Bottrell v. Farmers' Bank & Trust Co.

291 S.W. 832, 172 Ark. 1165, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 832 (Bottrell v. Farmers' Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bottrell v. Farmers' Bank & Trust Co., 291 S.W. 832, 172 Ark. 1165, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 113 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Mehaffy, J.

This suit was begun by appellant, plaintiff below, alleging that one S. B. Sweeney was a tenant on the land belonging to him, and raised a crop for the season of .1920, under a contract by which Sweeney was to pay the plaintiff $9,487 for the rent.

Plaintiff alleged that the tenant, Sweeney, harvested. the crop and paid $13,000 of the proceeds thereof to the defendant, Farmers’ Bank & Trust Company, for the satisfaction of a certain mortgage executed by Sweeney to the bank. It is also alleged that the defendant received said money, knowing that Sweeney was the tenant of said plaintiff and that said sum was derived from the sale of crops on the land and was subject to plaintiff’s lien for rent. Plaintiff also alleged that he made a demand on the defendant for the amount due on the rent, and was told that the financial condition of the bank was such that it could not sustain a draft for said sum, but that it was instituting action against Wilson-Ward Company at Memphis for the proceeds of cotton shipped to Wilson-"Ward Company by Sweeney, and that defendant would pay the rent if it was successful. It alleged that it relied on defendant’s promise to pay, and, for that reason, did not enforce or attempt to enforce his lien for rent; also alleged that defendant had recovered the money from Wilson-Ward Company.

The defendant answered, admitting that plaintiff was the owner of the land, and that it was rented to Sweeney, but denied that it was rented for the sum of $9,487; denied that Sweeney had sold the crop and paid $13,000 of the proceeds to the defendant to be applied to the paying of the mortgage, without having paid said rent; denied t£at it received the money with knowledge that said money was proceeds of the crop raised and grown, and subject to plaintiff’s lien for rent; denied that any demand was made upon defendant; denied plaintiff was told that defendant’s financial condition was such that it could not sustain a draft at the time, but that it was instituting action against "Wilson-Ward Company ; denied that it told said plaintiff that it' would pay rent if it was successful; denied that any promise was made and that plaintiff relied on the promise for rent; and further stated that, if plaintiff ever had a claim, it was barred by the statute of limitations at the time of filing of this suit.

The undisputed facts in the case are that the plaintiff was the owner of the land, and that Sweeney was his tenant and raised a crop on which the plaintiff had a lien for the rent, amounting to $9,487, and that Sweeney was indebted to the bank, said indebtedness being secured by a mortgage on some personal property and the crop. Sweeney sold the crop and, without paying the rent, except a small portion of it, paid the proceeds from the sale of the crop to the bank on his indebtedness to it.

Plaintiff’s proof tends to show that the bank promised to pay him the rent if they collected from Wilson-Ward Company, bnt the defendant denies this. The proof does not show, however, that the defendant asked or that the plaintiff promised not to institute suit to enforce the lien. Suit was not begun within six months after the rent was due. It would be useless to set out the testimony, because the undisputed proof is such that, if the suit is not barred by the statute of limitations, plaintiff is entitled to recover. If his cause of action is barred, he is not entitled to recover. This is the only real controversy in the case.

The appellant contends that the action of the bank destroyed the landlord’s lien, and that its action amounted to a conversion, thereby giving rise to an action in tort, which may be brought any time within three years.

The defendant contends that the statute of limitations is six months. Plaintiff calls attention first to the case of Van Etten v. Goldman Cotton Co., 158 Ark. 432, 250 S. W. 338. In that case it was held that “the act of purchasing the cotton destroys the landlord’s lien, and one cannot do this and escape liability for so doing except when he has acted in good faith in making the purchase, and good faith requires a reasonable investigation of any information of which the purchaser has possession calculated to warn him that he is Being offered cotton upon which there exists a landlord’s lien.”

In the above case the landlord sought to make the purchaser of cotton pay, because it was alleged that the purchaser had converted the cotton. The court, however, held that the purchaser bought the cotton without knowledge of the lien, and was therefore an innocent purchaser. But in this case it is not claimed that defendant was an innocent purchaser, but the claim is that the suit was not begun in time. We therefore think the above case has no application to the facts in this case.

Appellants next call attention to and rely on the case of Walker v. Rose, 153 Ark. 599, 241 S. W. 19. We do not think that case has any application. In the first place, there is no controversy about the statute of limitations, but it is a question of an innocent purchaser and of conversion. The proof showed in that case that the cashier of the bank stated that it was his fault that Walker shipped the cotton, that he instructed him to ship it, and knew that he shipped it, and received the drafts, and the court said :

“When the bank, through its cashier, advised Walker to ship cotton to a cotton factor out of the State, the cashier knowing at the time that the appellee had a lien on such cotton for rent and supplies, and when the cashier received from Walker a draft on the factor for the proceeds of such cotton and used such drafts in paying l^alker’s indebtedness, the bank by these acts converted to its own use the proceeds of the cotton, with full knowledge of the fact that the appellee had a lien upon such cotton, or its proceeds, for rents and supplies. The decree of the court holding the bank liable to appellee for such proceeds, under the circumstances, was correct, as disclosed by the above proof. Having’ knowledge of the appellee’s lien, it must be held that the conduct of the bank was tantamount to a destruction by it of such lien.”

It will be observed that the only question in that case was the question of an innocent purchaser, and the court held that, when the bank advised the tenant to ship the cotton out of the State, and, acting on that advice, the tenant did ship it, and turned the proceeds over to the bank, this was tantamount to a destruction of the lien by the bank, but there was no question in the case of Walker v. Rose as to the statute of limitations.

The nest case relied on by appellant, Foster v. Bradley, 143 Ark. 319, 220 S. W. 811, has no application to this case, and does not discuss the question of time in which suit must be brought. And, as we have already said, there is no question here about the landlord having a lien superior to that of the bank, and no question, as we understand the proof, about the knowledge of the bank that Sweeney was a tenant and that the appellant therefore had a lien for rent. Bnt the only question is whether or not he can enforce his lien against the bank after six months, or whether he can maintain a suit to compel the bank to pay because it received the proceeds, if a suit was not begun within six months. We think it may be said that the case of First National Bank v. Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank, 159 Ark. 389, 252 S. W.

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Related

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136 S.W.2d 188 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1940)
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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 832, 172 Ark. 1165, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bottrell-v-farmers-bank-trust-co-ark-1927.