Detinue by appellants for three bales of cotton. One Ghesson, being the owner and in possession of certain lands, on the 21st day of December, 1892, executed a mortgage thereon to J.Tt. Warren & Co., to secure two notes for $1,000, each, the one payable October 5th, 1893, and the other November 5th, 1893. Upon default in the payment of either, Warren & Co. were authorized to take possession of the lands and sell the same for the payment of the mortgage debt. Default was made in payment of the first note, and on the 10th of October, 1893, Ghesson, the mortgagor, surrendered possession of the land, with the crops growing thereon, to Warren & Co. under their mortgage. Warren & Co. then appointed Chesson their agent to gather the crops for them, and under this agency he gathered the three bales of • cotton in controversy and stored them in ap-pellee’s warehouse for Warren & Co., where they remained until seized under the writ in detinue in this case.
On the 14th March, 1893, Chesson executed a mortgage to the appellants, Thompson & Co., upon the crops tobe
Clearly a bailee, sued in detinue, may defend upon the title of his bailor; and it makes no difference that
Nor do we think that the fact that part of the money advanced by Thompson & Go. to Ghesson, under said note and mortgage given to them, was paid by Ghesson to said AVarren & Co. some time prevous to the 10th day of October, 1893, by check for $117, drawn by Chesson on Thompson & Co. and payable to AVarren & Go. in September, 1893, for provisions &c., which he was using for the purpose of making a crop on said lands during the year 1893, and that AVarren & Co. knew that Chesson had executed to Thompson & Co. a mortgage upon the crops for the purpose of securing the payment of the said mortgage, in any wise estopped AVar-ren & Go. to assert their superior title to the cotton. There is no question raised of notice of the execution and existence of the AVarren mortgage, on the part of Thompson & Co. The authority cited ■ by appellants’ counsel (Big. on Fraud, (Ed. of 1887), p. 187) is foreign to the subject.
Affirmed.