Tyson had let his storehouse to Abe Weil reserving a rental payable in monthly installments. Tyson sued out an attachment against Weil for rent not yet due and caused the writ to be levied upon 47 boxes of-dry goods on the,-premises.. The Samuel Gans Company, a. foreign corporation, interposed its claim to the goods, and a trial of the right of property folloAved; the issue óf laAV and-fact being tried by the court without a jury. From. judgment condemning the goods to the payment .of plaintiff’s claim, this appeal is prosecuted.
Section 4747 of the Code of 1907 reads as follows: “The landlord of any storehouse, dwelling house, or •other building, shall have a Lien on the goods, furniture, and effects belonging to the tenant, and subtenant, for his rent, which shall be superior to all other liens, except those for taxes.” Succeeding sections of the article state the cases in which the landlord may have an attachment for the enforcement of his lien and the procedure to be followed. The article was brought forward into the Code of 1907 from previous Codes without change except for the insertion in section 4747 of the words “and subtenant.” In amending the statute
Conceding everything to the validity of the statute in its operation upon the rights of subtenants and to the regularity of the procedure adopted, the judgment condemning claimant’s property to the satisfaction of any judgment for rent which plaintiff might thereafter procure against the defendant was erroneous for the reason that plaintiff, upon whom the burden rested, failed to establish a subtenancy. We are unable to see that Mrs. Weil held as a subtenant under Abe Weil. The inference of her subtenancy is to be drawn, if at all, from the fact that Abe weil, acting as her agent for the sale of her goods, used for that purpose the leasehold taken in his own name, and paid the rent for which he became liable to Tyson from month to month out of the proceeds of the sale. But it is not inferable from these facts that any estate, any term, was carved out of the leasehold for Mrs. Weil, or that at any time she had any contract right to a further continuance of the arrangement. It could scarcely be held on these facts that Mrs. Weil had any disposable interest in the freehold. If she is to be treated as having been in any sort
Issue was made up as prescribed by statute; the plaintiff alleging that the property claimed was the property of the defendant in the writ, and liable to its satisfaction. — Code, § 6040. While in the ordinary case the claimant has no legal right to raise questions that pertain to the controversy between plaintiff and defendant, yet, where the plaintiff asserts a lien, a right to the satisfaction of his debt out of the property of the claimant — which was the case presented by the evidence here —the trial of the right of property, if it is to be of any value to the claimant, must open the way for him to show that the plaintiff has no lien.—Boswell v. Car-
Applying the foregoing principles, we think the issues of fact should have been decided in favor of the claimant. Proceeding to render the judgment which the trial court should have rendered, we adjudge the issue according to the claimant’s contention.
Reversed and rendered.