10 Ga. App. 666 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
This was a money-rule. The contest was between the holder of a common-law fi. fa., issued, in 1909, and the holder of a distress warrant, sued out in 1910 and claiming rent for that year. The judge awarded the fund to the holder of the distress warrant, and the judgment creditor excepts. The facts were these: In January, 1910, Mann entered into a written contract with Georgia Peeples and Walt Peeples, under the terms of which lie agreed to sell to the other parties a described, tract of land for $800, to be paid in instalments. The first instalment was to fall due October 15, 1910, and the last instalment October 15, 1913. The contract further provided: “And it is further agreed that in the ease the said Georgia and Wait ..Peeples fail tq pay one or either of those notes as they come due, we agree to pay fifteen hundred pounds of middling lint cotton rent for that year, for the use of said farm. And upon payment of all of the above notes L. B. Mann agrees to make or cause to be made a good and sufficient title to said land.” The contract was signed by all three of the parties. During the year 1910 Mann advanced to the two Peeples money and supplies necessary to make a crop. Early in the fall of 1910, and some time before October 15, the parties to this contract agreed on a rescission of so much of it as related to the agreement to purchase the land, leaving the contract standing as one of rental only. Mann received 1600 pounds of lint cotton which was grown on the premises in question, and, after paying for supplies which he had advanced to the persons who made the crop, he credited 880 pounds of cotton on the rent. The common-law fi. fa. was levied on the remainder of the crop, and Mann claims the proceeds arising from the sale, under his distress warrant, which- he duly foreclosed and placed in a constable’s hands.
1. In Perry v. Paschal, 103 Ga. 134 (29 S. E. 703), Perry delivered to -Sims a paper of which the following is a copy: “This is to certify that I have this day bargained to Jim Sims fifty acres
The contention of counsel for the plaintiff in error is that Mann had no right to claim rent under the contract until October 15, 1910, or at least until that portion of the contract relating to the purchase of the property had been rescinded. This contention is sound. Oxford v. Ford, 67 Ga. 362. In that case it was held that the landlord had no right to distrain for rent before the date on' which the first instalment on the agreed purchase-price was due, or at least before the date upon which the purchaser had agreed to a rescission of that part of the contract. It is argued, upon the principle of this decision, that Mann was simply an ordinary creditor as to the money and supplies which he had advanced, and, being such, he had no right to apply any portion of the cotton to this unsecured debt so as to defeat the holder of the common-law fi. fa. Where a creditor holds both a secured and an unsecured claim, he can not appropriate the payment first to his unsecured claim, over the objection of another creditor holding a lien upon the property or the fund from which the payment is made Such an appropriation by the creditor would in equity amount to a payment or extinguishment pro tanto of his lien. Cofer v. Benson, 92 Ga. 793 (19 S. E. 56); Stubbs v. Waddell, 4 Ga. App. 264 (61 S. E. 145).
2. But we do not think this principle has any application to the present case. The contract between the owner of the land arid the persons who made the crop was primarily a contract of rent with an option to buy. The relation of landlord and tenant existed
Judgment affirmed.