1. Mokt gage: Desci-iption o: property. By indenture duly executed and acknowledged by both parties and recorded, Neel in the year 1879, conveyed to one Bertrand a plantation in Jefferson county. The consideration was $5,610, divided into six equal annual installments. The deed reserved a lien on the land and on ten bales of merchantable cotton, to weigh five huudred pounds each, out of the crop to be raised each year on the-place. Bertrand covenants to deliver this quantity to a designated trustee, to be sold in market and the proceeds to be-applied upon his debt. If he fails to meet the installment, in any year when it falls due, and likewise fails to turn out the cotton, the trustee is empowered to take charge of the ten bales of cotton produced on the premises and after-advertisement sell the same by public auction.
In _ 1881 the plantation was let to farm in. parcels to various tenants. Two of these tenants mortgaged their crops to Dodds, a merchant, for supplies. Some eighteen or twenty bales were made upon the whole place. The installment of purchase money for that year remaining unpaid, Neel, without the knowledge or consent of any person interested, hauled away in his wagon twelve bales of cotton, aggregating five thousand, six hundred and twenty-six pounds. In this lot were included three bales of the-crop raised by the tenants, upon which Dodds held a mortgage. Dodds brought replevin for the three bales, and Neel justified their seizure under the reservation of lien in his deed to Bertrand.
On the trial, which took place before the circuit court, a jury being waived, the plaintiff objected to the introduction of this deed, because it described no particular cotton. But his objection was over-ruled. The .court found that Neel held a prior lien .on the cotton, which could be asserted iu an action at law, and gave judgment accordingly.
If this were a contest between Neel and Bertrand, we should be inclined to uphold the description as effectual.
Thus, in Gurley v. Davis, 39 Ark., 394, this court went to a great length in sustaining a vague and indefinite description of mortgaged chattels, no one except the immediate parties to the instrument being concerned. But when creditors of the mortgagor, or others dealing with the property, have acquired adverse rights, a mortgage of a specified number of articles out of a larger number, will not be allowed to-prevail unless it furnishes the data for separating the property intended to be mortgaged from the mass. Jones Chattel Mortg., Secs. 56, 59, and cases there cited ; Richardson v. Alpine Lumber Co., 40 Mich., 203.
The case of Williamson v. Steele, 3 Lea., ( Tenn.,) 527, is in point. That was replevin for two bales of cotton. The plaintiff claimed under a mortgage, which purported to convey so much of a growing crop as would be sufficient to' make two bales of lint cotton, each not weighing less than five hundred pounds. The defendant had caused an execution, against the mortgagors, to be levied on the cotton in controversy while it was still unginned, and before it had been delivered to the mortgagee. It was the intention of the mortgagors to have the seed cotton»which was levied on, ginned, made into two bales and delivered to the mortgagee ; but this intention had not been communicated to. either of the parties to the action. The mortgagors had raised in all seven bales, but had already sold five in market without the plaintiff’s knowledge. And it was held the execution creditor had the better right. Cooper J., in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “When only a certain quantity of articles of the same character, such as cattle, grain in bulk, or a particular crop, is undertaken to be conveyed, no title can pass until the quantity is selected and set apart; until selection made, the whole property would be subject to execution by the grantor’s creditor. For what is sold is not separated from that which is not sold, and the grantee has no title in any particular property for which he could bring an action. The grantee, under the deed before us, has no right to select any particular part of the cotton raised to the extent of the quantity necessary to make two bales, and assert title thereto, against the grantor’s creditors acquiring liens on the crop. If he could do so, as to the seed cotton levied on by the defendant, he could equally select his two bales from the five previously sold. His right would be ambulatory, to suit his convenience or his caprice. * * *
It is the fact that no title passed or could possibly pass, to any of the cotton until designated by the selection of the grantor’s, that gives the creditor the better right.”
Doubtless the vendee may mortgage back not only the lands he has purchased, but the annual crops to be produced thereon during a series of years. But in order to affect creditors or subsequent purchasers or others who have acquired rights in these crops, with notice of the lien, the subject-matter of the mortgage must be described with sufficient certainty to distinguish the property intended to be conveyed and to identify it. If the reservation here had been of a lien upon all, or any aliquot portion of the crops of cotton, or even the first ten bales gathered on the place, a different question would have been presented. See Robinson v. Mauldin, 11 Ala., 977; Stearns v. Gafford, 56 Id., 544.
The case of Washington v. Love, 34 Ark., 93, was affirmed upon the whole record, because it seemed that substantial justice had been done. In that case there was also a sort of separation of the three bales of cotton, or what the court deemed such. Here there was none.
The authority vested in the trustee by the deed was the usual authority to take charge of and sell the cotton upon •default in payment. It was probably never intended to confer upon him any power of selection with a view to identify the mortgaged property. But if the language used admits of this' construction, then the trustee and not the beneficiary was the proper person to exercise the power. In «seizing the cotton, Neel was a trespasser.
Reversed and a new trial ordered.