Appellees recovered three bales of cotton of appellants before a Justice of the Peace in an action of replevin, and on appeal to the Circuit Court the verdict and judgment were in their favor again. It is submitted here that the appellees did not show title to the property sufficient to entitle them to recover in this action. It appears that they were the landlords of the parties who raised the cotton and so had a lien for their rent. This, of itself, would not entitle them to recover, but there was testimony tending to show that the cotton had been delivered to them, or at least to a third person for them in payment of the rent, before appellants got possession of it. The question of delivery and also of appellees right to recover was fairly submitted to the jury; and the verdict was for them,' Ther was evidence to sustain it and we are unwilling to disturb it on that account.
1. Mortgage: Description o property. - • The tenants who raised the crop had each executed, a f mortgage to secure appellants in the payment of a debt they' ;:'o'wed them, describing the property intended to be mortgaged as “all of a crop of ten acres of cotton to be grown’’ by the mortgagors on the appellee’s land. Appellants .undertook to show upon the trial that the landlord’s lien ,had. been paid off and discharged, and that if appellees had any interest in the three bales of cotton in suit, their rights accrued by virtue of an agreement between landlord and .tenant, after the mortgage lien had attached; and to meet this phase of the case they offered their mortgage in evidence and also offered to show that a particular ten acres of cotton in the field had been designated by the parties to the mortgage as the mortgaged crop. But it was in evidence that the mortgagors had cultivated forty-five or fifty acres of .appellees’ land in cotton, and that the three bales in question had been gathered from all parts of the field, and the court rejected the proffered testimony.
It is apparent that the subject matter of these mortgages -Was not. described with sufficient certainty to identify the property intended to be assigned. In order to affect purchasers or others acquiring rights in the crop, with notice of the mortgage lien, there must be a description in the mortgage by which it can be identified. Dodds v. Neal, 41 Ark., 70. In this case it is said : “When creditors of the mortgagors o ijothers dealing with the property, have acquired adverse rights, a mortgage of a specific 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 b.é mortgaged from the mass.”
The mortgages in question furnished no data by which the particular .ten acres could be laid off or distinguished from the other thirty or thirty-five acres. The parol evidence offered might have been admissible in a contest between the parties to the mortgages, but as against strangers it could not be heard to piece out a description so defective as this. That would be to prove notice of the mortgage lien by other means than the record, and this, under the settled rule of this court, cannot be done.
Objections are urged to some of the court’s instructions to the jury, but we are satisfied that substantial justice has been done upon the whole case and the judgment is affirmed.