The judgment of conviction in this case must be reversed for several reasons.
The defendant was indicted for selling or removing seed cotton, to which Letcher “had a lawful and valid claim under a written instrument, lien created by law for rent and advances, or other lawful and valid claim, verbal or written.” Code of 1886, § 3835. The indictment follows the form and is sufficient. — Form 77.
In Smith v. State,
The statutes, on which the validity of Letcher’s alleged lien must depend, are the following sections of the Code of 1886, § 3056: “A landlord has a lien ... on the crop grown on rented lands for the current year, and for advances made in money or other thing of value,.....for the sustenance or well being of the tenant or his family, or for preparing the ground for cultivation, or for cultivating, gathering, saving, handling, ox preparing the crop for market,” &c. In Cockburn v. Watkins,
It is not every advance a. landlord may make, even to his tenant, that comes within the statute. It must be of some one or more of the articles enumerated, and for some one or more of the purposes mentioned in the statute. Without this there is no lien.
The testimony tends to show that the advances made to the defendant in 1886 were made to him as a hired laborer, to be paid for by his labor. For this the statute gives no lien. As for the alleged balance for advances in 1885, the testimony does not enable us to affirm there was any lien for them. The only lien proved'in this case was for rent, and the cotton delivered must be applied to it. As the testimony appears in this record, there is no sufficient proof of any
The account-book, without proof of its correctness, was improperly admitted in evidence. — Hirschfelder v. Levy,
Beversed and remanded.
