Court Opinion

ID: 6513005
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:24:04.842231+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:56.347543
License: Public Domain

CLOPTON, J.
— The action was brought by the appellees, before a justice of the peace, to recover for the conversion of a bale of cotton; and was tried in the Circuit Court on appeal by defendants from the judgment of the justice. The plaintiffs claimed under a mortgage made by B. J. Stripling, February 4th, 1885, which embraced the crops to be grown during the current year. The defendants requested the court to charge the jury, if the mortgage under which plaintiffs claimed was made on an unplanted crop, and the cotton in controversy was a part of the crop grown, and plaintiffs never had possession of the cotton, they could not recover in this action for its conversion. Though a mortgage on an unplanted crop creates only an equity, which, unless possession is taken or received after the crop is planted, or there is some new act effectual to pass the legal title, will not support an action of trover, the mortgagee may maintain an action on the case against a stranger, who has converted or disposed of the crop with notice of the lien.- — Rees v. Coats, 65 Ala. 256. Counts in trover and in case were *518joined in tbe complaint; and though, the plaintiffs, on the hypothesis o£ the charge, were not entitled to recover on the count in trover, they might recover on the count in case. The charge, by the terms in which it was written, would have been equivalent to an instruction, that the plaintiffs could not recover on either count of the complaint, notwithstanding they had a lien on the cotton, and the defendant converted it with notice of such lien.
The complaint avers the registration of the mortgage in the proper office. This is a sufficient averment of notice of the lien, such registration being constructive notice. — Smith v. Fields, 79 Ala. 336.
Judgment was properly rendered against the sureties on the appeal bond. — Code, § 3125.
Affirmed.