Shields v. Kimbrough & Purnell

64 Ala. 504
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 64 Ala. 504 (Shields v. Kimbrough & Purnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shields v. Kimbrough & Purnell, 64 Ala. 504 (Ala. 1879).

Opinion

STONE, J.-

Eorniss was planting, and preparing to plant a crop on two adjoining plantations, known as the “Tom Beck plantations.” Eor rent of part of the land, he had promised to pay four bales of cotton to Mrs. Eorniss and an hundred and sixty dollars to Marshall & Conley. He had also purchased twelve mules of Shields, and had agreed to pay him for them twenty-five bales of the cotton to be grown on [505]*505the places that year, to be secured by a mortgage on the mules and on the crop. He had also made arrangements with Milhous & Shields, who were commission-merchants, to advance him two thousand dollars in provisions and supplies, to enable him to make the crop, to be secured by crop-lien under the statute, and a mortgage on the crop to be grown, mules, &c. More than half this sum had been advanced by Milhous & Shields to Forniss. Forniss was planting on the share, or “squad system” — he to furnish the land and the mules, while the freedmen were to furnish the labor, and he and they were to divide the crops produced between them. He, Forniss, was to advance provisions to the freedmen, to be repaid; the terms of this contract to be commented on further on! Under this contract, he had advanced to the freedmen, in value, eight hundred or a thousand dollars. At this stage of the adventure, Forniss, on the 17th March, sold out his lease and the personal property to Thigpen, who, to adopt the expression of the witnesses, was to “step into the shoes of Forniss”; to assume all the liabilities enumerated above, and to succeed to all the property rights of Forniss. He, Thigpen, was to assume the liabilities for rent to Mrs. Forniss and to Marshall & Conley, the obligation to pay the twenty-five bales of cotton to Shields, and the two thousand dollars to Milhous & Shields for advances; and was to procure the release of Forniss from his liability therefor to Shields, and to Milhous & Shields. This understanding was carried into effect. Thigpen gave his note to Shields, for the twenty-five bales of cotton, and gave a mortgage to secure its payment, on the mules and the crop to be grown. He also assumed the two thousand dollars for advances, and executed to Milhous & Shields a crop-lien and mortgage, to secure its payment. These were properly recorded April 6th. Forniss delivered up to Thigpen his leasehold interest, mules, farming implements, &c., and delivered to him the accounts against the freedmen for provisions advanced to them; and thereupon Thigpen proceeded to make the crop.

By the terms of the purchase, Thigpen was to pay Forniss three thousand dollars for his interest; five hundred dollars in cash, and twenty-five hundred dollars to be paid first January next afterwards. He paid the five hundred dollars, and on the 9th April, executed a mortgage to Forniss, to secure the payment of the twenty-five hundred dollars. This mortgage, and the contract it is made to secure, show on their face that they are subordinate to all the liabilities stated above, The terms of this mortgage will be explained hereafter. This mortgage was duly recorded in the proper office.

In the process of making the crop, Thigpen obtained ad[506]*506vanees from Milhous & Shields, beyond the two thousand dollars secured by the crop-lien and mortgage, to an amount near two thousand dollars. They had no mortgage providing for the payment of this excess of advances. Thigpen harvested the corn crop, and divided off to the freedmen their share of it. In October he surrendered the crop in its then condition, together with all the personal property covered by the mortgages, except one mare, to Milhous & Shields, who, through an agent, gathered the cotton crop, and prepared it for market. Among the effects thus turned over to Milhous & Shields, were the accounts against the freedmen for advances made by Forniss, and by Thigpen after his purchase. These, in the aggregate, amounted to some two thousand dollars, only a part of which was realized by Milhous & Shields. The sum realized from the sale of the mortgaged property turned over, including Thigpen’s one half of the crop in the division with the freedmen, fell short of the amount necessary to pay the rent liabilities mentioned above, the debt to W. B. Shields for the mules, and the two thousand dollars of advances made by Milhous & Shields, under the crop-lien and mortgage. Supplemented by the sum collected from the freedmen, as after shown, the sum realized exceeded the liabilities above, but was not enough to pay them, and the full amount of the additional advances made by Milhous & Shields, over and above the two thousand dollars. The present complainants, Kimbrough & Purnell, are assignees and owners of the debt and mortgage of Thigpen, given to Forniss as above shown, and the question is presented, does that mortgage convey to Forniss the sum realized from the freedmen’s share of the crop, as after shown ?

There is, in the bill and other pleadings, an entire absence of averment of the terms, or of any terms, on which, first Forniss, and then Thigpen, agreed to advance, and did advance, provisions and supplies to the laborers, or how those advances were to be repaid. No reference, in fact, is made to advances; nor is it shown in the bill that any person, other than Thigpen, had or has any interest in the crops to be grown, or that any division of the crops was to talie place. The bill charges that said Thigpen, “in order to secure the payment of the said sum of twenty-five hundred dollars, executed a deed of mortgage to the said John J. Forniss, on * * fifteen head of mules, farming implements, one lot of blacksmith tools, and all the cotton, corn, fodder, and everything else to be grown and raised by said Thigpen during the year 1870, on the said two plantations.” The bill further charges, “ That in the year 1870, a large amount of cotton, corn andfodder, was raised by said Thigpen on said two pian[507]*507tations, amounting to about sixty bales of cotton, one thous- and bushels of corn, and five thousand pounds of fodder.” The property conveyed by the mortgage of Thigpen to Forniss is therein described as “ fifteen head of mules, farming implements, one set of blacksmith tools, and all the cotton, corn and fodder, and every thing else to be raised and grown by him for the present year.” In the proof it is shown, as. we stated above, that the labor which produced the crops, was performed by freedmen working in squads, and that the crops were to be equally divided between Thigpen and the freedmen, with the exception of one squad, which was to have a larger share.

While the testimony shows that both Forniss and Thigpen advanced supplies to the freedmen, of which they kept accounts, and that the accounts thus kept by Forniss were turned over to Thigpen in the .trade, it no where shows that any agreement was made, securing payment for those supplies by a lien on the freedmen’s shares of the crop. Thigpen is the only witness who speaks of a contract between Forniss and the freedmen, as to supplies; and he says nothing on the subject of their payment, or security for their payment. All he says on the subject is as follows : “ John J. Forniss told me he had a contract signed by and between himself and the laborers on the ‘ Tom Beck places,’ but never delivered that contract to me, nor have I ever seen it; although Forniss promised and agreed to turn the same over to me. But he delivered to me, in place thereof, a contract purporting to be between himself and the laborers on the ‘ Tom Beck places,’ but the same was only signed by John J.

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Related

Kelley v. Cassels
147 So. 597 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
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33 So. 668 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1901)
Dunlap v. Dunseth
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Bluebook (online)
64 Ala. 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-kimbrough-purnell-ala-1879.