4 Ga. App. 52 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
D. G. Hughes Jr. foreclosed a landF lien, against Henderson, his tenant, in the city court of Dum , It was levied upon crops raised on the rented premises. To the foreclosure Henderson filed his counter-affidavit, denying the existence of the plaintiff’s lien, and the Sam Weichselbaum Company intervened, under §2?69 of the Civil Code, and by counter-affidavit denied the validity and existence of the Lien claimed by the plaintiff, and claimed that the proceeds of the property should be applied to the payment of a mortgage given to that company by Henderson for supplies furnished by it to make the crops. By consent of parties the two cases were consolidated and tried together. The jury found a verdict for $342.6?, principal, with interest and costs, in favor of the plaintiff, Hughes; and the defendants excepted to the ruling of the court in refusing a new trial, based upon the general grounds.
It is undoubtedly true that a landlord can not take a lien for supplies already furnished to his tenant by a third person on the tenant’s credit. Elliott v. Parker, 94 Ga. 620 (20 S. E. 106). Consequently, a special contract for such a lien, even though executed by a tenant in writing, and though the special contract was agreed upon and the writing prepared, for execution, and the assignment of it promised before the supplies were furnished, has no validity as against other creditors of the tenant. The specific holding in the Elliott case, supra, was, that no lien which a landlord
We take it, then, that the law is well settled that a landlord has no lien for supplies furnished to aid in making a crop, if they are furnished by another, or if they are furnished without the tenant’s consent, or the debt is assumed by the landlord without the tenant’s consent. Nor has the landlord any lien for articles he may furnish in his capacity as a mere agent for another. The articles furnished in the latter case are really supplied by a third person, the principal, whose agent the landlord is. A mere suretyship assumed by the landlord to guarantee the payment of a pre-existing debt of the tenant, though it be for supplies, will not entitle the landlord to foreclose a lien for supplies. But on the other hand, if supplies are furnished at the instance of the landlord by a merchant to his tenant, upon a previous understanding with the tenant that the supplies shall be so furnished, and the landlord is responsible for the payment of the debt thus created, the landlord is entitled to foreclose a lien for any supplies necessary to make the crop, and for which he himself undertook to pay the dealer, with the knowledge and assent of the tenant. Boyce v. Day, 3 Ga. App. 275 (59 S. E. 930).
As ruled in the case of Rodgers v. Black, supra, it is an issue of fact for the jury, whether the landlord or some one else furnished the supplies in question, or any portion thereof. There is no complaint that this issue was not fully and clearly submitted to the jury by the trial judge; and while Henderson emphatically denied making any agreement with his landlord with reference to the supplies, and while the account was charged on Thomas’ books to Henderson, and not to Hughes, and while Thomas took a mortgage from Henderson to secure the debt, the evidence in behalf of the plaintiff fully authorized the verdict rendered; and though it appears that the testimony in behalf of the defendants would have justified a finding in behalf of the counter-affidavit, the jury gave