298 S.W. 25 | Ark. | 1927
The facts, as stated by counsel for the appellant, are as follows:
On and prior to April 18, 1925, appellant was the owner and in possession of an unexpired lease on ten acres of land in Washington County, which was to continue so long as the strawberries growing thereon should produce a paying crop; on the 18th of April, 1925, this lease was sold under an execution levied out of the circuit court of Washington County upon a judgment against the appellant and in favor of the McIlroy Banking Company. At this execution sale the appellee, H. K. *882 Wade, became the purchaser of the unexpired lease; the sheriff executed to Wade a certificate of purchase.
On April 17, 1926, within a year from the date of the execution sale, appellant paid into the office of the circuit clerk of Washington County the sale price of the lease, fifteen per cent. additional, and the cost of the action, for the purpose of redeeming the lease from the execution sale so made to Wade, the clerk issued a receipt for the money so paid, and appellant thereupon asserted his right to the possession of the leasehold.
After the expiration of one year from the date of the execution sale, and after the redemption by the execution debtor, H. K. Wade, the purchaser, with knowledge of the redemption, demanded and received from the sheriff of Washington County a sheriff's deed conveying to him the leasehold involved. The exact date of this deed is uncertain, for the reason that the deed itself is not dated, but it was recorded, as shown by the transcript, on the 6th day of May, 1926; it does not appear to have been acknowledged. Thereupon the appellee brought this action for an injunction to restrain the appellant from interfering with the appellee in the possession of said leasehold. The chancery court in its decree held that a lease is a mere chattel and not subject to redemption, and granted the injunction prayed for.
For the purposes of our decision we accept the above as a correct and succinct statement of the facts. It thus appears that the only question for decision is whether or not an unexpired lease of land for agricultural purposes, when sold under execution, is subject to redemption under the laws of Arkansas. The statutes concerning the sale of real property under execution and the redemption from such sale are contained in 4223 to 4333 inclusive, chapter 59, of Crawford Moses' Digest. In these sections the terms "real property" "real estate," "land," and "premises" are all used interchangeably and mean the same thing. The *883 particular section under which appellant claims the right to redeem reads as follows:
"Section 4329. When any real estate, or any interest therein, is sold under execution, the same may be redeemed by the debtor from the purchaser, or his vendees, or the personal representatives of either, within twelve months thereafter."
Section 6299, C. M., declares that a judgment obtained in the courts therein named, including the circuit court, shall be a lien on the real estate owned by the defendant in the county in which the judgment was rendered from the date of its rendition. We have no statute which, in specific terms, declares that a judgment lien on land or real estate includes, under these terms, likewise a leasehold interest in such land for any purpose, much less for agricultural purposes. Mr. Freeman says:
"A term of years in real estate was always, by the common law, regarded as a chattel. It was transferred as personal, and not as real, estate. In this respect there was no difference between voluntary and involuntary transfers. Hence a leasehold interest in lands, for whatever term of years it may continue, must, unless some statute directs otherwise, be levied upon and sold as personal property." 1 Freeman on Executions, 119.
Many authorities are cited in note to sustain the text. Among them is Barr v. Doe, ex dem. Binford, 6 Blackford 335, 38 Amer. Dec. 146, where, among other things, it is said:
"A term of years is a chattel interest. Upon the death of the tenant it does not descend to his heirs, but goes to his executor. In the division of property into real and personal, it is classed among the latter. And in England, upon a fieri facias against the goods and chattels of the debtor, it is liable to be seized and sold." See also Coombs v. Jordan, 22 Am. Dec. 236.
Our own court, in Lenow v. Fones,
"No proposition has been better settled, from the earliest days of the common law, than that a lease, of whatever duration, is but a chattel. It was at common law regarded within the definition of personal things, and, although it was denominated a chattel real to distinguish it from mere movables, it was not, when speaking with legal accuracy, considered as real estate."
Now, in the absence of a statute changing this rule of the common law and declaring that a leasehold interest in lands is an estate or interest in the freehold or land itself, the rule of the common law must obtain, and such leasehold interest be considered as personal property. Therefore the question recurs whether the words "or interest therein" in the above statute are sufficient to embrace a leasehold interest in lands for a term of years for agricultural purposes. We do not believe that these words have that effect or that they were so intended by the Legislature.
The language of the statute clearly shows that it was only intended to include the freehold and any interest or ownership in the freehold itself. A leasehold interest may be so worded as to give the lessee, during the time of his lease, an ownership or interest in the land itself; but the lease under consideration is not so phrased. "At common law, and generally in the United States, all annual crops which are raised by yearly manurance and labor, and essentially owe their annual existence to cultivation by man, termed `emblements,' and sometimes `fructus industriales,' irrespective of their state of maturity, whether planted by the tenant or the owner of the soil, may be levied on as personal property. But, in several of the United States, execution levies are restricted to mature crops, and are not allowed as to unripe crops or as to growing crops not in a fit state to be gathered." "Perennial plants and their ungathered products, such as trees, bushes, grasses, peaches, timber, fruit, etc., are incident to the soil and not subject to execution" (as personal property). 17 Cyc. 941, 3 and 4. *885
A tenant under a lease of lands for the purpose of growing crops has no ownership or interest in the land itself on which the crops are grown. Therefore, from a sale of such lease under execution the tenant has no right to redeem under the above statute. To be sure, those leases which convey to the lessee an interest and easement in the land itself, such as gas and oil, and other mineral leases, and leases for the purpose of cutting and removing timber and other natural products which are a part of the land itself, would fall under a different rule; and we do not mean to hold that the statute under review would not be applicable to such leases. We are not called upon to decide and do not decide that question, but merely mention it to show the distinction between those leases and the lease under review. See Standard Oil Co. v. Oil Well Salvage Co.,
2. Section 4271, C. M. Digest, provides: "Every unexpired lease of land shall be subject to execution and sale as real estate." Learned counsel for the appellant contend that, under this statute, the lease in controversy was real estate, but we do not concur in this view. The preceding section (4270) prescribes and classifies the property, real and personal, that may be sold under any execution upon any judgment, order or decree of a court of record, and, after specifying certain personal property, it mentions, in the sixth subdivision, all real estate where of the defendant in the execution is seized in law or equity on the day of the rendition of the judgment order or decree whereon the execution issued, or at any time thereafter.
Sections 4323 to 4328 inclusive prescribe the manner of sale of real property under execution, and 4341 et seq. prescribe the manner of sale for personal property under execution. The methods of procedure for the sale of real and personal property prescribed by these statutes are different. A consideration of these *886 statutes convinces us that the purpose of 4271, supra, was merely to declare that unexpired leases of land should be governed by the methods prescribed for the sale of real property, rather than the method prescribed for the sale of personal property mentioned in the statute. It was within the province of the Legislature to declare that unexpired leases of land, when subject to sale and execution, should be sold as real estate is sold, that is, after giving notice of the time, place, etc., the same as that required for the sale of real estate. But it will be observed that 4271 does not declare that unexpired leases of land or real property are an interest in the real estate itself. It only provides that, in the execution and sale of such property, it should be governed by the same methods as are prescribed for real estate. Our conclusion with reference to this statute (4271) is that it is not sufficient to convert an unexpired lease of land for agricultural purposes (which, as we have seen, is a chattel real) into real estate or real property. We do not believe that such was the purpose of the Legislature, and therefore the redemption statute invoked by appellant in this case has no application.
The decree of the chancery court is in all things correct, and it must affirmed. It is so ordered.