Chamberlain v. Heard

22 Mo. App. 416, 1886 Mo. App. LEXIS 298
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 Mo. App. 416 (Chamberlain v. Heard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlain v. Heard, 22 Mo. App. 416, 1886 Mo. App. LEXIS 298 (Mo. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Hall, J.

The fact that the rent was due and unpaid was clearly averred in the affidavit as ground of attachment.

The question in this case turns upon the construction of section 3091, Revised Statutes, which is as follows: “When any pérson, who shall be liable to pay rent, whether the same is due or not, or whether the same be payable in .money or other things, if the rent be due within one year thereafter, intends to remove, or is removing, or has within thirty days removed his property from the leased premises (or shall in any manner dispose of such crop, or attempt to dispose of the same, so as to endanger, hinder, or delay the landlord from the collection of his rent, or when- the rent is due and unpaid), the person to whom the rent is owing, may, before a justice of the peace, or the clerk of a court of record, having jurisdiction of actions by attachment in ordinary cases, of the county in which the premises lie, make affidavit of one or more of the facts aforesaid, and that he believes, unless an attachment issue, he will lose his rent, whereupon such officer shall issue an attachment for the rent * * *”

That section of the statute is to be construed in connection with section 3083, which provides as follows: “Every landlord shall have a lien upon the crops grown on the demised premises in any year, for the rent that shall accrue for that year, and such lien shall continue for eight months after such rent shall become due and payable, and no longer. When the demised premises, or any portion thereof are used for the purpose of growing nursery stock, a lien shall exist and •continue on such stock until the same shall have been removed from the premises and sold, and such lien may be enforced by attachment in the manner hereinafter mentioned.”

By section 3083 the plaintiff, as the landlord of the leased premises, had a lien upon the crop grown thereon [420]*420during the year of the lease for the rent, and the - lien continued for eight months after the rent note became due. Haseltine v. Asherman, Sup. Ct. of Mo. not yet reported. By section 8091 the manner of enforcing such lien is provided. (Same case.)

In the-case at bar, the property attached was property upon which the landlord’s lien was, and what we shall say in this opinion, will be said with reference to that fact, without an intention to intimate at all whether we should or should not hold the same way had property been attached on which there was no such lien. We desire to be understood as simply deciding the question presented .by the facts of this case.

Is a landlord authorized, by section 3091, to enforce his lien, established by section 3083, by reason of the fact that the rent is due and unpaid, without more ?

■ By section 3091, the landlord must, in order to'obtain an attachment, make an affidavit “that he believes, unless an attachment issue, he will lose his rent.” Is the fact thus stated by the landlord an issuable fact % The counsel for the defendants contend that the belief of the landlord is not an issuable fact, but that the fact that the landlord would have lost the rent unless the attachment had issued, is an issuable fact. Whether the rent be due or not, if it will be due in one year thereafter, the landlord is entitled to an attachment to enforce his lien, if the tenant “intends to remove, oris removing, or has, within thirty days, removed his property from the leased premises, or shall in any manner dispose of such crop, ■ ,or attempt to dispose of the same, so as to endanger, hinder, or delay the landlord from the collection of his rent.” If the rent be due the landlord upon any one of such facts is entitled to an attachment, if by such fact he is hindered or delayed in the collection of his rent. It is not necessary that the landlord should be in danger of losing his rent. Still, in order for the landlord to obtain an attachment upon any of such facts, he would have to make the affidavit as to his belief mentioned [421]*421above. The affidavit in such cases would not present an issuable fact. The belief of the landlord would not be an issuable fact. The danger of the landlord losing his rent would not be made an issuable fact by such affidavit, because the landlord would be' entitled to an attachment if he should be only hindered or delayed in the collection of the rent.

Again, in order for a landlord to obtain an attachment upon the aforesaid facts, it is necessary for him to make an affidavit of one or more of such facts. The landlord must make affidavit of such facts, as they are set out in the statute. For instance, the first of said facts is, that the tenant “intends to remove * * * his property from the leased premises * * * so as to endanger, hinder, or delay the landlord from the collection of his rent.”

The tenant’s intention to remove his property from the leased premises must be such as to “endanger, hinder, or delay the landlord from the collection of his rent,” and of that fact the landlord must make affidavit, when it is relied on by him as a ground of attachment. In such case the danger of the landlord losing his rent is put in issue by the landlord’s affidavit, but by another part of such affidavit from the part in which he avers his belief. In such case, the affidavit is in two parts. The first part avers the fact of the intention of the tenant to remove his property, etc., so as to endanger, binder, or delay, etc. The second part avers the landlord’s belief that unless the attachment issue he will lose his rent. By the first part of the affidavit, the landlord’s danger of losing his rent is put in issue, as we have just said. By the second part of the affidavit no such issue is presented. . The issue was already made by the preceding part of the affidavit in connection with other issues. To hold that the second part of the affidavit, not only puts such fact in issue, but makes the landlord’s right to an attachment depend upon that single issue, is unreasonable. Such' clearly is not the meaning of the statute. [422]*422The second part of the affidavit is a jurisdictional act and must be made before the issue of the attachment, but it need not be proved.

Following such facts in the statute is another fact, stated asa ground of' attachment, which is, “or when the rent is due and unpaid.” "What is the meaning of those words ? They do not mean that the fact that the rent is due and unpaid, in connection with one or more of the other facts, gives the landlord the right to enforce his lien by an attachment, because the provisions preceding those words, as we have seen, give the landlord such right. Those words can have only one meaning, and that is, that when the rent is due and unpaid, the-landlord, on that ground, without more, may enforce his lien.

When the fact that the rent is due and unpaid is a ground of the attachment, the landlord must make affidavit of that fact, and, also, that he believes, unless an attachment issue, he will lose his rent. But the part of his affidavit as to his belief must be made for the same purpose and none other than that for which it must be made when any other fact named in the statute is the ground of the attachment. As we have seen, that part of the affidavit presents no issuable fact when any other fact is the ground of the attachment, so does it present no-issuable fact when the ground of the attachment is that the rent is due and unpaid. So much for sections 3083- and 3091 as original acts. They are not, however, original acts.

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Related

Bryan v. Vaughn
579 S.W.2d 177 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)
Williamson v. Adkins
208 S.W. 270 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1919)
Toney v. Goodley
57 Mo. App. 235 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1894)
Norton v. Flake
36 Mo. App. 698 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1889)
Haseltine v. Ausherman
29 Mo. App. 451 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1888)
Hicks v. Martin
25 Mo. App. 359 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Mo. App. 416, 1886 Mo. App. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-heard-moctapp-1886.