Judges: Daaus
Filed Date: 9/5/1890
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
There was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff leased certain lands for the year 1888 to Keel Brother, at the stipulated rent of 4,800 pounds of lint cotton, and that during said year he advanced to them, to be used in the cultivation of the crops grown on said land, guano of the value of 1,605 pounds of lint cotton; that Keel Brother paid plaintiff 5,836 pounds of cotton, leaving still due on said advance, 589 pounds of cotton; that on 19 October, 1888, Peyton Keel, of Keel Brother, delivered to the defendants five bales of cotton of the crop grown on said land during that year, and on 20 October, 1888, one bale more of said cotton; that on 22 October, 1888, O. C. Farrar, of the defendant firm, applied to the plaintiff to know if the said firm could not pay the price of said cotton to the said keel Brother, when plaintiff consented that they might do so; that upon reflection the plaintiff addressed a letter to O. C. Farrar the following morning, notifying him that he would not waive his lien as landlord until the balance due him *Page 121 (589 pounds of lint cotton) was paid, and recalling the permission given the day before that the money might be paid to Keel Brother, which letter was delivered to the said Farrar on the same day it was written; that thereafter, on 25 October, 1888, without having before seen either of the firm of Keel Brother, or had any communication with them after the time the cotton was delivered by them to these defendants, these defendants paid to the said firm of Keel Brother the price of the six bales of cotton. there was evidence on the part of the defendants tending to show that the price of the said cotton was paid by the defendants before the said letter was received.
It was further contended on the part of the defendants that (125) the plaintiff had no power to recall or revoke the permission given the defendants to pay the money to Keel Brother.
By consent of parties, his Honor reserved this question until after the verdict, and submitted this issue to the jury:
"In what sum are the defendants indebted to the plaintiff?" The jury answered for their verdict,"Fifty-one dollars and twenty-one cents."
His Honor, being of opinion with the defendants upon question reserved, rendered judgment for the defendants.
From which judgment the plaintiff appeals.
The facts of this case are not as fully and clearly stated as they might have been, but it is plainly to be inferred, from the record, that the defendants purchased the cotton of Keel Brother (the tenants of the plaintiff) before his lien as landlord had been fully satisfied. The plaintiff had one of three remedies: he could have sued for the specific property, or in tort for its conversion, if its delivery was refused (Belcher v. Grimsley,
The "price" of the cotton was in the hands of the defendants, subject to the lien and for the use of the plaintiff, and his right to it was distinctly recognized. Now, in this state of the case, the plaintiff, upon the application of one of the defendants, and without any consideration therefor, consented that the defendants might pay the price to Keel Brother. *Page 122
(126) So far as appears, the latter had no knowledge of this transaction, nor does there appear to have existed any privity between them and the defendants.
Before the defendants had paid the money to Keel Brother, who appeared to have been the only parties interested in the matter, and before, so far as the case discloses, they even had knowledge of the plaintiff's consent that the defendants might pay the money to them, and before there was any alteration or change in the condition or relation of the parties, the plaintiff revoked the permission given to the defendants, and required them to pay the money to him, according to the original obligation. It is contended, for the defendants, that when the plaintiff consented that they might pay the price of the cotton to Keel
Brother,"it was a complete waiver and cancellation of plaintiff's lien, and that very instant the ownership of the price of said cotton became a vested right in Keel Brother, and they could have successfully maintained their action against the defendants for the recovery thereof, had they declined to pay it to them," and that the plaintiff has no power to recall or revoke the permission given the defendants to pay the money to Keel Brother. Undoubtedly, if the defendants had paid the money to Keel Brother before the revocation of the permission, they would not be liable, for they would have been paying out the plaintiff's money in accordance with his express authority and permission; they would not be liable, for they would have been paying out the plaintiff's money in accordance with his express authority and permission; but we are unable to see, if plaintiff's permission was necessary, why he could not revoke it at any time before it was acted upon, or how he lost his lien by what occurred between him and the defendants. The agreement was an executory one, and without consideration, and even if it appeared that the defendants were acting as the agents of Keel
Brother (and no agency appears), it would not have worked a discharge of the lien. keel Brother could not have compelled either the plaintiff or defendants to have executed the agreement against the plaintiff's consent, for the plain reason that there was an entire absence of any consideration."A lien must be regarded as something of value. (127) It may be given up, in order to be obligatory, must be based agreement to give it up, in order to be obligatory, must be based upon a legal consideration." Danforth v. Pratt,
Error.
Cited: White v. Boyd,
(128)