Agricultural Bond & Credit Corp. v. Courtenay Farmers Co-Operative Ass'n

251 N.W. 881, 64 N.D. 253, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 272
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1933
DocketFile No. 6150.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 251 N.W. 881 (Agricultural Bond & Credit Corp. v. Courtenay Farmers Co-Operative Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agricultural Bond & Credit Corp. v. Courtenay Farmers Co-Operative Ass'n, 251 N.W. 881, 64 N.D. 253, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 272 (N.D. 1933).

Opinions

Burke, J.

In this action there was a rehearing and after a careful and thorough re-examination of the record, this decision is rendered.

On the 25th day of September, 1929, the defendant, S. M. Posey, entered into a written contract with Carl Engle, Ben Engle and John Doyle, the Engles and Doyle, agreeing to farm, during the farming season of 1930, commencing September 25, 1929 and ending November 1, 1930, all of sections 33 and 28, the northwest quarter of section 34 and the west half of section 2Y, all in township 145, range 62, in Foster county, North Dakota, said Posey to furnish all seed and pay one half of the threshing bill, and Carl Engle, Ben Engle and John Doyle to furnish all twine and all proper and convenient tools, teams, utensils, farm implements and machinery and to deliver Posey’s One half of the crops in the granary on farm free of charge, or haul direct to the elevator from the machine.

Crops of flax, wheat and barley were raised upon the said land during the farming season of 1930 and the grain so raised was stored in the Courtenay Farmers Co-operative Association and the Atlantic Elevator Company, both in Courtenay, North Dakota. The storage tick-1 ets were, by order of the court, deposited with the clerk of court.

There are claims against said grain as follows:

Mortgage to D. F. Cassidy on one half of crops grown during the year 1930 on the west half of section 2Y, northwest quarter of section 34 and southeast quarter of section 28, to secure the payment of one note for $Y11.30, due September 1, 1930, interest at 8%; one note for $1,000.00, due October 1, 1930, interest at 8%; one note for $Y11.30, due September 1,,1931, interest at 8%; one note for $1,000.00, due October 1, .1931, interest at 8% ; which mortgage was duly assigned to the defendant, Oliver Equipment Company and was duly filed and recorded on the 9th day of October, 1929;

The Union Central Life Insurance Company claims under an assignment dated April 9, 1930, assigning Posey’s interest in the farm contract, for advances in the sum of $133Y.16; and additional advances of $99.92 for gas and oil furnished and used in combine threshing and the further sum of $800.00 for farm supplies in connection with the *256 farming operations. Mortgage on crops grown in 1930" on sections 28, 33, west half of section 2Y and northwest quarter of section 34, to secure note for $800.00, interest at 8%, filed April 16, 1930; seed lien filed by Union Central Life Insurance Company for $691.13 for flax furnished and sown on west half of section 2Y; the $800.00 item is also claimed by the Larson Oil Company;

Seed lien for $600.00 for seed wheat filed by the Courtenay Farmers Co-operative Association June 12, 1930 and a further claim of $181.35, advances for gas and oil used in combine threshing;

Labor lien for $210.00, filed August Y, 1930 against the crops on all the land, by Matt Burkhard;

Farm labor lien, fifed September 29, 1930 by Earl Sargent for $166.00 against crops grown on west half of section 2Y, all of sections 28 and 33, and northwest quarter of section 34, $Y5.00 of which was earned in threshing the grain;

Farm labor lien filed October 15, 1930 by Clemens Leder, against all of sections 33 and 28 and northwest quarter of section 34, for $Y5.00 earned threshing the grain;

Farm labor lien filed October 25, 1930 by Oarl Borg for $24.50 against west half of section 2Y and northwest quarter of section 34;

Jacob Undem filed farm laborer’s lien November 1, 1930 for the sum of $301.25, $220.00 of which was earned threshing said grain, against the northwest quarter of section 34, west half of section 2Y and all of sections 28 and 33; . .

Chattel mortgage filed April 16, 1930 by Larson Oil Company on all the crops grown on all of the land to secure the payment of $800.00; the $800.00 mentioned in the Union Central Life Insurance Company’s claim; the defendant, Posey, waived his interest in the crop in favor of the Larson Oil Company;

On July 31, 1930, Carl Engle purchased from the West Motor Sales two combines for the total time price of $3,340.00;

On July 25, 1930, Carl Engle agreed in writing to pay the said West Motor Sales the sum of $16Y0.00 for each machine and to assign his portion of the threshing bill to apply on the purchase price, the intent of the writing being to establish a.threshers’ lien on the.crops, 800 acres of wheat in sections 28, 34-,,33;'all barley-on.320 acres in section 28; all flax on 510 acres in sections 2Y and 33 ;■

*257 S. M. Posey executed a similar contract, which was filed for record the fourth day of September, 1930.

The trial court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law and from the judgment duly entered thereon the defendants join in an appeal from the judgment and demand a trial de novo in this court. •

Appellants claim- that the threshers’ lien is invalid for the reason that it was not filed within twenty days from the time the threshing was completed. Nearly all the grain was hauled to the elevator from the machine at the time of threshing, or very soon thereafter, and no grain was delivered to the elevator after the 1st day of October, except some wheat, which the evidence shows was threshed in September and 56 bushels of flax, threshed on section 34 on the 23rd day of October. In the threshers’ lien the statement is 68 bushels from 18 acres in section 34, but the court found that 56 bushels of stored flax was grown on section 34.

The theory of the plaintiff is that the threshers’ lien was executed in accordance with the contracts made with the defendants, Carl Engle and S. M. Posey, exhibits 19 and 20, by the terms of which each agreed to pay one dollar per acre on 800 acres of wheat in Poster county on sections 28, 34, 33; 320 acres of barley in Foster county on sections 28, 34; 510 acres of flax in Poster county on sections 27 and 32. Each contract provides as follows: “It is specifically understood that the purpose of this agreement is to protect the West Motor Sales and establish a labor lien or a threshers’ lien on all crops planted or harvested on land ás above described and this lien is to act as a prior lien to any lien heretofore given by me.” In these contracts there is no provision for giving a lien on any flax sown in section 34 and it is the contention of appellants first: that since Posey and Carl Engle did not agree to give a lien for threshing flax in section 34 that more than twenty days had expired after the threshing of the grain upon which they did agree to give 'a lien and before the lien was filed; that the contract of Engle and Posey to thresh was completed in September and the lien, not being filed within twenty days after the completion of the contract for threshing, was invalid; that the combining of some of the green frozen flax on'section 34, after the expiration of the time for filing a lien, was an attempt to revive'and extend the time in which'a threshers’ lien may be *258 filed. . Second, appellants claim that the lien statement was not verified by oath. The evidence relating to the threshers’ lien is very unsatisfactory.

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Bluebook (online)
251 N.W. 881, 64 N.D. 253, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agricultural-bond-credit-corp-v-courtenay-farmers-co-operative-assn-nd-1933.