Judge v. Curtis

Decision Date16 January 1904
PartiesJUDGE et al. v. CURTIS et al.
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

Frank P. Poston, for appellants.

BUNN, C. J.

This is a bill in equity to fix a landlord's lien on proceeds of certain cotton, upon which he had a lien for rent, and to subject certain other property of Duffin Bros. & McGeehee, merchants of Memphis, Tenn., in Arkansas, to the payment of the amount so adjudged, and for other purposes.

In January, 1898, John Sabine Smith, a citizen of New York, was the owner, and had been for some time the owner, of a plantation in Chicot county, Ark., known as the "Florence Plantation," and had rented the same for the year 1897 to W. J. Smith, of that county. At this time he again rented the plantation to the said W. J. Smith for the year 1898 for the sum of $1,800, and took therefor his two several promissory notes, each for $900, one due and payable on the 15th November, 1898, and the other on the 15th day of December, 1898, and secured by his landlord's lien on said crop to be grown on said plantation for that year. In March next following, W. J. Smith arranged with the defendants Duffin Bros. &amp McGeehee, general merchants of Memphis, Tenn., to furnish him moneys and supplies to enable him to carry on his farming operations during said year 1898 on said plantation. This arrangement was evidenced by a deed of trust executed by said W. J. Smith on the 1st March, 1898, to defendants Judge & Poston as trustees for the benefit of said Duffin Bros. & McGeehee, by which he conveyed to them for that purpose all the cotton, cotton seed, corn, fodder, and hay to be made on said plantation during that year, and also 20 head of horses and mules of W. J. Smith, then on said plantation, and of various descriptions. This deed of trust was filed for record on the 15th November, 1898. The amount secured, as named in the deed of trust, was $4,000. When the cotton on said premises had been gathered, ginned, and packed, and made ready for the market, the defendant W. J. Smith began to ship the same to the defendants Duffin Bros. & McGeehee, at Memphis, and by the 20th January, 1899, had shipped to them, by steamboat, 91 bales, which was received by said merchants, and as soon as possible sold by them in the markets, and the proceeds, amounting to $2,110, placed as a credit on the indebtedness of W. J. Smith to them, secured as aforesaid. On being informed of this, plaintiff, on the 9th day of February, 1899, instituted this suit, by bill in equity filed, with prayer for judgment against defendants Duffin Bros. & McGeehee for said cotton, and for cotton received by garnishee, J. P. Alender & Co., from subtenants, and for other and proper relief. The complaint is substantially to fix the landlord's lien on the amount for which defendants sold said cotton then in their hands, and will be so treated, under the doctrine of Reavis v. Barnes, 36 Ark. 575. W. J. Smith was summoned, and subsequently appeared and answered, controverting none of the essential or material allegations of the complaint however, and as to him all of the same are taken as confessed. Warning orders were made and published by the clerk against Judge & Poston, the trustees, who were shown to be nonresidents, and also, on same ground, against Duffin Bros. & McGeehee, and an attorney appointed to defend for them, who subsequently made a report of his action in the premises, to the effect that he had received a response to his communication from Judge & Poston, but none from Duffin Bros. & McGeehee. Judge & Poston, as trustees, filed their demurrer to the complaint, which being overruled, they then appeared in person and by attorney and filed their answer, to which plaintiff interposed demurrer. Upon the filing of the complaint, an affidavit for general attachment in equity against the property of defendants was filed, and order issued — as against W. J. Smith, because he had removed or was about to remove his property out of the state, not leaving enough to satisfy his creditors, and...

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6 cases
  • Nohrnberg v. Boley
    • United States
    • Idaho Supreme Court
    • June 1, 1925
    ...his present action is a purely equitable proceeding to impress his lien upon the proceeds of a conversion. (25 Cyc. 682; Judge v. Curtis, 72 Ark. 132, 78 S.W. 746.) It been said that trover may partake of the nature of an equity action, and that plaintiff can recover damages only to the ext......
  • Downs v. Mayor
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • January 12, 1910
    ...211 Ill. 310, 71 N. E. 1001; Martin v. Gunnison, 27 Ohio Cir. Ct. R. 113; Cohen v. Lasky, 102 Ga. 846, 30 S. E. 531; Judge v. Curtis, 72 Ark. 132, 78 S. W. 746; Kneeland on Attachment, § 85; Drake on Attachment, § 22; Wade on Attachment, §§ 12, 22; Penn v. Flack, 3 Gill & J. There is an imp......
  • State ex rel. American Piano Co. v. Superior Court for King County
    • United States
    • Washington Supreme Court
    • February 28, 1919
    ... ... the tort may be waived, and the claim will be considered as ... arising from an implied contract. In Judge v ... Curtis, 72 Ark. 132, 78 S.W. 746, it is said: ... 'Ordinarily a plaintiff in a suit for conversion may ... waive the tort, ... ...
  • Judge v. Curtis
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • January 16, 1904
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