properly applied without its consent to any unsecured indebtedness of Kathan to Scott. We will consider the case from both such aspects.

It seems that the finding that appellant never obtained any interest whatever in the mortgaged property or the fund received therefrom is manifestly wrong. It is elementary that a mortgagee of chattel property holds the legal title thereto, but nevertheless, till default and actual possession of the property in himself, his interest, as against the mortgagor or any person claiming under him, is special. It is limited to the amount of the mortgage indebtedness. The general’ property and the equitable title being in the mortgagor or those claiming under him, the mortgagor may sell the mortgaged property and convey a good title thereto subject to the mortgage. Such title is equitable in character, to be sure, but it is of sufficient dignity to be regarded as a general property right, good as against the whole world except as to the special interest of the mortgagee, which, till it becomes absolute, may be extinguished by the owner of the general property by payment of the mortgage indebtedness. In ease of a conversion of the property as to the mortgagee, the measure of damages recoverable by him is limited to the value of his special interest therein, the amount due upon the mortgage. Smith v. Konst, 50 Wis. 360, 7 N. W. 293. The mortgagor may not only sell the property and convey a good title subject to the mortgage, but he may place a second mortgage thereon, and the subsequent vendee or mortgagee may pro tect his interest and clothe himself with a full legal title by paying off the first incumbrance. Smith v. Coolbaugh, 21 Wis. 427. It follows necessarily that the conduct of Kathan' in mixing the mortgaged lumber with appellant’s lumber and •treating all of it substantially as products coming under bis contract with appellant, and the treatment by appellant, with knowledge of the facts, of the lumber so confused, substantially as legitimately under such contract, vested in it an interest therein and in the proceeds thereof good as against the whole world except S.cott under his mortgage. It was competent for it at any time to extinguish the mortgage by paying the amount due -thereon. If Scott had brought suit against appellant before receiving the $6,428, the limit of his recovery on account of the fund derived- from the mortgaged lumber would have been, necessarily, the amount received from such lumber upon the sale to Whitbeck. & Co., not exceeding the amount due upon the mortgage indebtedness. It follows that if the $6,428 was paid to Scott on account of such fund and by reason of Scott’s interest therein, his remaining interest was that much less than before.-

Whether the $6,428. was in fact paid out of the proceeds of the mortgaged lumber we are not informed by any specific finding made by the trial court. The idea apparently embodied in the findings is that the payment was made out of profits due Nathan growing out of the execution of the contract between him and appellant of March 31, 1890, and that as such contract did not cover the mortgaged logs appellant cannot legitimately refer to such logs or the products manufactured therefrom as the origin of the fund out of which the payment was made. We are unable to find in the evidence legitimate support' for that view. The findings pretty clearly show, and the evidence leaves no reasonable doubt on the question, that Nathan, who had, as we have seen, the general property right to the mortgaged logs and lumber, treated such lumber, with appellant’s consent, as he treated all other logs owned by him which came into the Buttrick mill boom during the sawing season of 1890. No discrimination was made between the lumber from the different kinds of logs, except as to about 420,000 feet of lumber, which was piled by itself And marked as Scott lumber in conformity -with tbe requirements of tbe mortgage. All tbe logs were manufactured together. Tbe lumber was all piled and treated as appellant’s. Tbe entire stock was so treated in tbe sale to Whitbeek & Oo. Tbe proceeds of tbe sale came to tbe bands of appellant as contemplated in tbe contract of March 31, 1890, and were accounted for to Kathan according to tbe evident understanding between tbe parties. Nevertheless, as we have seen, tbe learned trial court found that appellant never obtained any interest whatever in tbe mortgaged logs or lumber, and therefore never obtained any title or interest in tbe fund produced therefrom. Upon that theory tbe case passed to judgment, — ■ upon tbe theory that the entire proceeds of tbe mortgaged property, $14,082.15, was received by appellant to tbe use of Scott, regardless of what was in fact due upon tbe mortgage indebtedness; that bis interest in tbe mortgaged property and tbe fund derived therefrom was absolute, whereas it was only •special and limited, as we have seen.

As stated before, substantially all the logs, in manufacturing the same into lumber and preparing tbe products for sale, •and tbe equivalent thereof in money after the sale, were treated as covered by tbe contract between appellant and Kathan. The lumber,-in the main, was piled in the Buttrick millyard so as to confuse beyond identification that produced from tbe mortgaged logs with that produced from the unmort-gaged logs, and specifically described in tbe contract of March 31, 1890. All payments made to Kathan, including the $6,428, were charged to him on appellant’s books. When the settlement was made between tbe parties the proceeds of tbe entire stock of lumber were treated as a single fund under tbe contract of March 31, 1890. It was all credited to Kathan and tbe profit going to appellant was charged to him. While there is some little confusion in the evidence of tbe witness who made .up the account between the parties for closing, as regards whether tbe terms of tbe contract were literally followed or not, lie testified very clearly tliat it was-liis -understanding that tie lumber was to be all credited to Kathan at the price agreed upon in sucb contract, and tbe result slows clearly, in our judgment, .that it was so credited. The statement of the settlement under the contract, which was introduced in evidence, and the result transferred to appellant’s books, do not show with exactness that the profits of the lumber deal were worked out by taking account of all of the lumber as if it were included in the contract referred to; but from all the figures it seems that no rational conclusion can be arrived at other than that the property and the fund derived therefrom were so treated. It is not to be wondered at that after the lapse of some eight years the witness was unable to explain in all respects just how the result carried to-appellant’s books was arrived at. He said that another statement, in his judgment, was made than the one exhibited in evidence containing the final work. It seems quite plain that reductions of the profits first worked out were made for some reason, consistent with the theory that the entire fund was treated under the contract of March 31, 1890. We are unable to perceive in the evidence, even by conjecture, th&t it was not so treated.

The feature of the case last discussed shows the prejudicial character of allowing the complaint to be amended after the lapse of many years after the death of the only party to the transaction with Scott in respect to whether the payment of $6,128 was received as a payment out of the fund derived from the mortgaged property, entirely changing the situation, as both Scott and appellant- understood the same to be at the time the action was commenced.

The following satisfactorily indicates that the mortgaged lumber was treated as we have suggested and that the payment to Scott came therefrom. The price of all the lumber to appellant as per contract, including lumber from the mortgaged logs, was $38,771.23. The net amount received therefrom bj appellant was $49,026.83, indicating a profit of $10,249.60, or $5,124.80 to each party. The statement in the record of the settlement between appellant and Nathan is to that effect. The account upon the books as closed, evidently to the satisfaction of Nathan, does not contain any ■charge identical with such a division of profits. The ledger accounts show that the entire proceeds of the lumber were credited to Nathan. That necessarily, in effect, placed the ■entire profit of the lumber deal to his credit, consistent with the theory that the matter was by mutual understanding worked out under the contract of March 31, 1890. The proceeds of the lumber having been credited to Nathan, placing to his credit the entire profits, treating the contract mentioned as conveying all the lumber to appellant in order to transfer its portion of the profit to the credit of its profit and loss account, it became necessary, one would say, to charge Nathan with the amount of such profits and to give a proper credit. Nathan’s ledger account on appellant’s books shows that such a charge was made, and presumably such a credit was given. The item, however, is $4,595.60, or $529.20 short of one half the profits as per the statement before referred to. The figures may well have been arrived at by some treatment of interest items, or insurance items, or other matters in the statement which the bookkeeper testified he thought was made other than that put in evidence. We are unable to even conjecture any way in which the mortgaged lumber could have been treated in the new statement so as to reach such result.

Thus we have seen, it appears, that the $6,428 paid Scott was not profits of the lumber deal between Nathan and appellant, for there was no such amount of profits. It represented his profits, undoubtedly, aside from overpayments theretofore made anticipating profits, and also all there was understood between the parties to be coming to him out of the proceeds of the entire stock of lumber sold out of the mill-yard. The amount is so charged to Nathan on the books. Instead of tbe memorandum explaining sucb charge indicating that it was paid specifically as profits, it indicates that it was paid just as we have suggested. Here is the memorandum:

“To check No. 7,179 for draft to W. A. Scott per J. E. N. order, being N.’s profits and sale of his own lumber to H. Whitbeck & Co. $6,428.”

There can be no mistaking the meaning of that language. It voices this: The payment was made as a closing up of all claims of Nathan, both as to profits on the lumber deal between him and appellant and as to any lumber in the Whit-beck & Oo. deal not strictly within the terms of the contract of March 31, 1890. It was made out of the general fund derived from all the lumber, and to close out Nathan’s entire interest in the fund. That is in harmony with his evidence and all the evidence in the case. lie said that the lumber from the Scott logs was not treated separately from the logs specifically mentioned in the contract of March 31, 1890; and that he was authorized by Scott to let it go in with'the rest. The latter’admitted that in his evidence, but said he consented to the sale relying on information from Nathan which was false; that only 420,000 feet were in the millyard. But let that be as it may, there is no escaping the conclusion that the $6,428 was paid as a closing with other payments, for moneys in appellant’s hands, whether representing profits on lumber or proceeds of the lumber belonging to Nathan, sold to Whitbeek & Co. The payment, in the state of the account as it existed when it was made, after ’crediting the proceeds of the lumber, brought such account substantially to a balance. Two debit items of small amounts, with the charge for appellant’s profits, balanced the account. Since Nathan’s one-half of the actual profits of the lumber deal was but $4,596.60, and the proceeds of the mortgaged lumber, according to the findings of the court, were $14,082.15, it must be that Nathan received all his profits on the logs specifically covered by the contract of March 31, 1890, in advance. Here is the account as it was closed, putting all tbe debit items up to tbe date of tbe charge on account of tbe check in question into one sum:

We have a debit balance against Nathan of $7,654.15. Can there be any mistaking that tbe comprehensive memorandum of the charge respecting tbe $6,428 was m'ade to indicate that it covered tbe balance going to Nathan, whether of profits or for any lumber of his own included in the credit of the proceeds received from the Whitbeck Company; that with the mortgaged lumber out of the deal, Nathan received all his profits under the contract of March 31, 1890, in advance; that he had, before the sale to Whitbeck & Co., received all the proceeds of the logs specifically mentioned in such contract at the rates therein mentioned for the manufactured products, and the profits finally obtained out of the deal as well. If not, then the payment of $6,428 cannot be legitimately referred to any other source than the fund produced from tbe mortgaged logs, — not referred to anything else either in fact or from any indication upon appellant’s books.

But it is said that when the check was sent to Scott it was accompanied by a letter from appellant to the effect that it represented the amount due Nathan under the conditions of a certain contract, the same being directed to be turned over to Scott, and that he had a right, in view of such letter, to regard the payment as not coming out of the mortgaged logs, as they were not in the contract of March 31, 1890. This effectually answers that: The account was worked out between Nathan and appellant in the process of accounting between them by putting all of the proceeds of the lumber into a common fund. The letter was not intended to indicate that the money was paid out of the fund derived from the logs, other than the mortgaged logs. Scott, in view of all the facts, had no reason to otherwise understand it, because, so far as appears, he had no knowledge but that all the Nathan logs were covered by the contract of March 31, 1890. Again, he knew that all the lumber in the yard was to be sold for account of appellant, as between it and Nathan, that some 420,000 feet of the lumber at least came from his mortgaged logs, and with such knowledge he consented to have his interest therein sold with the rest and to rely upon an order from Nathan authorizing payment to him of whatever might be found due the latter from appellant, and that the draft was sent to him accordingly. Thus his conduct leaves no doubt that he knew some of the lumber in the Buttrick yard was produced from the mortgaged logs, that he expected the same to be handled, as between Nathan and appellant, as part of the general stock, that he expected his interests would be protected as the person primarily interested in the mortgaged lumber by a. payment upon the Nathan order, and that the payment was made accordingly. True, he testified that he consented to the lumber being handled that way, relying upon representations made by Nathan that there were only about 420,000 feet in wbicb be was interested, expecting tbat tbe proceeds thereof would be paid to him. But be knew sucb proceeds were to go through the hands of appellant under its arrangement with Nathan, whatever such arrangement was, and were to come out on the order. He testified on the trial to this effect:

“I knew before the sale that there was lumber in the But-trick yard that came from the mortgaged logs. I knew of the .sale and was satisfied with it. I knew that the purchase money was to be paid to the Alexander Stewart Lumber Company. I found no fault with that. I got an order from Nathan on the company. I got it before the lumber was sold. I got it to protect my right and delivered it to the company. When I got the order I did not Tcnow that Kaihan would sell the lumber. The Stewart Lumber Company sold the lumber.”

That means this, if anything: Scott knew that some of the mortgaged lumber was piled in the Buttrick yard; that the sale thereof was to be controlled by appellant; that it was to ■be sold as part of its stock of lumber in the Buttrick yard; that he was willing to have the lumber so sold in view of the fact that the proceeds would come to the possession, for him, ■of a responsible party, the Alexander Stewart Lumber Company. and that he had an order on file with such company to protect his rights. So when he got the draft, obviously he understood it was sent pursuant to the order; that it was given in protection of his mghts. He had no property rights to be protected except by virtue of his mortgage.

Scott’s conduct after he got the check is consistent with "the view above expressed. Soon thereafter he made complaint to appellant that the amount he had received was not in full for his proportion of the proceeds of the sale of the lumber; that the amount of the mortgaged lumber included in the sale was greater than had been represented to him. He testified on this as follows:

“I objected to the division of the proceeds of the sale on ■the ground that it was represented to me that there were over 400,000 feet of logs sawed that were under the mortgage. I bad not been allpwed that, and I asked tbe reason. He [meaning, an officer of appellant] claimed that the statement was all,,right and that I had all I could claim under the sale.”

What statement was all right? Manifestly the statement-showing that the proceeds of all the lumber went into a common fund, introduced in evidence. There can be no mistaking the meaning of that testimony. Scott understood that' the $6,428 came out of the common fund, the proceeds of the-mortgaged and unmortgaged lumber. He believed that more-should be paid him because such sum was disproportionate* to the amount of mortgaged logs that had been manufactured.. Later, when this action was commenced, consistent with that theory, the admission was made in the complaint that the payment under discussion was on account of the mortgaged property, and that admission remained without an intimation, as before stated, that it was not in accordance with the facts, until Mr. Kathan died. Without stopping to discuss this phase of the case further, it is evident that when this action was commenced, and for some eight years thereafter, it, was Scott’s idea and that of his attorney, as well as the understanding of all parties concerned, that the $6,428 payment was made, so far at least as appellant was concerned, out of' the proceeds of the mortgaged lumber and to apply on the mortgage indebtedness, and that they were possessed of a written statement from appellant’s office in harmony with that view.

The conclusion is that the $6,428 was paid out of the proceeds of the mortgaged lumber if the amount thereof was as-found by the trial court, and in respect to that we see no good' reason for disturbing the court’s findings. It was intended to be applied on account of the claim which Scott had on the-lumber sold to Whitbeck & Co., and it was so received by Scott. Now it is quite immaterial to this case what application was made of the money as between Scott and Kathan. The principle is elementary that the proceeds of mortgaged: property must be applied to extinguish tbe mortgage indebtedness regardless of any agreement between mortgagor and mortgagee, so far as tbe rights of innocent third persons ■would otherwise be prejudicially affected. Jones, Chattel Mortgages, § 640. Scott’s interest in the fund received by appellant from Whitbeck & Co. cannot exceed the amount of such proceeds or the amount due upon the mortgage indebtedness left after deducting therefrom all -sums upon the mortgage security, being the $6,428 received from appellant February 10, 1891, $3,748.09 received from logs and lumber March 23, 1892, and $197.80 received August 2, 1892.

The point is made on exceptions that Scott gave his agent,. Nathan, authority to sell the mortgaged lumber, and therefore that he cannot pursue appellant, who acted in good faith in joining with Nathan and selling the lumber and in disposing of the proceeds. The trouble with that position is that the court found that Scott consented only to a sale of the lumber which he was informed was piled separately in the mill-yard amounting to 420,000 feet; that appellant consented to Nathan’s wrongdoing in confusing about 1,200,000 feet of mortgaged lumber with lumber not affected by the mortgage; that it profited thereby, by joining, with knowledge of the-facts, in selling the stock as unaffected by the mortgage, except as to 420,000 feet, and receiving and appropriating the-proceeds thereof to his own use. There is evidence in the record to support that view, — evidence so strong that under the rales applicable to the subject we cannot properly overrule-the circuit judge’s conclusions. There is evidence tending to-show that, whereas 1,656,724 feet of lumber was manufactured from the mortgaged logs, appellant knew that all but 420,000 feet thereof was confused with its lumber, while Nathan was, by his conduct at least, giving out to Scott that, the lumber manufactured from the mortgaged logs was but the small amount of 420,000 feet piled separate and marked as such. Assuming, as we must, that the facts which such evidence tends to prove exist as found by tbe trial court, it cannot be properly said tbat Scott consented to tbe sale of any mortgaged lumber except tbe 420,000 feet, or tbat appellant was an innocent party in joining in a sale of some 1,200,000 feet of other mortgaged lumber and receiving tbe proceeds thereof and treating tbe same regardless of tbe mortgagee’s rights. Since appellant was a guilty participant with' Nathan as above indicated, it became liable to Scott for •money bad and received to tbe extent necessary to satisfy plaintiff’s claim, subject to tbe rule heretofore stated, that such claim can be considered only as being tbe amount of tbe mortgage indebtedness according to tbe terms of tbe $10,000 note evidencing tbe same, after applying thereon all the sums received out of the mortgaged property as before indicated.

There are many other questions discussed in tbe briefs of counsel, but it is believed tbat such of them as are material to tbe disposition of this case are included in tbe points tbat have been discussed and decided.

The result is tbat tbe judgment appealed from must be reversed and the cause remanded to the trial court with directions to render judgment in favor of plaintiff in accordance with this opinion. Tbe $6,428, tbe $3,748.09 and tbe $197.80 must be applied on tbe mortgage indebtedness as received, and'judgment be rendered for tbe balance with costs as heretofore taxed and allowed.

By the Oourt. — So ordered.

A motion for a rehearing was denied September 29, 1903.  