Court Opinion

ID: 8125310
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 15:05:32.093184+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:12.045243
License: Public Domain

Pardee, J.
The question raised by the demurrer as to the plaintiff’s right to maintain this action has been one of difficulty, because the declaration contains the unnecessary-statements that plaintiff, as administratrix of the estate of Michael White, lias, except as otherwise appears, filed her final account of administration, and that plaintiff is the sole distributee of the said estate. The learned counsel for defendant have plausibly assumed that plaintiff was suing in the capacity of distributee for an alleged conversion suffered in her capacity as administratrix, and have contended that the suit must fall because the right of action for a tort is not assignable, and because the distributees of an estate can only enforce their rights through an administration.
Upon the examination I have given the matter, I am inclined to the opinion that their contention is well founded, if the plaintiff is suing as assignee or distributee; but I have concluded that the plaintiff is suing in her own right, and neither as administratrix, assignee, nor distributee. I am inclined to think that the unnecessary averments referred to were inserted by the counsel for plaintiff to support some theory of the case not yet developed. That the action is named a “plea of trespass on the case,” while the facts declared make out an illegal conversion, is immaterial, and the authorities cited as to the necessity of the right of possession in order to maintain an action of trespass are therefore irrelevant.
In the ease of Rees v. Coats, 65 Ala. 256, it is decided that “a person who has a valid lien under a verbal mortgage, on a crop which was not planted when the mortgage was given, may maintain a special action on the case against another who, with notice of such lien, has converted the crop when- gathered to hh own use.” See, also, Columbus Iron-works v. Renfro, 71 Ala. 579. These authorities are *440sufficient to support the plaintiff’s 'action, so far as the form or style of it is concerned.
As to the right of the plaintiff to sue in her own name for a tort against property of the estate, I find in Williams on Executors the following declared:
“ Upon the death of the testator or intestate, if any injury is afterwards done to his goods and chattels, the executor or administrator may bring an action for damages for tort; and under such circumstances he has his option either to sue in iris representative capacity, and declare as executor or administrator, or to bring the action in his own name, and in his individual character. So with respect to the action of trover, if the goods are taken and converted after his death, and before the executor has obtained possession of them, he may either bring an action in his own name without alleging himself executor, or he may sue as executor, and declare either that the testator was possessed of the goods, and the defendant, after his death, converted them, or he may allege that he himself was possessed as executor, and the defendant converted them.” See Williams, Ex’rs, 784.
“ Where the action accrues to the executor or administrator upon a contract made by or with him as such, after the death of the testator or intestate, or for an injury done to, or conversion of, the property of the testator or intestate, in the hands or possession of the executor or administrator, after the death of the intestate or testator, the action may and ought to be brought in the proper name of the executor or administrator, but not as such.” Id. 785, note, and authorities there cited.
It follows that an administrator may sue in his own right for the conversion of goods belonging to the estate, although acquired after the death of the intestate. In the present case it may be noticed, too, as bearing on the right of plaintiff to sue individually, that the declaration does not show that the money loaned Coltart was the money of the estate, nor that the bond and mortgage given by Coltart were given to the plaintiff as administratrix. The demurrer should be overruled.
On the merits, the question is whether the mortgage given by Coltart to plaintiff operated a severance of the growing crops mortgaged from the realty. I think it clear that a mortgage of land does not affect the growing crops until entry under the mortgage, and then all crops not severed pass with the land. See 2 Jones, Mortg. § 1658, and cases cited; and Coffey v. Hunt, 75 Ala. 236. The crop in this ease alleged to have been converted was not physically severed at the time defendant entered under his mortgage, nor entirely gathered when defendant purchased at the sale under Mrs. Hamilton’s mortgage.
But the plaintiff contends that Coltart had the right to sell the growing crops at the time he gave plaintiff a mortgage on them, and that giving the mortgage operated a legal severance of the crops. The mortgagee may, if he sees fit, enter at any time after default; but if he chooses to leave the mortgagor in possession he consents that the profits may be received by the mortgagor, and held without account. See Hil. Mortg. 187. The rights of the mortgagor in the mortgaged *441premises are well settled. Ho is regarded as the owner of the property as against all the world except the mortgagee. “lie has the power of conveying or leasing the premises subject to the incumbrance, and is entitled to the rents and profits until they are intercepted by some active assertion of claim to them by the mortgagee.” Comer v. Sheehan, 74 Ala. 452; Falkner v. Campbell, Id. 359; Johnston v. Riddle, 70 Ala. 219. Even though the mortgage may, in terms, giye a lien upon the profits and income until possession of the mortgaged premises is taken, or something equivalent done, they belong to the mortgagor. See Johnston v. Biddle, supra; Fosdick v. Schall, 99 U. S. 253. “A mortgagor of real estate is not liable for rent while in possession. He contracts to pay interest, not rent.” Gilman v. Telegraph Co., 91 U. S. 616, 617. A mortgagor is entitled to sever, in law or in fact, the crops which stand upon his land at any time prior to the destruction of his title by sale or entry under the mortgage. This results from his ownership, and consequent right to the use and profit of this land.” Willis v. Moore, 59 Tex. 628. See Bittinger v. Baker, 29 Pa. St. 70; Buckout v. Swift, 27 Cal. 433; Freom. Ex’ns, § 113. In Myers v. White, 1 Rawle, 353, it was decided that, even after the commencement of a suit on a mortgage, the mortgagor may dispose of his growing crop, and then it will not pass to the sheriffs vendee though it bo still growing on the land, and this decision is indorsed as correct law in 90 Pa. St. 217. In Willis v. Moore the decision quoted is put upon the ground that a mortgage in Texas is a mere security for debt, and in Bittinger v. Baker the opinion of the court is based, in part, on the law of Pennsylvania as to mortgages being liens on land, and not titles to it. In this last case, however, the court, after a review of the Pennsylvania and common-law authorities, says:
“The principle of these cases is that where a person is in possession of land under a title that may be determined by an uncertain event not within his control, it is essential to the interests of agriculture that such a determination of his lease shall not prevent him from reaping what he has sown. Co. Litt. 55; 4 Kent, Comm. 73; 3 Watts, 405. It is a rule demanded by the common sense of the people, and depending on it; and if it does not extend to a case like the one we are considering, then we have revealed to us this strange anomaly of a rule of common law or general custom that is unknown to the people, and that operates as a snare to them when acting on the dictates of common sense.”
The only Alabama case to which my attention has been called, and bearing on the point in hand, is to the effect that “a transfer of a rent note after the grant of tho reversion is subject to the rule that the rent, as an incident, passes and inures to the owner of the reversion; but if the rent is assigned while the lessor is still the owner of tho reversion, and the reversion is afterwards conveyed, the rent and the reversion are effectually severed.” Alabama Gold Lile Ins. Co. v. Olivier, 1 South. Law T. 159. In Hershey v. Metzgar, 90 Pa. St. 217, it was held that where, under a claim for exemption, an appraisement *442of a growing crop had been made under a previous execution, it operated a severance in law, although under the execution on which the land was sold the debtor could have no exemption of growing crops.
The general rule as to the passing of growing crops with the land is as defendant claims; but under the authorities herein cited, and on principle, I think I should hold in this case that the mortgage of the crops made by Coltart, the mortgagor of the realty in possession, to the plaintiff, was a sale of the crops, and in law operated such a severance that they did not pass at the subsequent sale under the mortgage of the realty.
For the foregoing reasons, and the law and the evidence being in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff, Elizabeth White, do have and recover of the defendant, Robert L. Pulley, the sum of $913, with legal interest according to the law of Alabama thereon from December 13, 1879, and all costs of suit.
NOTE.
Crops fully matured do not pass by a sheriff’s deed upon foreclosure sale of tlie land. Everingham v. Braden, (Iowa,) 12 N. W. Rep. 142.
A mortgagor, and those claiming under him, having the right to the possession and use of the mortgaged property after foreclosure sale until his title is divested by due course of law, may cut and remove all crops growing upon the mortgaged premises, in the usual course of good farming, until the confirmation of the mortgage sale. Allen v. Elderlrin, (Wis.) 22 N. W. Rep. 842.
After the foreclosure of a mortgage upon a tract of real estate, the mortgagor planted a crop of corn thereon, which was immature and growing when the land was sold pursuant to the decree of foreclosure. One day before the sale of the land the mortgagor sold the com to another, who claimed the same as against the purchaser of the land. Held, that the lien of the mortgage and decree of foreclosure attached to the growing crop as well as to the land, and that the purchaser of the land under the decree would be entitled to the growing and unsevered crop in preference to the vendee of the mortgagor, unless there was a reservation of the crop, or unless the purchaser had waived his right to claim the same. Beckman v. Sikes, (Kan.) 10 Pac. Rep. 592.