Life Ins. Co. of Virginia v. Page

172 So. 873, 178 Miss. 287, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 206
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1937
DocketNo. 31991.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 172 So. 873 (Life Ins. Co. of Virginia v. Page) 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
Life Ins. Co. of Virginia v. Page, 172 So. 873, 178 Miss. 287, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 206 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of LeFlore county, awarding a personal decree against the appellee Jackson W. Page, and dismissing the appellant’s bill of complaint in all other respects.

. The Life Insurance Company of Virginia leased to the defendant Jackson W. Page a plantation in LeFlore county, consisting of 978 acres, for a rental of $2,700 for the year. The lease contract contained a waiver of the landlord’s lien reading as follows:

“In order that the lessee may obtain funds to enable him to conduct his farming operations during the term of this lease, the lessor has simultaneously herewith and does hereby agree to waive its landlord lien for any advances up to an amount not to exceed, in any event, Four Thousand ($4,000.00) Dollars.’’

*295 After the execution of this lease contract, the tenant, with the knowledge and consent of the insurance company, subleased 270 acres of the leased land to the Secretary of Agriculture of the United States for the sum of $1,368.90, payable in two installments of $684.45 each, to be paid by checks drawn payable to the Greenwood Production Credit Association of Greenwood, Miss.

After the execution of the original lease, the Greenwood Production Credit Association agreed to furnish the tenant to the amount of $2,137, which bore interest amounting to $43.79, but before making these advances, it required a separate and independent waiver to be executed by the insurance company and delivered to it. In addition to the amount secured from the Production Credit Association to conduct his farming operations, the defendant Page contended that he secured more than $1,100 for that purpose from his father-in-law, H. G. Kitehell, trustee of the estate of Vesta G. Kitehell, his deceased wife, and when the time arrived for the payment of the rent, it was contended that all the crops produced on the leased premises were used in repayment of the advances made by the Production Credit Association and H. G. Kitehell, trustee, for the purpose of carrying on farming operations on the land.

On November 30, 1934, the insurance company, in the exercise of its landlord’s rights under the statute (Code 1923, section 8799), sued out a distress for rent against certain agricultural products produced on the land; also certain goods and chattels of said Page found on the leased premises; also a United States treasury check or warrant for $684.45 for the second installment of government rent, which was payable to and then in the hands of the Greenwood Production Credit Association, and also cotton tax exemption certificates covering 25,000 pounds of lint cotton.

On December 7,1934, the Life Insurance Company, the landlord, filed its bill of complaint against the tenant, *296 Jackson "W. Page, H. G. Kitehell, trustee of the estate of V. G. Kitehell, deceased, J. M. Weeks, assistant in cotton adjustment under the United States Agricultural Adjustment Act (48 Stat. 31, see 7 U. S. C. A. 601 et seq.), Oscar Wade, a subtenant on the leased premises, the Greenwood Production Credit Association, and others. The bill alleged that the rent was unpaid, and set forth the facts in reference to the pending attachment for rent, and prayed for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property levied on under the attachment, for a mandatory injunction to require the proper indorsement of the government check, and the cotton ■tax exemption certificates and the delivery thereof to the receiver, and for the subjection of all of said property to the payment of the complainant’s claim for rent.

After proper notice of the, application for the appointment of a receiver and the issuance of a mandatory injunction, without apparent contest, a decree was entered appointing a receiver and granting an injunction. Thereafter the receiver qualified and took charge of the property under levy, and, in compliance with the injunction, the tenant, Page, indorsed the cotton exemption certificates, and the government check, which was payable to the Greenwood Production Credit Association, was indorsed by it and delivered to the receiver, as was also certain stock in said association of the par value of $115 which had been issued to said Page when the loan to him was consummated. The receiver sold the tax exemption certificates for $500, and the government check for $684.45 was duly cleared through the United States Treasury, and the proceeds placed to the credit of said receiver. In addition, the defendant H. G. Kitehell, trustee, paid to the receiver $303 of rent from subtenants which had been paid to him for the repayment of alleged advances.

The defendant Page answered the bill and alleged that in pursuance of the general waiver of the landlord’s lien *297 in the lease contract, he borrowed from the Greenwood Production Credit Association the sum of $2,137, and from H. G. Kitchell the sum of $1,177, for the purpose of making a crop, and that $303 of the proceeds of the crops raised by subtenants and paid as rent had been paid to the said Kitchell on the indebtedness due to him. It was further averred that the United States Treasury check for $684.45 was not subject to the attachment for rent, for the reason that it was not proceeds derived from agricultural products, but there was no claim that it was exempt from levy by reason of being government funds.

H. G. Kitchell answered the bill, and asserted a right to the $303 which had been paid to him out of the proceeds of the crop, on the ground that it was in part payment of money advanced by him under the waiver of the landlord’s lien for the purpose of enabling the tenant to produce a crop. He further asserted a superior lien on personal property and agricultural implements that had been levied on, by virtue of the lien of a deed of trust thereon executed to him, as trustee for the estate of V. G. Kitchell, deceased, on March 1, 1933, but he asserted no right or claim to the United States government check or the tax exemption certificates.

The Greenwood Production Credit Association answered disclaiming any interest in the controversy or in the proceeds of the government cheek payable to it, and it indorsed the check and delivered it to the receiver, and also delivered 23 shares of its stock of the par value of $5 each, which had been issued by it to Jackson W. Page in consummating its loan to him.

The J. I. Case Company also intervened and asserted a prior lien on a certain piece of the agricultural machinery, under a conditional sales contract, and the right of this petitioner does not appear to have been contested.

After the answers had been filed and the cause had been set for hearing in vacation, the United States of *298 America filed a petition to intervene, wliicli was granted, and it thereupon filed its petition setting up at length the contract that had been entered into between the tenant, Jackson W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 So. 873, 178 Miss. 287, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/life-ins-co-of-virginia-v-page-miss-1937.