81 Mo. App. 17 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
The defendant was the owner of about four hundred acres of farm and pasture lands which she rented
The plaintiff also demanded possession of the flax under his mortgage. McCarter delivered the flax so threshed to Mr. Hargis for the defendant. It seems that McCarter had obtained from Hargis the seed which he sowed in the previous spring and had given the latter an instrument in the nature of a mortgage on the crop to be grown therefrom to secure the price of the seed so furnished. It was also therein agreed that the product was to be delivered to Hargis at the St. Louis market price.
The defendant testified however that she sold the seed to Hargis. But however this may be, it is certain Hargis got the seed and on August 7, 1896, paid defendant the full market value thereof less his commissions and the price of the seed furnished McCarter in the previous spring, which she applied on the rent. On the tenth day of August, following, the defendant and McCarter entered into a contract by which the latter turned over to the former the possession of the farm, and the corn, hay, flax and hogs thereon, in consideration of which the former paid him $800 and canceled his notes for the rent. The hogs are shown to be worth about $400.
The plaintiff’s insistance is, that a landlord’s lien can only'be enforced by legal process; while it is that of the defendant that where the crop is delivered by the tenant to be applied in satisfaction of the rent due, legal process in such case may be dispensed with. The ordinary rule is probably as plaintiff contends. Knox v. Hunt, 18 Mo. 243; Sanders v. Ohlhausen, 51 Mo. 163; Hulett v. Stockwell, 27 Mo. App. 328.
The judgment will be reversed and cause remanded.