Buck v. Payne

52 Miss. 271
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 52 Miss. 271 (Buck v. Payne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buck v. Payne, 52 Miss. 271 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Simrall, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was once before in this court, and turned upon the question whether the mortgage executed by Arlow Minice to Payne & Raines was superior to the laborer’s lien of Thomas Minice. The circuit court had instructed the jury that the mortgage, having been executed 14th February, 1873, was superior to the lien of the laborer, which resulted from the contract of employment entered into by the mortgagor with Thomas Minice the 6th April, 1873. It was held by this court that a mortgage on the crop, executed after the passage of the act of the 5th of April, 1872, was subordinate to the right of the mortgagor to employ laborers, and thereby by operatiop of law create a lien in their behalf, although such employment might be subsequent to the date of the mortgage.

. When Payne & Raines took the mortgage from Arlow Minice . it was subject to his right to employ laborers, and subject to the first lien, which the act of 1872 created in their behalf.

The case must be remanded for that error. It Avas also to be considered on the second trial, on the question whether Buck was a bona fide purchaser of the cotton. Testimony went-to the point that Thomas Minice had waived to the mortgagees his rights, and that Buck did not have notice of the mortgage. See report of case, Buck v. Payne & Co., 50 Miss., 650.

[276]*276The only .additional fact introduced on the second trial was that the mortgage was recorded a day or two after its date.

The case is now before us to review the judgment in favor of Payne & Raines. The laborer’s lien is implied by law. It exists altogether in pais, resting on no matter of recoi’d, requiring no writing to evidence or uphold it. It is purely secret and tacit.

Buck, the purchaser from Thomas Minice, the laborer, is protected to the same extent that Thomas Minice was. He becomes the assignee of Thomas’ rights as respects the cotton, and stands in his place. It was incumbent on him, therefore, to make inquiries and ascertain their extent. And in this the laborer’s lien is distinguishable from those which are express, manifested by writing, and registered. A recorded moi'tgage is notice to creditors andpurchasei’s, from the mortgagor, of its contents, and no more. It does not, and in the nature of things cannot, impart notice of secret equities. Registration contemplates no purpose of that sort. But when a right is asserted under a tacit lien it involves a concrete of circumstances out of which it arises. If Thomas Minice were contesting with Payne. & Raines about the bale of cotton, it would be competent for them to show that when his employment began, in April, 1873, he agreed to waive the lien in favor of his employer’s mortgage in consideration that they would furnish him directly, as through his father, with provisions and other necessaries. A lien which the law implies for the benefit of a party may be waived or surrendered by him. It may arise out of parol contract (verbal contract). So it may be waived or surrendered in the same way. If the laborer engages to rely upon the promise of the employer to pay his wages, and not upon the lien, he is at liberty to do so. He may waive the security which the law provides, and accept the personal liability of his employer.

A purchaser of cotton or other agricultural products from a laborer acquires just such title as he has and is able to give. If he has secured it for wages the presumption of law is that his right is protected by the lien conferred by the act of 1872. [277]*277Whether it be so or not is purely a question of fact, and it is open to inquiry and proof whether he did not abandon his lien by this contract. A purchaser from him acquires no larger or better right than he had. He cannot shield himself on the plea that he was an innocent purchaser, without notice that the lien has been surrendered or abandoned. He must at his peril inform himself of the terms of the laborer’s contract.

The policy of the statute is to make sure to the laborer his wages. That is accomplished by impressing on the entire agricultural crop a privilege to be paid in preference to other creditors or incumbrancers. If, as we have said, he chooses to .give up this advantage, his vendee of any part of the crop cannot. protect himself by proof that he did not know of such waiver. To hold otherwise would be to affirm that, although the laborer may have worked under a written contract expressly waiving the lien, yet if a purchaser of cotton from the laborer did not have notice of such waiver he is not bound by it, but becomes an innocent purchaser. And, further, if the employer has mortgaged the entire crop to be produced, and filed with his mortgagees the contracts with his laborers containing such waiver, such mortgagees could not prevail against a purchaser of part of the product from a laborer unless the purchaser had notice of such waiver. On the contrary, we think that a purchaser from a laborer must inform himself of the facts, and can claim no better right or greater protection than the laborer himself.

A party under a duty to make inquiry must use reasonable diligence that directs him to the primary source of information. Now, what were they in this case. Buck is held to have notice of the contents of the mortgage. He would there have read that, for supplies advanced and to be advanced to the mortgagor, his family, and hands under his control, to enable them (us) to cultivate a plantation, “ the mortgagor pledged his entire crop of cotton and corn to be raised and gathered •by us the present year.”

[278]*278The entire supplies to be consumed bj all persons engaged in the production of the crop were to be furnished, and the whole crop to be raised by them is pledged.

If ho had consulted Arlow Minice, the employer, he would, in all probability, have been informed that Thomas had waived his privilege to the mortgagees. The mortgage itself embraces the whole crop, because the mortgagees were to advance to Arlow for all the laborers. The plan was this : the supplies were to be on the credit of Arlow, for all the hands. They may have been debtors to him, and therefore he pledges all the rights he had against the laborers for payment. Among-these was his lien on their part of the crop for what he might advance them. To that extent the mortgage would be operative, and, after this claim was satisfied, the surplus would beat the disposal of the laborer.

It does not appear that Buck instituted any inquiry, either of the employer, or the state of accounts, or claims of the mortgagees. For his own' safety, before he bought the cotton, he ought to have ascertained by inquiries, at least of the employer, and, being charged with notice of the contents of' the mortgage, prudence would have suggested that he should have learned from Payne & Raines why it was that Arlow Minice assumed to mortgage the whole crop.

But there is a point not brought to the notice of the court when formerly before us, aud which seems to have escaped the attention of counsel on both trials in the circuit court; that is, that a default or breach of the contract with the mortgagees did not occur until after the 1st of November, whereas this suit of replevin was brought 31st October, 1873.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Miss. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buck-v-payne-miss-1876.