The act of February 23, 1883, as amended by the act of February 17, 1885 (now constituting sections 3069-3074 of the Code), giving to “landlords of store-houses, dwelling-houses and other buildings, a lien on the goods of their tenants for rents,” must be construed in the light of the common law, and be accorded such operation and effect, not inconsistent with its terms, as was given to the landlord’s remedy under the old law of distress. The main points of difference between the statutory and common-law systems are, that the former substitutes the process of courts for the personal distraint of the landlord allowed by the latter, and confines the distress to the property of the tenant; whereas, under 'the latter, the right to distrain extended to the goods of a stranger found on the demised premises. These changes were necessary, to conform the *176law to the genius of our institutions, which is inimical alike to the taking of property without due process of law, and to the subjection of the goods of one man to the satisfaction of the debt of another, on the mere fortuitous circumstance of their being on the premises of the debtor. Aside from the cardinal points of difference, and such changes in detail as were necessary to limit and effectuate the new remedy, it is apprehended that the principles of the common law, as to rent and the remedies for its collection, apply also to the statutory right and remedy wé are considering. At common law, there would be no distress, unless the relation of landlord and tenant existed. Under our statute, the existence of this relation is essential to the right of attachment. At common law, the right to distrain pertained only to property which was, or had been within a certain period, on the premises. There is no express., or necessarily implied limitation of this kind, in our statute, but, following the common law, we have adjudged that the right to attach extended only to goods which enjoyed the protection of the premises for which rent is claimed. — Ex parte Barnes, 84 Ala. 540. Distress could only be made, at common law’, during the term of the lessee; and doubtless, under the statute, an attachment could not be maintained after the termination of the demise, except it may be in the enforcement of a lien which had attached' before. What was a termination of a lease, in the sense which operated to put an end to the right of distress, became the point of many decisions at common law; and no reason occurs to us for not according to the principles settled in these cases a controlling influence in the construction of our statute, or, rather, in determining whether, in a given case, the term has ceased in that sense which defeats the right to attach. It is thoroughly established by these adjudications, that where the tenant holds over, after the term originally stipulated, the relation of landlord and tenant continues; the original term is held to be enlarged, and the right to distrain for the rent of any part of the tenure still exists. — Taylor Land. & Ten., p. 448, § 564.
This rule is based on the implication, which the law raises, that the parties have agreed to a continuation of the lease, and looking back from any point during the holding over, to the inception of the relation, the whole time is in law considered but one term. The courts, seizing on the reason for this result — the implication of an agreement to continue the *177term — gave the rule a wider operation, and extended it to cases in which, the contract for a continuation of the tenancy was expressed, as it before applied to contracts which were implied from the situation of the parties. It thus became the settled law, that where there are successive leases from year to year, for the purpose of distress, all of such successive years are regarded as constituting but one term. In a leading case on this subject, there was a rental for the year 1839, another for the year 1840, evidenced by a different instrument, and yet another for the year 1841, evidenced by an indorsement on the contract for 1840; and a distress in 1840 for the rent in arrear for 1839. Holding the distress well made, the court uses this language: “What is there in the nature of the case to prevent us taking a stand at the time of the distress, and computing backwards, according to the acts of the parties? Had the renewal for the several years been by implication, it would, according to the language of the writers,- have been construed to spring out of, and continue to enlarge the first lease. Shall an express renewal have a less important effect? There is just as much room for implication and constructive continuation in the one case as the other.” — Webber v. Shearman, 6 Hill, 20. This case was followed by subsequent ones; and it may now be considered as settled law, that where there are leases from year to year, and the rent of a former is in arrear during a subsequent year, the goods of the tenant then on the premises may be distrained for such rent.—Bell v. Potter, 6 Hill; 497; Parker's Appeal, 5 Penn. St. 390; Taylor Land. & Ten., p. 504, § 572.
Substituting the lien of our statute, and the remedy by which the lien is effectuated, for the old lien and remedy by distress, and applying the principles above stated to the operation of the statute in this case, the result is, that the plaintiff below had a lien on the goods in the store-house at the time of the attachment, for the rent in arrear for the previous year, whether those goods were in the store before the end of that year or not; and the charges given by the court asserting this proposition are free from error. The lien attached to the goods the moment they were brought into the house, if, when brought in, they belonged to the tenant; and the alleged sale of January 7th, 1887, to the tenant’s son, conveyed no right to the property, which could prevail over the lien, so long as the goods remained on the demised premises. If these positions be well taken, it follows that *178the evidence offered on the trial of the motion to dissolve raised a wholly immaterial inquiry; and if error was committed in the admission of testimony, in rebuttal of irrelevant evidence introduced by the defendant, it was error without injury; and if error, and injurious, the error is not one of which the defendant can complain. — Harmon v. Jenks, 84 Ala. 74.
The judgment invoked by the motions should have been confined to the motions. If the court had found that the property was not subject to the attachment, for the reason that the debt sued on was not for rent for the payment of which a lien existed on the property, the attachment should have been dissolved. Having, as we have seen, correctly found that the note was for rent for which a lien on the property of defendant in the store during the second year of the lease existed, the judgment should have been simply that the motions be denied. The case would then have been precisely in the same condition as if the motions had not been made. So considered, it presents the features of an ordinary attachment suit, in which there has been a limited appearance by the defendant, and a claim interposed by a third person, under the statute, which was still pending. The jurisdiction of the court to proceed to final judgment, depended on whether the levy had been made on property which belonged to the defendant. That question could not be determined on the motions. The interposition of the claim by D. Abraham had the effect of rebutting the presumption of that fact which arose from the sheriff’s return, and postponed its ascertainment until the trial of the issue between the plaintiff and the claimant. Until the trial was had, and the property found in it to be subject to the attachment, there was no such service of process on the defendant, by levy on his property, as would support a judgment by default. That the court, in passing on defendant’s motion, had adjudged the property to be his, can make no difference. It could not cut off the claim in that trial. And if, on the trial of the claim suit, the issue should be found in favor of D. Abraham, and the property be adjudged to belong to him, the court would be put in the attitude of having rendered a personal judgment against J. Abraham, without personal service, without an appearance on his part, and without constructive service by levy on his property. These considerations lead us to the conclusion, that the court erred in entering up judgment against the defendant; a conclusion that is also strongly sup*179ported by tbe statute, which clearly contemplates that the suit against the defendant shall stand in abeyance, or at least not proceed to a judgment of condemnation, until the claim suit has been determined. — Code, §§ 3012-3013; Moore v. Dickerson, 44 Ala. 485; Lampley v. Beavers, 25 Ala. 533.
It follows, that the judgment of condemnation was also erroneous; and for these reasons, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.