26 Fla. 276 | Fla. | 1890
The appellees sued out a distress warrant in the Circuit Court of Duval county against J. FI.
The first error assigned is, the court erred in holding that the claimant, the appellant here, was the actor in the court below, and in requiring him to proceed and establish his case as plaintiff in the cause. The case at bar was before this court before, in C. H. Jones & Brother vs. S. W. Fox, assignee, 23 Fla., 454, and it then appeared from the record that at the trial in the court below the plaintiffs in the warrant, Jones &■ Brother, were put first to proof of their right to subject, the'goods distrained to their debt.Jones & Brother took a non-suit and appealed the case, assigned as error, among other things, the ruling of the court below requiring them first to prove their right to subject the goods distrained to their debt. The judgment was reversed,-the court holding the rule in this State to’be, that the claimant must first be put to proof of his ownership of the property. At the last trial of the cause the court below followed the rule as announced in the case supra, and hence, there was no error in the trial court deciding that the claimant was the actor, and the fact that the claimant was styled the “plaintiff,” could certainly make no difference to any one interested in the result of the suit.
“The second error assigned is, the court erred in overrul
The third error assigned is, the court erred in ascertaining and adjudging that the property levied on, as shown by the return of the sheriff upon the. distress warrant, is subject to the lien of said C. FI. Jones & Brother for rent as claimed as against the claim of the claimant. At the trial of the cause the following statement of facts was agreed to by and between the parties to the suit: 1. That J. FI. Neff, doing business as ship chandler and grocer under the name of J. FI. Neff & Co., in the city of Jacksonville, Florida, was indebted to the plaintiffs for rent, as their tenant, under the lease filed herein as exhibit A. 2. Being so indebted, and the said rent being past due, and being also indebted to others, as shown in the assignment herein filed as exhibit B, executed said assignment to S. W. Fox, assignee, claimant herein, and the said Fox thereupon took possession of the stock of merchandise so assigned. 3. That subsequently the plaintiffs sued out the distress warrant as shown by the proceedings, which was levied upon said stock of merchandise so in possession of said Fox, but which had not at the time of the seizure been removed from the leased premises.
It is insisted for appellant that the statute under which this action was brought, Chapter 3131 laws of Florida, act
Second, that when the distress warrant was sued out, the title to the goods had passed to the claimant, and for that reason the court below erred in determining that the goods were subject to the plaintiffs’ claim. This position is not tenable. The assignee acquired, no greater interest in the goods than the assignor possessed before assignment, and when he, the assignee, took the goods he took them subject to the appellees’ lien. The lien given by the statute is a charge upon the property of the tenant, and the landlord cannot be deprived of his lien at the will of the tenant by assigning the goods in the house rented, to a third party. Campbell Manufacturing Co. vs. Walker, 22 Fla., 422.
The fourth error assigned is, the court erred in overruling the motion of the appellant, claimant below, for a new trial. The grounds of this motion were: 1. The judgment rendered herein is contrary to law; 2. The judgment herein is contrary to the evidence'; 3. The judgment is not supported by the evidence; 4. The judgment herein is not supported by the law; 5. The court erred iq overruling