80 So. 521 | Miss. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
Sam Lucas sued out a writ of replevin against E. E. Scarborough, claiming that Scarborough unlawfully detained certain property, and that the affiant was entitled to the immediate possession of said property, and that it had been wrongfully taken from the possession of said Lucas less than thirty days prior to the suing out of the writ. Scarborough was the manager of a plantation owned by Dr. Guthrie, a nonresident of the state, and Lucas was a tenant upon the place in the year 1914. When Lucas went upon the place of Guthrie, Scarborough, acting for Guthrie, took up an indebtedness consisting of two deeds of trust upon some of the property involved in the suit and took a' new deed of trust upon the property of Lucas for one of the deeds of trust so taken up. In addition to this, Scarborough, representing Guthrie, sold Lucas a mule and some other property, and Scarborough testifies that in the fall of the year, the price of cotton being low, and Lucas believing he could not pay out of debt, agreed with Scarborough to turn the property in the deed of trust over to Scarborough in satisfaction for
It does not appear to be disputed that Lucas owed Dr. Guthrie a sum of money not less than two hundred and fifty dollars, but which amounted to between five and six hundred dollars according to the testimony of Scarborough. Scarborough testified that he had no personal interest in the property and no personal claim against it, but that he was general agent and manager of Dr. Guthrie’s plantation and that he had possession as such manager for Dr. Guthrie. Guthrie filed a claimant’s issue, but before the trial of the issue between Scarborough and Lucas his attorneys dismissed that suit and relied upon the possession of Scarborough as agent of Dr. Guthrie. The trial judge on motion granted a peremptory instruction for the plaintiff, Lucas, and judgment was accordingly entered, from which this appeál is prosecuted.
Presumably the court below granted the peremptory instruction on the theory that Scarborough could not defend as agent of Dr. Guthrie. We think the court erred in two particulars, or two reasons: First, the testimony of Scarborough that Lucas had delivered the
Section 1261, Code of 1906, section 991, Hemingway’s Code, reads as follows:
“Any person who, with notice of an employer’s employee’s, laborer’s, cropper’s, part owner’s, or landlord’s lien on any agricultural products, and with intent to defeat or impair the lien, shall remove from the premises on which it was produced, or shall conceal, or aid or assist to. remove or conceal, anything subject to such lien, and upon which any other person shall have such lien, without the consent of such person, shall, upon conviction, he punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars, and by imprisonment in the county jail not more than six months, or by either.”
Under this section the plaintiff could not remove the products grown on the place and the property furnished upon which the lien existed without the consent of the landlord.
The writ of replevin is a possessory action and' does not necessarily involve title. Scarborough being in possession, lawfully according to his testimony, could defend the suit of replevin, though he had no personal title to or interest in, or claim upon, the property. It is insisted by the appellee that Scarborough would have to proceed under section 772, Code of 1906, section 555, Hemingway’s Code, which reads as follows:
*132 “Upon affidavit- of a defendant before plea filed in any action upon contract, or for the recovery of personal property, that a third party, without collusion with him, has a claim to the subject of the action, and that he is ready to pay or dispose of the same as the court may direct, the court may make an order for the safe-keeping or payment, or deposit in court, or delivery of the subject-matter of the action to such person as it may direct, and an order requiring such third party to be summoned to appear in a reasonable time and maintain or relinquish his claim against the defendant. If such third party, being duly summoned, or in casé he be a nonresident of or absent from this state, if publication of summons shall have been made for him as prescribed by law for nonresident or absent defendants in chancery, shall fail to appear, the court may declare him barred of all claim in respect to the subject of the action against the defendant therein; but if such third party appear, he shall be allowed to make himself defendant in the action at law instead of the original defendant, who shall he discharged from all liability to either of the other parties, in respect to the subject of the action, upon his compliance with the order of the court for the payment, deposit, or delivery thereof. If the claim of such third party extend to only a part of the subject-matter of the action, similar proceedings may be had respecting the part so claimed, and the action shall proceed as to the residue as in other cases.”
Scarborough might have proceeded under this section had he desired to resort thereto and if he was willing to surrender the property, but he was not compelled to do so, and if he refused to do so and defended the suit it devolved upon the plaintiff to show the right of immediate possession to thé property in himself.
Judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.