Griffith & Warren v. Biggers
Griffith & Warren v. Biggers
Opinion of the Court
H. P. Biggers sues Griffith & Warren in an action of detinue for a hale of cotton. The case was tried by the court without a jury, and there was judgment for plaintiff for the cotton, and its value was fixed at $100. This judgment is assigned as error.
J. W. Carnes rented land for the year 1920 from R. T. Edwards. This bale of cotton was raised by him on this land that year in Cullman county. Proof of value ranged from $75 to $110. After renting the land Carnes on January 15, 1920, gave plaintiff a mortgage on his crop of cotton and corn of the year 1920 in that county. It was signed by Carnes, duly recorded on January 16, 1920, and its execution attested and proven. The original was introduced in evidence. It secured a debt of $325, all of which was unpaid. After the execution of this mortgage to H. P. Biggers said Carnes executed a second mortgage on his crop to the defendants. It was not introduced in evidence, and the record fails to give its date. It was signed, as the testimony discloses, only by Carnes. *564 During üie year Carnes obtained advances from defendants, Carnes testified:
“I gave Griffith & Warren a second paper, nobody never signed it with me, I just gave them my own paper. I made arrangements with them to trade with them. Edwards was not present at the time I made the arrangements. He did not have anything to do with making the arrangements. I made arrangements to trade with them, and gave them my own mortgage, and this mortgage was for my provisions. It was a second mortgage. I did not ask Mr. Edwards to arrange it for me. I traded with the firm of Bland, Warren & Gibbs the year before. I paid them out that year. I did not ask my landlord, Mr. Edwards, to arrange with these parties to furnish my provisions.”
Rufus Edwards testified, as follows:
“I know Mr. J. W. Carnes. He was. a tenant on my place in the year 1920. The relation of landlord and tenant existed between us. I made arrangements with Warren & Griffith to furnish Mr. Carnes for the year. Mr. Carnes spoke to me first of trading at Griffith & Warren. He said he wanted to trade there, and I told Mr. Warren to furnish him as much as he needed to make a crop, what he had to eat himself and for his mule, to make a crop on, just such things as he would have to have, and if he made it I would see that it was paid, but I didn’t want to take it out of my own crop, but if he made it on his crop I would see it paid. Griffith & Warren furnished him to make his crop.”
He also testified that he signed, no writing and—
“I was to see it paid, that is, to the extent of the crop that Mr. Carnes made on my place.”
Continuing, he said:
“I sold the bale of cotton to Griffith & Warren. First Mr. Carnes and I had it ginned, then me and Mr. Carnes applied it on this debt to Griffith & Warren, and received credit on his account to that extent. I did this as his landlord.”
Allen Warren, a defendant, testified:
“I am a'member of the firm of Griffith & Warren. I know Mr. Carnes. Griffith & Warren furnished Mr. Carnes his supplies with which to make a crop for the year 1920. Mr. Rufus Edwards requested us, and it was at his instance that we furnished Mr. Carnes. Mr. Edwards was Mr. Carnes’ landlord for that year. Mr. Edwards, as landlord, came in and said to me for us to go ahead and furnish Mr. Carnes, and he would see it paid as far as the crop went. We charged the stuff that Carnes bought to J. W. Carnes. Mr. Edwards was not on the paper. Edwards just said he would see it paid as far as the crop went.”
He further said:
“This was the cotton that was raised by Mr. Carnes. Mr. Carnes gave us a mortgage on it. Mr. Edwards did not sign the mortgage, and did not sign any note.”
W. C. Griffith, a defendant, testified:
“I know Mr. Carnes. We took a mortgage on his crop in 1920. We took this mortgage at the request of Mr. Rufus Edwards, Carnes’ landlord. Mr. Edwards requested us to take the mortgage, in case that Mr. Carnes should attempt to move any of the stuff off of his place, get it out of his control; and we took the mortgage at the request of Rufus Edwards, who is Carnes’ landlord.”
The defendants pleaded the general issue. This is an admission by them of the possession of the bale of cotton. Section 1 of act approved Feb. 28, 1911 (Acts 1911, p. 33).
“A landlord has a lien, which is paramount to, and lias preference oyer, all other liens, on the crop grown on rented lands for rent for the current year, and for advances made in money, or other thing of value, either by him directly, or by another at his instance or request for which he became legally bound or liable at or before the time such advances were made,” etc. Section 4734, Code 1907.
This cotton was credited on the debt due defendants by Carnes. Was the landlord, R. T. Edwards, legally bound or liable to pay said debt for advances? If not, then the debt would not be a prior lien to plaintiff’s mortgage on the cotton. If no liability rested on the landlord to pay the debt, then there is no room for the operation of the statute; and the lien of the landlord, having no landlord debt on which to rest, could have no existence, If there is no landlord debt authorized by statute, then there is no landlord’s lien to be paramount to plaintiff’s mortgage. The lien rests in contract, and must be based on a debt authorized by the statute. The debt must be contracted by the landlord with *565 a third party at or before the time the advances were made to the tenant at the request or instance of the tenant or with his approval or with his ratification after knowledge of the contract. Bell & Co. v. Hurst, 75 Ala. 44.
In Clanton v. Eaton, 92 Ala. 615, 8 South. 824, Justice Clopton wrote for this court:
“If, therefore, the landlord gratuitously, without the request or knowledge of the tenant, makes himself liable for advances, which the tenant understands he is procuring and purchasing on his own account and sole credit, this does not constitute advances made by the landlord through another in the meaning of the statute, nor will voluntary payment therefor constitute the tenant his debtor. The landlord cannot thus arbitrarily, and of his own will, without the concurrence of the tenant, acquire a lien on his crop declared by the statute to be paramount to all other liens.
“But this rule is subject to modification. Though there may have been no previous request, the tenant’s ratification, after being informed that the landlord became liable to enable him to obtain the advances, will as effectually support the lien as if done at his special instance — the landlord paying the demand may recover as for money paid at the request of the tenant. Evans v. Billingsley, 32 Ala. 395.”
Affirmed.
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