The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1887, A¥illiam Scully, plaintiff in error, was the owner of a certain farm, containing-about 200 acres, situated in Towanda township, Butler county, Kansas. He leased this land .by written lease to one J. N. Bledsoe for a period,of five years, rents payable in cash annually, as specified in the written lease. Bledsoe was in the occupancy of this farm from the time he leased it up to and including March 1, 1890. In 1889 Bledsoe raised á crop of corn on the leased premises, and when it was gathered he placed the corn in two cribs on the farm where it was raised, being about 2,500 bushels. About the 20th of Janu*498ary, 1890, Bledsoe sold the corn in the two cribs to J. IP. Porter, defendant in error. On the 14th day of February, 1890, William Scully commenced an action against J. N. Bledsoe in the district court of Butler county, Kansas, to recover the rents then due on said farm and to enforce a lien therefor on the crops grown on the said farm in the year 1889. The corn, then still being in cribs on the farm, was attached by the sheriff, and while the sheriff held said corn under the attachment this suit in replevin was commenced to recover the possession of said corn.
Under the order of delivery issued on the commencement of this action, the coroner of Butler county took the corn out of the possession of the sheriff and delivered the same to J. H. Porter, plaintiff below. Plaintiff claimed to be the owner of the corn by virtue of a purchase from Bledsoe on or about the 20th day of January, 1890, and payment for which was made January 30, and without any notice that the corn was raised on leased lands, or that Scully had any lien upon the same. This suit was commenced by J. H. Porter, as plaintiff, against Charles Schram, as sheriff'. After the commencement of the suit, William Scully, being the real party in interest, was, on motion, substituted as party defendant in this action, and said Scully appéared then and answered the petition of the plaintiff below, and all proceedings thereafter were had in the action Between Porter and Scully. After issues were fully joined the case was tried before the court with a jury, and verdict and judgment were rendered for plaintiff below. Defendant below excepted, and brings case here for review.
The first error complained of by plaintiff in error is the sustaining of a demurrer of plaintiff below to the second defense set up in the answer of the defendant *499below. This assignment of error is ribt tenable, for, upon the sustaining of said demurrer, the court per.mitted the defendant below to amend the second defense by interlineation, and to the amended answer the plaintiff below renewed his demurrer, and it was overruled by the court. The record fails to show the particular reason for sustaining the demurrer to the second defense set up in the original answer, or in what particular the amendment consisted, but it is evident that the amendment consisted in some slight correction in the phraseology in the second defense; and the defendant below had the benefit of the defense contained in the second defense in the original answer. This action being in replevin, the defendant could show any defense that would make his possession lawful. Therefore, the defendant in this case having a general denial to the answer, the other defenses set up in his answer were immaterial.
The second error complained of by the plaintiff in error is the overruling of the motion of defendant below to strike out the second count in the reply of plaintiff below and the overruling of the demurrer of defendant below to said second count of the reply of plaintiff below. The second paragraph of the reply of plaintiff below, to which these objections 'are taken, is as fellows : .
‘‘ Por a further reply to said cause of defense this plaintiff says, that he had no notice of any ownership or claim of ownership on the part of Scully to the lands described in said answer, and he had no notice or did not know that said Scully claimed any interest in or to the crops grown on said lands, or to the corn involved in this suit; he did not know that Bledsoe was a tenant of Scully’s, and that he purchased the corn in good faith and paid a valuable consideration therefor.”
*500This brings us to a consideration of the statute respecting landlords and tenants, and the lien of a landlord on the crops grown on leased lands, and the effect of a sale of crops by tenant, grown on leased lands, where the rents have not been paid. Chapter 55 of the General Statutes of 1889, being “An act in relation to landlords and tenants,” is, in part, as follows :
“ Sec. 24. Any rent due for farming land shall be .a lien cm the crop growing or made on the premises.' Such lien may be enforced by action and attachment therein, as hereinafter provided.”
“Sec. 26. The person entitled to the rent may recover from the purchaser of the crop, or any part thereof, with notice of the lien, the value of the crop purchased, to the extent of the Tent due and damages.
“Sec. 27. When'any person who shall be .liable to .pay rent (whether the same be due or not, if it be due within one year thereafter, and whether the same be payable in money or other things) intends to remove, or is removing, or has, within .30 days, removed his property, or the crops, or any part thereof, from the leased premises, the person to whom the rent is owing may commence an action- in the court having jurisdiction; and upon making an affidavit, stating the amount of rent for which such person is liable, and one or more of the above facts, and executing an undertaking as in other cases, an attachment shall issue in the same manner axid with the like effect as is provided by law.in other actions.”
Under section 24, the landlord has a lien on the crops growing or .made on the leased premises for rents due or payable on farming lands, and this lien maybe enforced by attachment as provided in section 27. Section 26 makes the purchaser of the crop who purchased with notice liable to the landlord for the value of the crop purchased, not to exceed the amount of rent due.
*501The main question for consideration in this case is, Does the lien of the landlord affect the purchaser of the crop without notice of the landlord’s lien? Or, in other words, can the tenant in possession sell the crops grown on the leased premises to a stranger who has no notice of the landlord’s lien, and pass title to the crop to him freed from the lien? One who purchases the crop with notice of the landlord’s lien is liable to pay the landlord the value of the crop* purchased, not to exceed the amount of rent due or payable. It would seem to follow that one who purchased the crop without notice would take it freed from all claims or liens of the landlord. Secret liens are not favored by our law. The legislation of this state has ever been against the rights of lien-holders who do not in some of the modes prescribed by statute give notice of their lien. A party holding a lien on real estate may lose it if he does not have the same recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the property is situated, or give actual notice in some manner to those about to deal with the owner thereof. It is so in cases of liens by mortgages or otherwise oii personal property. If the instrument containing such lien is not filed in the office of register of deeds of the county where the property is situated, and a person purchases the same from the owner thereof who has possession of the property and has no knowledge of such lien, he takes it freed from the lien. A tenant who raises a crop on leased lands where he is required by the terms of his lease to pay cash rent, is the owner of the crops raised by him, subject only to the lien of the landlord for rents due or payable; but he may sell and dispose of the crop and pass a title to the purchaser, the purchaser being liable to pay the landlord the value of the crops-purchased, if purchased witli *502notice of such lien. But if the purchaser has no notice of the lien of the landlord, he takes them freed from any lien, unless he is in possession of such facts as would put a reasonably prudent person on inquiry as to whether the crops were raised on leased premises and whether the rents were paid. There was no error in the ruling of the court in overruling the motion to strike out, and in overruling the demurrer to the second count in the reply of the plaintiff below.
The final contention of the plaintiff in error is, that the court erred in'the instructions given to the jury, and in refusing to instruct them as required by the defendant below. The argument in support of this assignment of error is based on the theory that the landlord is given; a lien on crops grown or made on leased premises by virtue of the statutes of this state, and that it is a paramount lien which every person must take notice of. It is true the landlord has alien created by statute on the crops grown on leased land,' and the mode of enforcing it is prescribed by the same statute, and the statute creating the lien makes the purchaser liable to the landlord for the value of the crops purchased, when the same are purchased with notice of a lien. The construction claimed by plaintiff in error would render all purchasers of crops from a tenant liable to the landlord for the value .of the crop purchased, whether they had notice of the lien or not.
We do not think that the landlord’s lien is any more sacred than any other lien on personal property, or that every person dealing with the tenant must take notice of the lien of the landlord. In order to arrive at the meaning and intention of this statute we must construe the act as a whole, and give to each section and sentence a reasonable interpretation so *503that the sense of each section, sentence and word may be fully gathered, and the internal sense of the whole may be understood.
On an examination of chapter 55, General Statutes of 1889, being “An act relating to landlords and tenants,” we find it contains what shall constitute a tenant at will; how tenancies are created and determined ; provisions for the occupancy of joint tenants and tenants in common ; for the maintenance of actions for waste ; the lien of landlords for crops grown or made on farming land; where rents are payable in a share or certain proportion of the crops, that the lessor shall be deemed to be the owner of such share ; the manner of obtaining possession of such share if the lessee should refuse to deliver it over; that the person entitled to the rent may recover from the purchaser of the crop or any part thereof, with notice of the lien, the value of „the crop purchased, to the extent of the rent due and damages ; and then it provides the manner of enforcing the lien against the tenant. Giving to this entire act a fair construction, it is evident that the tenant is the owner of the crop grown or made on the leased premises, subject only to the lien given the landlord by law, and that this lien is subject to no higher rights than other liens on personal property, and persons dealing with the crop are held to no other or dif ferent rule than persons dealing with other personal property subject to liens. The tenant being the owner of the crop and in possession thereof may sell the same as he might any other property covered by a lien, and the title of the property would pass by such sale to the purchaser, and if he had notice of the lien he would be liable to the landlord for the value of the crops purchasedbut if he is an innocent purchaser for value, without notice of any lien, he would take the *504property free from the landlord’s lien. The written lease in this case was not filed or recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Butler county, and there was nothing to give constructive notice of the landlord’s claim on the crops, unless it was the fact that the corn was in cribs on the leased premises". We do hot think this fact alone would be such as to put the purchaser on inquiry as to whom the land belonged, or as to whether Bledsoe was a tenant occupying the lands of some other person, or whether there were any claims against the crop for unpaid rents. Persons in possession of personal property are generally presumed to be the owners thereof, and the general presumption is that it is clear from incumbrance, unless there are some facts in connection-with its use, location or condition that would be calculated to create suspicion, or to put ordinarily prudent persons on inquiry as to liens or claims against it, and. where there is nothing of record in some office provided for by law for giving constructive notice of a lien on personal property, and a person without notice, either actual or constructive, purchases the same in good faith and for a valuable consideration, he receives a good title to the same. We have examined the authorities cited by counsel for plaintiff and relied upon as authorities in this case, which were made in other states under similar statutes to ours, but find the fact of notice and the right of the tenant to sell crops are materially different from the provisions of the Kansas Statutes, and do not think they are applicable to the facts in this case. They are not in accord with the general policy and decisions of our own state. The law respecting landlords and tenants in some of the states formerly gave the landlord a lien on all crops grown on the leased premises, and also *505on all implements and animals used on the premises to raise the crops, and the courts in some of those states held that the tenant could not sell or dispose of. any portion of the crop raised on the leased premises, or sell or dispose of any of the animals or farm implements used to make the crops,..until all rents were fully paid, and that the purchaser of the animals that h id been used to make crops on leased lands must take notice of the lien, and the property might be followed into the hands of an innocent purchaser without actual notice, and taken and sold for the payment of rents ; that the purchaser took the property at his own risk, the same as the purchaser of stolen goods. These decisions are not authority under the laws of Kansas respecting the rights and liabilities of landlords and tenants, and are not in harmony with the general policy of our laws respecting parties dealing with property incumbered with liens.
The laws of England and of the earlier period of this country were intended for the special protection of-the rights of the landlord, and the tenant’s rights in every respect were subordinated to those of the owner of the soil, and the tenant did not seem to acquire any property rights in the crops grown by him on leased premises until the landlord had been paid his rents in full, but under more recent and 'humane legislation the severity of the laws as to tenants have been greatly modified and the tenant is given more consideration, and his rights are treated as equal with those of his landlord. He acquires an ownership in the crop raised by him, and he may use the same or sell it, subject to the lien of the landlord. The laws of some of the cotton states make it a criminal offense for a tenant to remove or sell any portion of the crop grown by him on leased premises until all the rents *506have been paid ; but the courts in some of these states hold that where he -has removed the crop and sold it, •the purchaser takes the title freed from the lien of the landlord where he purchases without notice of the lien for unpaid rents.
We think the court below instructed the jury on the correct theory of the law applicable to this case, and the instructions requested by the defendant below did not contain the correct theory of the law. The jury, after being instructed on the law, having found the facts in favor of the plaintiff below, we< cannot say that their verdict was not sustained by -sufficent evidence.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
All the Judges concurring.