Page:North Dakota Reports (vol. 3).pdf/253

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UNION NATIONAL BANK v. OIUM.
213

the error of the court in rendering judgment for the defendants upon the findings, the judgment is reversed, and a new trial "ordered. All concur.

on rehearing.

We have carefully considered the petition for rehearing. It has not convinced us that we were in error. It is urged that it appears that the mortgagee took its security for an antecedent debt, and that, therefore, it does not occupy the same vantage ground which it would have held had the mortgage been taken to secure a loan made on the strength of that security. This contention is founded on an utter misapprehension of the question. A mortgagee, whether for a present or an antecedent debt, whose Security is prior in point of time, is entitled to priority of lien except as such priority is affected by the statute. We hold that one who attaches for a debt incurred before any default in filing the mortgage exists is not entitled to the protection of the statute; that he is not within its manifest policy and spirit. To bring himself within the act, he must show that he parted with value while the default existed. Buta mortgagee who has first obtained a valid lien has a right to rely upon the priority secured by what the law regards as his superior diligence, whether the mortgage is to secure an old or a new debt. His lien is protected, unless the creditor can point to a statute which denies the mortgagee such protection. The question whether the attaching creditor comes within the statute is in no manner affected by the inquiry whether the mortgagee took his security for an existing claim or a newly created indebtedness. This inquiry only becomes important as to one whose lien is subsequent in point of time, but who claims priority of right. It is never made to determine the rights of one who has secured the first lien in point of time. He stands on his legal priority until one having a subsequent lien brings himself within some statute which will give him Priority of right.

It is also urged that the attaching creditor was injured by the delay in enforcing his claim, induced by the failure to file the