Court Opinion

ID: 3232732
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:07:59.227537+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:57:24.893807
License: Public Domain

Appellee, Mrs. Engram, sued Thoma on a note given for the rent of a dairy farm, and caused an attachment to be levied on a number of dairy cattle that had been grazed on the farm. Mrs. Blackman interposed her claim, and on the trial of the right of property the evidence showed that on January 1, 1923, plaintiff let her land to defendant to be used as a dairy farm for the year. Plaintiff's rent note was dated January 10, 1923, but the evidence was that the rental contract was entered into on the 31st day of December, 1922, to take effect on the next day, and, as we understand the record, defendant was thereafter in possession. Claimant's case was that, although the cattle had been previously in the possession of defendant, they were the property of the Bank of Eufaula until January 6, 1923, when defendant purchased them from the bank, giving his note for the purchase money and a mortgage on the cattle to secure the same. In May, 1923, the mortgagee or his assignee, proceeding under a power given in the mortgage, took possession of the cattle, and foreclosed the mortgage by a sale at which claimant became the purchaser. The court gave the general affirmative charge for plaintiff, holding that the cattle were subject to the lien of the attachment. Our judgment is that claimant showed the better title, and that she was entitled to the general charge duly requested.
Section 8894 of the Code of 1923 (Acts 1919, p. 1084, § 1) provides:
"Owners of land, or their assignees, shall have a lien upon all live stock raised, grown or grazed upon rented land for the rent of said land for the current year, and which shall be paramount to all other liens. The lien shall exist only when the land is leased or rented or used for pasturing or grazing purposes."
True, the statute provides that the lien of the landowner "shall be paramount to all other liens," but this means that the lien of the landowner on the live stock of the tenant shall be paramount to all other liens, not that the lien for rent may fasten upon and displace the title of an owner other than the tenant. The cattle were the property of the bank until January 6, 1923. On that day the bank sold to defendant in attachment, but, in legal effect, retained title as security for the purchase money. There was at no time any interest in the tenant upon which the landlord's lien could attach save only the equity of redemption. The general rule of law is that a mortgage given to secure unpaid purchase money simultaneously with a conveyance of the property, and as a part of *Page 263 
the same transaction, takes precedence of all other claims and liens of every kind against the mortgagor, to the extent of the property sold. 27 Cyc. 1180. In our judgment that rule should apply in the case shown by the record and the title given to secure the purchase money passed by the foreclosure to the purchaser at that sale. McRae v. Newman, 58 Ala. 535; Threefoot v. Hillman, 30 So. 513, 130 Ala. 244, 89 Am. St. Rep. 39; Cambell v. Anderson, 18 So. 218, 107 Ala. 656.
There were numerous exceptions reserved on questions of evidence, but the controlling facts showed without dispute that claimant was entitled to the general charge duly requested by her. Some of the evidence thus brought into the case and some parts of appellee's brief seem to proceed upon the idea that statements made by Wild, the president of the bank, to plaintiff, prior to the lease contract and prior to the sale of the cattle to defendant, should operate to estop the bank, and so the claimant, to claim the superiority of the mortgage title over the lien asserted by plaintiff; but we find in the record no evidence tending to show any statement or representation by Wild to the effect that title to the cattle had passed into the tenant nor any suggestion of a waiver of the bank's title. The mortgage was filed for record within five days of its execution, and, without that, plaintiff knew that the cattle had been purchased from the bank by Thoma.
The judgment is reversed; the cause remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.