Antone v. Miles and Whitfield

105 S.W. 39, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 289, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 487
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 39 (Antone v. Miles and Whitfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antone v. Miles and Whitfield, 105 S.W. 39, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 289, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 487 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

HODGES, Associate Justice.

—This suit was originally instituted in the Justice Court of Precinct Ho. 4 of Red River County, by John Antone, appellant, against Delbert Miles, one of the appellees, to recover the sum of $198.65 claimed to be due for supplies and advances furnished by the appellant to Miles, during the year 1906, to enable the latter to make, gather, secure and house a crop on certain rented premises.

The facts show that Miles was Antone’s tenant during the ^ year 1906, and raised a crop of cotton on the former’s premises. While the record does not definitely disclose what rent he was to pay Antone, yet we gather inferentially from the uncontroverted facts that Antone was to furnish the land, team, tools and feed the team; and that Miles was to perform the labor of making and harvesting the crops; and each was to receive one-half. Prior to the filing of this suit Miles had gathered and sold five or six bales of cotton from the rented premises, without any objection from his landlord. About a week, or more, before the institution of this suit Antone instructed Miles not to sell any more of his cotton, claiming that he (Antone) held an account for supplies which had not been paid. Subsequently, however, Miles gathered a bale of cotton and sold it to the intervener, J. B. Whitfield, one of the appellees herein, without the knowledge or consent of his landlord. Antone then instituted this suit against Miles upon his account for supplies, procured the issuance of a distress warrant and caused the same to be levied on the bale of cotton purchased by Whitfield from Miles, and sought to subject it to the payment of his claim.

Whitfield at first filed a' claimant’s affidavit and bond in order to get possession of the bale of cotton, but subsequently intervened in this suit, and set up his claims to the cotton. After specially excepting and demurring to the proceedings' instituted, he pleaded substantially as follows: That he was the legal owner of the bale of cotton levied upon, by virtue of a valid purchase of the same from the defendant, Delbert Miles; and now claims the cotton as *291 his own, free from any claim of Antone’s; that he had purchased the cotton in open market, from said Miles, before the commencement of this suit; that Miles had a good and perfect right to sell the same, and that Antone had so held him out to the world as having that right, and that .he did in fact have that right; that plaintiff, Antone, had permitted, acquiesced in, authorized and ratified previous sales of cotton off the rented premises by said Delbert Miles, and had made him his agent to sell said cotton, and is now estopped to come in and deny that the said Miles had the authority to sell the cotton involved in this suit. He also denied that Antone had any lien upon the bale of cotton at the time it was sold to the intervener; and "says that if Antone ever had any lien on said "cotton, that it had been fully satisfied by other property of the defendant, Miles, which said Antone had appropriated since the beginning of this suit and applied as a credit upon the account for which this suit was brought. He also asked that if Antone had not so applied said property to the credit of Miles on said account, the court order it done.

The cause was tried before a jury in the Justice Court, which resulted in a verdict in favor of Antone against Miles, on the account, for the sum of $131.10, and in favor of the intervener, Whitfield, for the bale of cotton. Appellant then appealed to. the County Court of Bed Biver County, where the case was again tried before a jury and a verdict rendered in favor of the appellant against Miles for the sum of $82.65, and in favor of the intervener, Whitfield, for the bale of cotton. From that judgment appellant, Antone, prosecutes this appeal.

It appears from the statement of facts, that Antone held a claim amounting to the sum of $198.66 against Miles for supplies furnished the latter during the year 1906 to enable him to make and gather a crop on the rented premises. Ho question is raised as to Antone’s landlord’s lien upon the bale of cotton bought by Whitfield from Miles, and of his right to have it subjected to the payment of this supply claim, unless it were defeated by the facts set forth in Whitfield’s plea of intervention.

Appellant’s first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to give the following charge requested by him: “I charge you, as the law, at the request of the plaintiff, that the uncontradicted evidence shows that plaintiff had an undivided one-half interest in the bale of cotton purchased by J. B. Whitfield, intervener, from Delbert Miles, and is entitled to have his landlord’s lien foreclosed for that amount, whatever you may believe the other facts to be.” This charge must have been framed and requested upon the assumption that the mere letting of land to another in consideration of rent to be paid in a portion of the crop, gave the landlord title to that portion he was to receive. Appellant follows this assignment of error with the following proposition: “Where the landlord furnishes land, team, tools and feed, and tenant furnishes labor, the landlord has something more than a lien on crops, he has a specified interest in the crops themselves.” Whether or not one who lets premises to another in consideration of a part of the crops to be *292 grown thereon as rent, has a specific undivided interest in the crops when gathered, as distinguished from a lien, depends entirely upon the terms of the agreement between the parties. (Tignor v. Toney, 13 Texas Civ. App., 518; Mansfield v. Neese, 21 Texas Civ. App., 584; St. Louis S. W. Ry. v. Laws, 61 S. W. Rep., 498; Taylor’s “Landlord and Tenant,” sec. 34.)

There is nothing in the record in this case to show that this was other than an ordinary contract of renting land on shares. Appellant, in the statement of his case, shows that he is seeking to recover a judgment for a sum claimed to be due for supplies, and asks for a personal judgment against the appellee, Miles, and a further judgment for the foreclosure of his landlord’s lien on the bale of cotton bought by the intervener, Whitfield. He nowhere discloses the fact that he claimed ownership of one-half of the cotton, but merely sets up a lien. Ownership and lien are inconsistent interests, and can not exist together in the same person as to the same subject matter. There was neither pleading nor evidence upon which to base such instructions to the jury.

This charge is also subject to the further objection that it undertook to have the jury transcend its authority. It was equivalent to a peremptory instruction to the jury to either foreclose appellant’s landlord’s lien on an undivided one-half of the bale of cotton, or to find that it should be foreclosed. Neither of these is within the province of the jury in such cases. It is the duty of the jury, under proper instructions from the court, to find the fact as to whether or not the lien sought to be enforced exists upon the property involved; and if found to exist, to state that finding in the verdict. It is then the province of the court to direct the foreclosure as a part of its judgment. Hence the court did not err in refusing this special charge.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 39, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 289, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antone-v-miles-and-whitfield-texapp-1907.