Holt v. Colyer
This text of 71 Mo. App. 280 (Holt v. Colyer) 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.
Opinion
This is an action of replevin to recover the possession of four hundred bushels of corn.
It has been the long settled law in this state that the crop, during the existence of the lien, is not subject to the process of the law without payment of the rent at the suit of another creditor as the lien of the landlord protects it from seizure and sale. And so it has been ruled that when the landlord had the crop in his possession with special lien thereon that it was protected from seizui'e and sale till the rent was paid, and that he had such right of property therein as entitled him to claim it by interpleader in an action of attachment by a creditor against the tenant. Sanders v. Ohlhausen., 51 Mo. 163; Knox v. Hunt, 18 Mo. 244. And so, too, it has been held that the statutory lien of the landlord, without other authority, does not entitle him to seize and appropriate the crop without legal process. But if he comes into possession of it without trespass and especially with the tenant’s consent for the purpose of securing the rent, the rent must be fully paid or tendered before it can be retaken by the tenant or his mortgagee. Colby on Replevin, sec. 522; Buck v. Lee, 36 Ark. 525; Roth v. Williams, 45 Ark. 447. It thus is made to clearly appear that the plaintiff was [285]*285entitled to the undisturbed possession of the corn until his rent was either paid or tendered in full. The payment or tender of the rent was a "condition precedent to the mortgagee’s right to recover the possession. The sheriff could not successfully defend the possession acquired by him under the writ, for his right thereto was not greater than that of the mortgagee, which, as we have seen, was inferior to that of the plaintiff. The effect of the judgment in this action was to restore the-status quo, or in other words, to restore plaintiff’s possession of which he had been deprived by the suit of the mortgagee.
It follows that even if the objection, that the -wife and not the husband was the proper party to bring the action, had been taken and preserved in the proper manner, for the reasons just stated, it would not have, been tenable.
The judgment is for the right party and must be affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
71 Mo. App. 280, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-colyer-moctapp-1897.