Rose City Mercantile Company v. Miller

286 S.W. 1010, 171 Ark. 872, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 545
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 1010 (Rose City Mercantile Company v. Miller) 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
Rose City Mercantile Company v. Miller, 286 S.W. 1010, 171 Ark. 872, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 545 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Certain preliminary pleadings and motions were filed in this cause and are discussed in the briefs, but a stipulation filed upon the submission of the case in the court below renders it unnecessary to consider them. In this stipulation it was agreed “that this cause shall be tried as a suit brought for the purpose of enforcing the rent lien of plaintiffs against defendant for cotton appropriated by it on which the rent had not been paid ’ ’

In support of this cause of action the plaintiffs offered testimony to the following effect: Mrs. H. T. Urquhart, by written contract, leased her farm to two tenants. One portion of the farm was leased to Son Lewis, and another portion to Crawford Romus. The rent of one tenant was $1,750, and the rent of the other was $1,250. After executing these lease contracts, Mrs: Urquhart conveyed the farm to her two daughters, Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Ragland, who are the plaintiffs in this suit. W. H. Miller, the husband of one of the plaintiffs, was agent for both the plaintiffs in the collection of the rents. The Rose City Mercantile Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, a corporation, of which J. L. Atkins was president, made advances of money and supplies to sharecroppers of Lewis and Romus to enable them to make a crop during the year 1923, and, to secure these advances, took a mortgage on the crop of these sharecroppers.

Miller testified that Atkins state'd to him that he would like to handle the crop to protect the interest- of the store, which both understood to mean the Rose City Mercantile Company, and that, pursuant to this conversation, he wrote Atkins the following note:

“Little Rock, Ark., August 7, 1923.
“Mr. John L. Atkins,
North Little Rock, Arkansas.
“Dear Sir: Referring to our conversation, please find below memo of various rent notes maturing on or before November 1, 1923.
Crawford Romus.........................................................$1,250.00
Son Lewis ........................................................................... 1,750.00
Wm. Holman .................................................................. 250.00
“You are authorized to collect the above'rent notes out of the first cotton, when picked, ginned and sold, you to furnish the Union Trust Company of Little Rock, Arkansas, each Monday morning, weekly, with statement showing amount of cotton ginned and sold and to whom sold, and to deliver the proceeds as collected to the Union Trust Company, to be credited on the above notes until final payment is made.”

Miller further testified that he later went away on a trip, assuming that the cott.on would be sold by Atkins and the proceeds applied to the payment of the rent, but, upon his return, he found that, after selling -the cotton, Atkins had applied only one-half the proceeds of the- crop of the sharecroppers to the accounts of the plaintiffs at the bank. The other half had been credited to the accounts of the sharecroppers with the company. This suit was brought against' the company to recover the proceeds of the sale of the sharecroppers’ cotton.

There are but few questions of fact in the case, the principal one being the capacity in which Atkins acted in selling the cotton, it being one of the contentions of. the company that Atkins was a mere trustee, whose actions herein set out did not render it liable for the proceeds of the sharecroppers’ cotton, although' this money was received and applied by it to the credit of the sharecroppers’ accounts.

Another statement of this contention is that the company had nothing to do with the cotton or proceeds of the sale, except that Atkins placed cash in the hands of the company-as trustee to hold and pay out on the order of Atkins, who bought cotton for the Lesser-G-oldman Cotton Company, when Atkins made out tickets showing the sum due for cotton purchased and to whom the money should be paid, and that, in selling the cotton pursuant to the authority conferred in the note from Miller, set out above, Atkins was not the agent of the company, and the company is not therefore liable for the destruction of the plaintiffs’ landlord’s lien.

It is also contended that the plaintiffs did not show such ownership of the land as authorized them to maintain this suit for conversion, there being no relation of landlord and tenant between the plaintiffs and the company, and further, that it was not shown that 'the plaintiffs had not been paid their rent.

It is finally insisted that, as the cotton had been sold to a purchaser having full knowledge of the existence of a landlord’s lien, and that the rent had not been paid,' the plaintiffs should have attached the cotton in the hands of the purchaser, and therefore the cause, which was brought in equity, should have been transferred to law and the plaintiffs required to proceed against the purchaser of the cotton.

The chancellor held the company liable for the conversion of the half interest'in the crop belonging to the sharecroppers, and this appeal is from the decree entered in accordance with that holding.

It may be first said that we think the undisputed testimony shows that the plaintiffs were the owners. of an undivided half each of the land on which the crops were grown, and they therefore had a landlord’s lien on the crops to secure the payment of their rent. Moreover, Atkins was constituted agent for the plaintiffs to collect their rents, and, having acted in that capacity, he must account to his principals as such. Under the agreement Atkins undertook to collect the rent for the plaintiffs, and, under this authority, he sold the cotton and paid them one-half o.f the proceeds, and he will not be heard to question the authority under which he acted.

We think it. a mere play upon words to attempt to distinguish between Atkins and the company in the conversion of this cotton. Miller testified that it was understood in his conversation with Atkins, prior, to writing-the note set out above, that Atkins was the president of the company, and the purpose of the arrangement was to enable Atkins to protect the interests of the company. The undisputed.testimony shows thaff after each sale off cotton, the company remitted one-half of the proceeds to the Union Trust Company, the depository designated in the Miller note, and these letters were written and signed by the company by Atkins as president. Moreover, the undisputed testimony shows that the proceeds of the sale of the interests of the sharecroppers were credited on the books of the company to the accounts of these sharecroppers, so that there can be no question but that the company was a party to and the beneficiary of the conversion of the cotton.

As to the proposition that the testimony did not show that the rent had not been paid, but little need be said. Atkins handled and sold all the cotton, and the statement rendered by the company of the sales -of the cotton showed that the total proceeds of all the cotton paid only a small part of the rent.

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Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 1010, 171 Ark. 872, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-city-mercantile-company-v-miller-ark-1926.