Bedford v. Gartrell
Bedford v. Gartrell
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Gartrell’s claim below, as plaintiff, was based upon her lien as landlord of Gilbert Carter. This lien would be good against Bedford, whether it was a simple rent contract with Carter, or a contract that he should be purchaser on paymenfiof price, but, on failure, he should be regarded as tenant for a fixed consideration as rent. Nobles v. McCarty, 61 Miss., 456. Bed-ford’s defense is that Carter was not a tenant for rent, but held as purchaser of the land from Mrs. Gartrell, and, being such, gave him a deed of trust for supplies for the’year 1902. He produces seven plain promissory notes, payable annually, each for $100, not reciting for what they were given, and each payable to Mrs. Gartrell by her then name of La Grille. He also undertakes to show that, on delivery of these notes, she and Carter both signed a contract for the Sale and purchase of the land, in duplicate. She says she never did, but that she expressly refused to do so when the papers were brought to her by her then husband, since’ divorced. Carter testified that he occupied as purchaser under the written contract, and says that he “either now has said written contract, or has lost the same and it cannot be found.” There is no evidence that he, or any one else, ever tried to find it, or made any search for it, and yet we find a letter from him, of date
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.