84 Miss. 219 | Miss. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon the former appeal in this case (79 Miss., 406; 30 South., 691) it was decided that this “controversy is one as to priority of liens between the mortgagees and the landlord,” and the cause was remanded for determination on the merits of the questions of waiver, estoppel, and priority of liens. Omitting consideration of all questions not necessary for decision, and accepting’ the finding of the chancellor upon conflicting testimony as conclusive, we find the following facts to exist: That Mrs. F. S. Hicklin was the owner of a plantation which was leased for a term of years to one W. D. Moore, and that the notes of the tenant, representing the annual rent, had been, with the knowledge of the tenant, assigned and delivered to L. F. Dreyfus. During the year 1898, Moore, the tenant, had been supplied by Dreyfus, and paid the rent for that year to him; but, the crop raised being insufficient to pay his account, a balance of $2,400 was due Dreyfus at the close of the year’s business; this balance being secured partially by a trust deed on work stock, worth approximately $600. In the early part of 1899, Dreyfus refusing to further supply Moore, the tenant, he applied to appellees for $1,200 in advances to enable him to make and gather a crop on the Ilicldin place. After some negotiations, appellees agreed to make the advances upon condition that the lien of the landlord for rent should be waived, and that Dreyfus should transfer his security on Moore’s personalty. These terms being satisfactory to Moore, the matter was by appellees submitted to their attorneys to
The first contention presented on behalf of appellant is that the court erred in holding' that Mrs. F. S. Hicklin was bound by her waiver, because, it is said, appellees did not comply with the conditions expressed therein. To properly weigh the argument on this point, it is necessary to understand the relative positions of the parties, the circumstances which rendered the waiver necessary, and the considerations which induced Mrs. Hicklin to execute it. The conditions which confronted Mrs. Hicklin were these: Her plantation was leased to a man whose personalty and work stock were incumbered to an amount largely in excess of their value. The merchant who had advanced him money and supplies the previous year refused to continue the business, so that it became necessary for the tenant to procure elsewhere sufficient money to enable him to conduct his planting operations during the current year, and this he was unable to do, except upon condition that the lien of the landlord on the crops to be raised should be waived, and the existing trust deed upon his personalty should be transferred. The waiver was executed, therefore, as an inducement to some other merchant to make the necessary advances to the tenant, and thereby prevent the plantation from lying uncultivated. Hnder these circumstances, this was a perfectly natural arrangement. Mrs. Hicklin realized that without the waiver her tenant could not obtain advances, and, as a necessary consequence, she could receive no rent; while, by waiving
The second contention of appellant is that the court erred in holding that L. IT. Dreyfus was estopped by his conduct and declarations from claiming any landlord’s lien as assignee of the rent note on the cotton in question. The doctrine of estoppel by conduct rests upon the principle that it would be a fraud in a party to assert what his previous conduct had denied, when, on the faith of that denial, others have acted so that injury would befall such others if the truth of the fact or previous declarations should afterwards be denied. Staton v. Bryant, 55 Miss., 261. The rule is again correctly stated as follows: “It is a universal law that if a man, either by words or conduct, has intimated that he consents to an act which has been
Affirmed.