Lemay v. Johnson

35 Ark. 225
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 35 Ark. 225 (Lemay v. Johnson) 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
Lemay v. Johnson, 35 Ark. 225 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

This cause brings again before the court the note and mortgage which were collaterally considered in the case of Lemay v. Williams, 32 Ark., 166. The question presented by the record in that case, was whether or not prosecution of an attachment suit' before a justice of the peace, based upon these instruments, and which had been dismissed, was malicious and without probable cause. The court stated hypothetically that if, in fact, the holder of the note had altered the date, without the consent of the maker, and to his prejudice, it was a forgery, and the note void. This was merely the statement of an undoubted abstract proposition. The court in that case left this out of the question as a matter of fact, and decided it on the want of jurisdiction in the magistrate, and the invalidity of the mortgage under the law, then in force, to give a right to proceed in an action at law to enforce it. The matters reappear in a suit in equity, upon independent evidence. This cause must be decided upon it3 own i-ecord.

Lemay, a merchant, filed this bill on tile fourth day of December, 1874, against Williams, a" renter on the plantation of John D. Parks, stating that on the seventh day of May of that year defendant executed to him, and on the twenty-fifth duly acknowledged a mortgage, which is exhibited. In consideration of the sum of one hundred dollars paid as advances by Lemay, it-conveys to him the entire interest of Williams in all the crop or crops planted and to-be planted and gathered on the Parks place that year, to be void if Williams should, on or before the twenty-fifth day of December, pay to Lemay all dues and demands which the latter might legally and justly hold against him. It authorized Lemay to take possession of the crops when the amounts should become due, and sell them to pay the debt; or to take possession of them when gathered and hold them until the debt should be due, and then sell.

The bill then sets forth and exhibits a note of defendant to Lemay, bearing date of May 7, 1874, and payable on the twenty-fifth of December following, for the sum of $158, to bear interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum from the first day of January, 1875, with a waiver of all rights under the exemption laws; which note is alleged to be a charge on the mortgaged property.

It proceeds to charge that "Williams had raised and gathered, on the Parks place, about 4,500 pounds of seed cotton, three bales of cotton, and about two hundred bushels of corn, which, or a large portion thereof, he had removed, and was about to remove or dispose of to the injury of complainant, and that he had refused to deliver said crop according to the agreement, to be held until the note should fall due.

The prayer seeks a decree for the debt and a foreclosure of the mortgage lien ; and that meanwhile a receiver be appointed to take and sell the property, and hold the proceeds ; besides general relief.

In response to the prayer a receiver was appointed for the cotton, alone, who took possession and reported a sale of the seed cotton for $162, and the bales for $181.29.

"Williams, in his answer, denies the acknowledgment of the mortgage on the twenty-fifth of May, or at any other time, but admits that it was signed and delivered to complainant on the thirty-first of March, 1874, with a blank date. He admits the execution of the note, but says it was on the seventh day of April, and bore that date. He says that, then, none of the crops of corn or cotton had been planted; and that complainant, afterwards, in order to obtain a lien at law, altered the date of the note by erasing “April” and inserting “May;” and altered the mortgage by inserting in the blank the date of May 7, and causing a fictitious acknowledgment thereof to be appended as of the date of the twenty-fifth of that month ; and that these alterations were without his consent. He therefore submits that the note and mortgage are not his acts and deeds; and that by them complainant took no lien.

John D. Parks, the landlord, was, on the sixth of January, 1875, admitted to interplead for his rents ; aud set up a contract of his tenant, "Williams, to pay him as rent for that year, one thousand pounds of lint cotton, ginned and baled, of the first picking, and one hundred bushels of corn, to be delivered on the first of November. He says the 4,500 pounds of seed cotton were of the first picking, and that, ginned and baled, it would have been worth $125. The corn was also worth $125. He. says he has not been paid, and claims his lien.

Complainant says, in reply to the interplea, that when the cotton was seized there were left on the place 700 pounds of lint cotton of the first picking, which remained there nearly a month; and that Parks,, knowing of this suit and proceedings, consented to and permitted the removal and disposition of it by Williams. Also, that two hundred bushels of corn were left upon the place, of Williams’ crop, and has there remained ; aud to the extent of one hundred bushels has been consumed by Williams, with the consent and permission of the interpleader.

The regular judge being disqualified, the cause was heard before a special judge, upon the pleadings, exhibits and a mass of evidence. Parks, meanwhile, had died, and Mary E. Parks been made administratrix ad litem.

The court found, amongst other things, that Parks had permitted Williams to use and consume the corn raised upon the place, without any effort to collect his one hundred bushels, for rent; that 1,000 pounds of the lint cotton s.eized was worth $125; and that the interpleader had a lien to that extent, alone, on the fund in court; that complainant had agreed to furnish Williams with supplies for the year 1874, to the extent of $100, and that the latter was to give a mortgage to secure the same, together with all other indebtedness which- might be owing to complainant on the first day of January, 1875 ; that upon the settlement of past indebtedness made, in pursuance of said agreement, on the seventh day of April, 1875, Williams was found indebted in the sum of $158 ; that he then executed the note in question bearing that date, and signed the mortgage with the date in blank, which was left in the custody of complainant, upon an understanding between them, that it should be consummated by execution, acknowledgment and delivery, after the crops should be up and growing ; that afterwards complainant refused to furnish the necessary supplies, as contemplated; whereupon defendant receded from the contract, and did not actually execute and acknowledge- the mortgage. Further, that afterwards, on the twenty fifth day of May, 1874, complainant, without defendant’s consent, filled the blank in the date with “May 7;” and without the authority, knowledge or consent of defendant, caused a certificate of acknowledgment to be appended thereto, and' had the instrument recorded. The court was of opinion that this, in appearance, changed the legal effect of the instrument; which, in fact, was a mere inchoate agreement; or, at most, would have been only an equitable mortgage inter partes, but for the unauthorized acts of complainant, and his refusal to furnish supplies; and that therefore the instrument was not the act and deed of defendant. Further, the court was of opinion that the change in the date of the note was immaterial and did not affect any substantial rights of defendant.

i. Chancetice: ' nowlc>tr¡ai: ceptions.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Seligson v. Seegar
202 S.W.2d 970 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1947)
Smith v. Smith
195 S.W.2d 45 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1946)
Feldstein v. Feldstein
188 S.W.2d 295 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1945)
Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Hagler Special School District No. 27
12 S.W.2d 881 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1928)
Parks v. Murphy
266 S.W. 673 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1924)
McMillan v. Brookfield
234 S.W. 621 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1921)
Bradley v. Holliman
202 S.W. 469 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1918)
Dorsett v. Watkins
1916 OK 705 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1916)
Harrison v. Murphy
1912 OK 799 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)
Ceasar v. Ceasar
1908 OK 251 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1908)
Western Coal & Mining Co. v. Hollenbeck
80 S.W. 145 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Ark. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemay-v-johnson-ark-1879.