90 So. 484 | Miss. | 1921
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
Tbe appellant, Overall, was convicted on a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses by virtue of bis having sold a bale of cotton upon which there was a landlord’s lien without informing tbe purchaser of the exact
The indictment is drawn under section 1168, Code of 1906 (section 895, Hemingway’s Code), which provides as follows:
“If any person shall sell . . . any property . . . on which he knows there is a lien of any kind . . . Avithout. informing the person to Avhom he so sells . . . of the exact state of the property as affected by said . . . lien . . . thereon, he shall be guilty of obtaining under false pretenses whatever he received from the person dealing with him, and shall, on conviction, be punished therefor, as for obtaining goods under false pretenses.”
The proof in the case for the state is substantially as follows:
The appellant, Overall, was the tenant of Jeff Busby for the year 1919, and as such tenant raised a bale of cotton upon which Mr. Busby, as landlord, had a lien for sixty dollars. Appellant, without the consent of Mr. Busby, and without informing his purchaser of the exact state of the property as affected by said'landlord’s lien, sold the cotton to B. N. Smith, and received payment therefor. After-wards the landlord, Mr. Busby, sued and obtained judgment against Smith for the amount due as a lien upon the cotton. The indictment and conviction of appellant followed.
At the trial Smith, the purchaser of the cotton, testified that before he paid Overall the purchase money for the cotton Mr. Busby, the landlord, informed him (Smith) that — “Overall lived on my place and I have a landlord’s lien on that cotton, and there is a settlement pending be-tAveen me and Overall, and it will be all right.”
This testimony by Smith, the purchaser, that he was notified by Busby of the landlord’s lien before he bought and paid for the cotton from appellant, is undisputed in this record. Mr. Busby does not deny informing Smith of his lien on the cotton before Smith had completed the pur
The appellant presents several grounds for reversal, but we shall notice one only, and that is whether the evidence offered by the state is sufficient to sustain a conviction for obtaining money under false pretenses.
The exact point to be considered in determining the question of whether the state’s proof sustains the, charge, is this: Can there be a conviction of false pretenses under the statute involved where it is shown, without dispute, that the purchaser of the incumbered property had'knowledge of the lien before he purchased it? It will be noted that the statute prescribes that “the exact state of the property as affected by the lien” shall be disclosed % the seller to the purchaser, and the failure to do this shall constitute false pretenses.
The appellant in this case did not inform the purchaser of the exact status'oí the property with reference to the Hen. It would therefore appear that there has been a violation of the letter of the statute. But, the question arises, Was there a violation of the spirit of the statute? If there be no violation of the spirit, then the appellant is guiity, of no offense, because the spirit, and not the letter, must control in the ’construction of the law.
We are of the opinion that the facts in this case fail to sustain a conviction of obtaining money under false pretenses. The purpose of the statute was to provide 'that, where a person obtains money or property from another by the sale of property upon which there is a lien, and the purchaser has been deceived by the seller with reference to the exact title of the property in not disclosing the lien,
But where the purchaser, as the undisputed evidence in this case shows, had prior knowledge, by express notice, that the landlord’s lien upon the cotton existed, and that a settlement between the landlord and the tenant was then pending, there was no deception practiced by the seller upon the purchaser by failure to disclose, because the purchaser already knew the status of the property. The main object of the statute is to protect purchasers against deceit and injury by sellers who know the property is incumbered, by requiring that the seller must disclose its exact status. So, if there is no deception of the purchaser, or, to put it in another way, if the purchaser knows what be is buying— knows there is a lien upon the property — and he purchases it, then he is not deceived and injured by the seller, and consequently nothing is obtained by false pretenses, and there is no violation of the law.
Following the views expressed above, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the appellant discharged.
Reversed, and appellant discharged.