92 P. 1093 | Kan. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In January, 1904, Elizabeth B. Mangum leased her farm to M. C. Cooney for $150 per year, taking his note for that amount, due the following-December. Cooney raised a.crop of corn on the farm and sold a portion of it to Henry Stadel for $117.50. He paid $35 on his note, leaving $115 of the rent unpaid, which under the statute was a lien on the corn grown on the premises, including that sold to Stadel..
The question arises, Was there testimony tending to show that Stadel had notice of the lien? The statute gives the landlord a lien on the crops of his tenant for the payment of the rent. The lien may be enforced against the crop after it has passed into the hands of a purchaser with notice of the lien, wherever it can be identified, by a proceeding against such purchaser to recover the value of the crop purchased to the extent of the unpaid rent and damages. To charge a purchaser with notice of a lien actual notice is not necessary. A person cannot be a bona fide purchaser who has brought to his attention facts which should have put him upon inquiry — an inquiry which if pursued with due diligence would have led to a knowledge of the lien. (Scully v. Porter, 57 Kan. 322, 46 Pac. 313; Stadel v. Aikins, 65 Kan. 82, 68 Pac. 1088.) Without doubt the plaintiff had a lien upon the corn sold Stadel, but it was one which was not enforceable against a bona fide purchaser. This follows from the fact that the statute gives a remedy against a purchaser with notice, implying that there is no remedy against one who purchases in good faith and without notice. The plaintiff’s action is practically based upon a charge of bad faith in the purchaser; that is, of the purchase of the corn with notice of the plaintiff’s lien. While the statute gives a lien, bad faith in the purchaser cannot be presumed. Stadel was not required to show his good faith, and the burden of showing that the purchase was made with notice of the lien was upon the plaintiff.
Did plaintiff offer testimony tending to show notice
“When a person purchases grain from a tenant, either on or some distance from the leased premises,, with knowledge of the relation of landlord and tenant, or of the facts which should have prompted inquiry as. to the existence of a lien in favor of the landlord on crops grown on the leased land, he cannot escape liability to the landlord.” (Stadel v. Aikins, 65 Kan. 82, 85, 68 Pac. 1088.)
Enough was brought out in the testimony to give-
The ruling of the court sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.