Stephenson v. Lewis

238 S.W. 61, 152 Ark. 361, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 61 (Stephenson v. Lewis) 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
Stephenson v. Lewis, 238 S.W. 61, 152 Ark. 361, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 52 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellant-Stephenson was-the plaintiff below, and brought this suit in equity to enforce his lien as a landlord against the proceeds of certain cotton received and sold by appellee Lewis (defendant below) wbo is a merchant, and who furnished Lewellen, the tenant, the money and supplies to make the crop grown during the year 1920 upon the demised premises. The parties occupied the same relations to each other during the year 1919, except that the rental contract for that year provided for an agreed share of the crop. Stephen-' son testified that Lewellen failed to cultivate a portion of the land in 1919, and he therefore changed the 1920 contract on that account to provide for an agreed share of the cotton and corn and for $8 per acre rent on any land not cultivated by the tenant. Lewis carried over a large indebtedness due him by Lewellen during the year 1919, and there is a sharp conflict between his testimony and that of Stephenson as to the terms of the 1920 rental contract. Lewis testified that he refused to advance Lewellen until after Stephenson had modified the rental contract to make it the same as the 1919 contract had been, that is, that the rent should be only an agreed share.

The deposition of Lewis’ wife was taken, and she testified that she heard the negotiation between Stephenson and her husband and corroborated her husband as to the modification of the 1920 contract. A motion was made to suppress this deposition upon the ground that Mrs. Lewis, as the wife of the defendant, was incompetent to testify; but this motion was overruled.

There was a motion to suppress the deposition of Lewis himself and that of his wife, upon the ground that the notary public who took the depositions gave them to defendant’s attorney, who took them, unsealed, and delivered them in that condition to- the clerk of the court. The order of the court made on the hearing of this motion recites the admission of the attorney for the defendant' that the depositions had been transmitted by him and delivered unsealed to the clerk. The motion to suppress was overruled; but it does not appear what showing, if any, was made to warrant the order. In the absence of an affirmative showing that the integrity of the depositions had been preserved, the depositions were prima facie inadmissible. Section 4236, C. & M. Digest, directs how depositions shall be directed and forwarded to the cleric of the court in which they are to be read. The action of the attorney in delivering these depositions to the cleric unsealed was in violation of this statute and rendered the depositions prima facie inadmissible; and there appears in the record no showing which removes this presumption. St. L. I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Webster, 99 Ark. 265; Mo. & N. Ark. Rd. Co. v. Johnson, 115 Ark. 448.

It is conceded that the deposition of Mrs. Lewis is incompetent, and that the court should have excluded it; but it is insisted that the competent testimony in the case sustains the finding made by the court below that the complaint was without equity. This is not true, for, with the deposition of Mrs. Lewis suppressed, as it must be, and in the absence of a showing validating the deposition of Lewis himself, the decree is without evidence to support it and must therefore be reversed.

In view of the reversal which must be ordered, we take occasion to announce the law applicable to the only question of law which appears to be involved in the decision of the case upon its merits, and that is, the extent of the landlord’s lien.

Before the crop was gathered, the tenant abandoned it. Stephenson at the time claimed a balance on rent of $238.48. Stephenson gathered the remainder of the crop and applied the proceeds thereof, amounting to $62.51, to his demand, and sued for $175.97, the balance due after this credit was allowed. Lewis admits that he received cotton of much greater value than this balance claimed.

This balance is claimed as rent upon the land which the tenant did not cultivate pursuant to the written contract of tenancy to that effect. As has been said, Lewis claims this contract was modified so as to provide that the rent should consist wholly in an agreed share of the crop, and that the provision for the payment of money rent on lands not cultivated was expressly abrogated. If the court should find the facts thus to be, then the finding and decree should be for the defendant, as it is admitted that Stephenson was given his share of the proceeds of the crop actually produced. Few v. Mitchell, 80 Ark. 243.

But what about the claim of a lien on the crop which was grown for the rent due on the lands which were not cultivated? Our answer to this question is that the hen of the landlord exists on all the crops to secure all the rent. The statute provides that every landlord shall have a lien upon the crops grown upon the demised premises in any year for rent that shall accrue for such year. Sec. 6889, C. & M. Digest. The contract was an entire one. The rent reserved was an agreed share of the crop grown on the lands cultivated and money rent for the remainder of the land. The lien as certainly exists to secure the payment of money as it does to secure the payment of an agreed share of the crop, and the statute gives a lien upon all the crop for all the rent.

In the case of Von Berg v. Goodman, 85 Ark. 605, a tenant agreed to make certain repairs on the demised premises as part of the rent. The tenant failed to make the repairs, and this court held that the landlord had a lien on the crop for the value of those repairs. It was there said: “But, as it (cost of repairs) was.in fact stipulated for as a part of the rent, we hold that a lien existed for that as well as for the value of the part of the crop stipulated in the contract. * * * * The parties cannot put into the contract that which is not rent and by calling it rent create a lien on the crop for the amount (Roth v. Williams, 45 Ark. 447); but, if it is in fact a part of the rental price, its character as such is not changed because the liability therefor attaches upon the happening of some contingency, such as the failure to make repairs.”

It is true the repairs in that case constituted a part of the rent for the whole of the demised premises; but the case is express authority for our holding that the claim for money rent is not defeated because liability therefor attached upon the happening of the contingency contracted against — the failure of the tenant to cultivate a portion of the land. The money to be paid in this contingency was made a part of the rent and furnished a part of the entire consideration for the whole of the land demised.

In 2 Wood on Landlord & Tenant, p. 1032, it is said: “But, if an entire rent is reserved, although it is in a subsequent part of the lease distributed to each tenement in several distinct sums, each tenement is charged with the whole rent. ’ ’

The case of Thompson v. Mead, 67 Ill. 395, is a case directly in point. The law of Illinois giving liens to landlords appears to be identical with the law of this State, except that, instead of reading that “every landlord shall have a lien upon the crop grown upon the demised premises, * * * * ” as the law of this State reads, the law of that State reads that “every landlord shall have a lien upon the crops growing or grown upon the demised premises.” This difference is, of course, unimportant in its application to the point now under consideration.

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Related

Bonds v. Lloyd
547 S.W.2d 431 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1977)
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34 S.W.2d 219 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 S.W. 61, 152 Ark. 361, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-lewis-ark-1922.