Dunbar v. Texas Irr. Co.

195 S.W. 614, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1410
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1912
DocketNo. 6005.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 614 (Dunbar v. Texas Irr. Co.) 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
Dunbar v. Texas Irr. Co., 195 S.W. 614, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1410 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellee against J. I-Iarvey and the Bay City Rice Milling Company to recover the sum of $566.72, together with interest and attorney’s fees, alleged to be due as water rents for water furnished the defendant Harvey by plaintiff to irrigate a rice crop grown by him during the season of 1909 upon a tract of 80.96 acres of land on the D. N. Dunbar farm in Matagorda county. It was alleged that plaintiff had a first lien upon the rice crop grown upon said land to secure the payment of said water rents, and that 231 sacks of said rice had been wrongfully converted by the defendant Bay City Rice Milling Company, and judgment was asked against said defendant for the value of said rice. The defendants answered and set up that D. N. Dunbar was the owner of the land on which the crop was raised; that Harvey was a tenant of said D. N. Dunbar and rented the land -from him under a verbal rent contract for the year 1909, for a share of the crop, viz. three-tenths thereof, payable as harvested ; and further that the said D. N. Dunbar, the landlord of said Harvey, had during the said year made advances to the said tenant to enable him to plant, grow, and harvest the crop raised, amounting to $587; that the tenant turned over to his said landlord, Dunbar, 231 sacks of rice, of the value of $1.70 per sack, in part payment of the sum due for advances; and that the defendant Bay City Rice Milling Company received the said rice from said Dunbar, stored it in his name, and for his account, and sold it for him on his order, and thereafter paid him the proceeds or such sale, less storage and commission for sale. D. N. Dunbar, the landlord, intervened and alleged that he was the owner of the land in fee simple; that J. Harvey was his tenant for the year 1909, under a parol cropping contract, by which the inter-vener, as consideration for the land and seed, was to receive three-tenths of the crops; and. further, that as landlord during said year and beginning on January 10, 1909, up to September 30, 1909, he had furnished advances to his said tenant, to enable him to plant, grow and harvest his crop, consisting of money, teams, tools, feed, and supplies, amounting to the sum of $587.80; that the tenant only made a crop of 330 sacks; that out of same as harvested he paid intervener 99 sacks for his rent, or share of the crop; that the re *615 maining 231 sacks, of the value of $1.70 per sack, were delivered to him at the railroad station by the tenant as part payment for the advances so made; that he had and held the landlord’s lien upon said crop; and that such lien was superior and paramount to any lien held by the plaintiff. The cause was tried by the court below without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff against the defendant Harvey for the sum of $663, being the amount of the water rents due by him to plaintiff with interest and attorney’s fees as provided in the rental contract, and against' the defendant the Bay City Rice-Milling Company and the intervener D. N. Dunbar for the sum of $392.70, the value of said 231 sacks of rice with interest thereon from November 15, 1909. Judgment was also rendered in favor of the intervener against the defendant Harvey for the value of the supplies furnished him by the inter-vener. From this judgment, the defendant Bay City Rice Milling Company and the in-tervener D. N. Dunbar prosecutes this appeal.

The case was tried in the court below upon an agreed statement of facts, from which we make the following excerpts:

“By section 2 of the statement of facts it is agreed that D. N. Dunbar was, and ever. since has been, the owner of the land in fee simple.
“By section 3 it is agreed that said Dunbar about January 1, 1909, rented the 80 acres of land to defendant Harvey for the year 1909, by verbal contract under which intervener, Dunbar, for the furnishing of land and seed to plant it, was to have three-tenths of the crop raised; that the tenant Harvey raised a crop of 330 sacks and delivered 99 sacks to Dunbar for the rent as same was harvested.
“By section 4 it is agreed that the landlord, Dunbar, during said year, beginning on January 10, 1909, and ending on September 30, 1909, made and furnished advances to his said tenant, amounting to $587.80, to enable him to plant, cultivate, and harvest the crop, which advances consisted of stock, feed, cash, harness, tools, and supplies, and by the account of advances itemized in said article it is shown that the landlord, Dunbar, had advanced to his tenant $267 prior to the making of the water contract.
“By section 5 it is agreed that the tenant hauled the balance of the crop, amounting to 231 sacks, to the railroad station on September 30, 1909, and on October 15, 1909, turned same over to his landlord, Dunbar, in part payment of the amount due for advances and assigned to him the bill of lading.
“By section 6 it is agreed that afterwards the landlord, Dunbar, delivered the said 231 sacks of rice by rail to the defendant Bay City Rice Milling Company, who sold it for his account at the price of $1.70 per sack.
“By section 7 it is agreed that the landlord, Dunbar, applied the proceeds of the sale to' the partial payment of his debt for advances.
“By section 12 it is agreed that no contract of any nature existed between the landlord, Dunbar, and the plaintiff (appellee) for the irrigation of the land cultivated by the defendant Harvey, and. that said Dunbar was in no manner a party "to the contract between the tenant Harvey and the plaintiff sued on herein, and that the landlord’s lien provided for by statute has never been waived or released.
“By sections 9, 10, and ll it is agreed that the defendant J. Harvey, on April 20, 1909, entered into a water contract with plaintiff company, wherein he agreed to pay. a water rental of $7 per acre for the irrigation of the land, amounting to $566.70, and that subdivision 9 of said contract created a mortage on all rice grown on the land to secure the payment of the sums due, and for attorney’s fees, in case suit was brought on the contract; that said mortgage has been duly filed on Miay 4, 1900, as a chattel mortgage; and that neither the statutory nor the chattel mortgage lien of the plaintiff has ever been waived or released.”

Under an appropriate assignment of error, appellant first assails the judgment of the court below upon the ground that article 3130 of the statute (Sayles’ Civil Statutes) is so vague and indefinite that no valid lien is created thereby. The proposition presented under this assignment is as follows:

“A statutory lien on personal property, to be valid and effective as such, must be complete and specific in its terms, as to the amount secured, as against whom the lien exists, and as to the particular service or product for the value of which the lien is given, failing in these matters the act is void for uncertainty and indefiniteness.”

Article 3130 of the statute is in the following language: *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 614, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbar-v-texas-irr-co-texapp-1912.