Case ID: ark_52/html/0358-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Per Curiam.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Webb v. Arnold.
    Landlord’s Lien : Attachment to enforce.
    Where a tenant, by the consent of his landlord, .removes part of the crop from the premises where it was grown, to sell it for the purpose of paying a debt to a third person, the failure to apply to the payment of the rent the excess of the proceeds after the satisfaction of the debt, is no ground for attachment.
    APPEAL from Sebastian Circuit Court.
    John S. Little, Judge.
    This was a proceeding under sec. 4459 Mansf. Dig., to enforce by attachment the lien of a landlord on the crop of his tenant, consisting of corn and cotton. The statute provides that “ any landlord who has a lien on the crop for rent shall be entitled to bring suit before a justice of the peace, or in the Circuit Court, as the case may be, and have a writ of attachment for the recovery of the same, whether the rent be due or not, in the following cases:
    “ First. When the tenant is about to remove the crop from the premises without paying the rent.
    “ Second. When he has removed it, or any portion thereof, without the consent of the landlord.”
    The attachment was obtained in this case on thé alleged ground that the tenant had removed the crop, or a portion of it, without the landlord’s consent. On the trial there was evidence to show that the plaintiff had authorized the defendant to sell two or. three bales of the cotton for the purpose of paying a debt due to one Howard, and for which the plaintiff was surety. The judgment was for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.
    
      Charles, M. Cook and Joseph M. Hill, for appellants.
    The evidence in the cause shows that the tenant did remove a portion of the crop without the consent of the landlord. This was sufficient to sustain the attachment. Mansf. Dig., sec. ‡‡59 and Ark. Rep. passim. See, also, Jones on Liens, secs. 379, 1013.
    
    The intention of the landlord must be inferred from all the “attendant circumstances.” 32 Me., 211; 27 Mich., 6; Jones Liens, sec. 379.
    
   Per Curiam.

There was evidence to justify the jury in finding that the landlord consented to the removal of the cot- ° # ton from the premises where it was grown, and it was in proof that the tenant was authorized by the landlord to sell two.or three bales of cotton to pay the Harwood debt, for which the landlord was surety. He sold two bales for $¡81, and out of the proceeds paid the Plarwood debt of something over ,$50, and devoted the residue to the payment of his creditors.

The consent of the landlord to the removal and sale of the cotton was the gist of the defense to the attachment, and when that was proved, the ground of the attachment failed. The failure to devote the excess of the proceeds of sale, made by consent of the landlord, to the payment of rent, was not a ground for attachment. The appellant has pointed out no error for which the judgment should be reversed.

Affirm.