Alexander v. Wehkamp

232 P.2d 440, 171 Kan. 285, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 9, 1951
Docket38,320
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 232 P.2d 440 (Alexander v. Wehkamp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Wehkamp, 232 P.2d 440, 171 Kan. 285, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 255 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

Appellant (plaintiff below) as landowner brought this action against the appellees (defendants) as tenants under a written lease.

Plaintiff’s first cause of action was to replevin the entire volunteer wheat crop raised and harvested on 88.43 acres of the leased land. His second cause of action was to recover damages against defendants for their failure to drill and plant 212 acres of wheat which with the 210 acres drilled would make up the % of the section required, under terms of the written lease, to be drilled to wheat.

Defendants answered claiming % of the volunteer wheat crop raised and harvested on the 88.43 acres; the answer alleging that the written lease had been modified by an oral agreement of December 11, 1947, to permit the volunteer wheat on 182 acres in the south /3 of the section to stand and mature and be treated as drilled wheat. In their cross petition, defendants claimed damages against plaintiff for plowing up 94 acres of this 182 acres of volunteer wheat referred to above in which defendants claimed a % interest.

*286 Plaintiff’s amended reply denied making any oral agreement which modified the terms of the written lease.

The pertinent facts may be stated as follows: On December 4, 1946, plaintiff-lessor leased to defendants a short section of land consisting of 633 acres in Finney county for a term of one year commencing on August 1, 1947, and ending July 31, 1948. The lease consists of a printed form containing nine separate printed provisions having nine typewritten provisions on the back and having attached thereto numerous additional provisions; due to the length of the lease it will not be set out, but pertinent provisions thereof will be referred to.

Under the terms of the written lease, at least % (422 acres) of the entire acreage of the section was to be well cultivated to make a good seed bed and planted to wheat in the fall of 1947. The remaining K (211 acres) of the section was to be summer fallowed in the fall and in the spring and left rough to prevent blowing and to catch and preserve the moisture.

Defendants went into possession of the land and worked what they thought was % of the land which was to be drilled to wheat under the terms of the lease. This consisted of the north % and the south U of the section leaving the center % for summer fallow. Later and after the first moisture of the fall season, defendants started to drill wheat on the ground that had once been worked. They had drilled the north % of the section (210 acres), and had started on the south M, having drilled approximately nineteen acres thereof, when the weather became bad and as a result further drilling was impossible. There was at this time, in the latter part of November or fore part of December, 1947, a good stand of volunteer wheat growing on this south % of the section. On December 11, 1947, defendant Alvin Wehkamp went to the office of plaintiff in King-man, Kansas, and told plaintiff that their drills and machinery were still in the field and the seed wheat in the granary. Said defendant testified to the following conversation with the plaintiff on December 11 with reference to modifying the terms of the written lease:

“A. Well, as near as I can remember, I told Mr. Alexander our drills were still in the field, and tractor, and my truck was in the granary, and the volunteer was coming up, and I didn’t think it would be. a good idea to sow that and kill that volunteer, as late as it was, because it was a good stand and thought it would be good to leave it standing for a crop, and he agreed on that.
“Q. Just tell the conversation, as near as you can remember.
*287 “A. He said he guessed it would have to be all right; he didn’t like it; I said I didn’t like it either, but as late as it was it looked like the only thing we could do if we wanted to raise a crop of wheat.
“Q. Did you tell him you weren’t going to drill the rest of that”. . . .
“A. No, I didn’t tell Mr. Alexander I wasn’t, until he said it would be all right. I wouldn’t have to, and I just decided that; I didn’t say, as I remember, that I absolutely wouldn’t, or wasn’t.”

The north H of this section is not in question in this case, that 210 acres of drilled wheat having been harvested and properly divided between the parties. The center % of the section, ap- . proximately 212 acres, which the plaintiff claims should have been planted tp wheat as alleged in his second cause of action, was never worked and defendants claim that was the portion (% of the section) left for summer fallow under the terms of the lease; that they had the right to determine the part of the section to be summer fallowed; that the section was not worked because of the extreme dry weather; and there were not sufficient weeds to require that ground to be worked; and for the foregoing reasons they were not liable to plaintiff in any sum on his second cause of action.

There seems to be no dispute but that the center % of the section was to be left for summer fallow. Plaintiff testified that in speaking of the summer fallowed land he referred to the center piece, and late in the fall advised defendants by letter that inasmuch as that ground had not been worked or summer fallowed, they should not at that late date do so until further authorization from him. No such authorization appears in the record.

Plaintiff testified:

“Q. Now referring back to your letter of August 4th, or — your letter of September 27, you say ‘on talking to Alvin [defendant], he advised that the ground that you didn’t expect to put to wheat was not summer fallowed’. What ground were you referring to there?
“A. The ground that he said hadn’t been plowed at all.
“Q. You didn’t expect that to be put into wheat in the fall by the Wehkamps, did you?
“A. I didn’t know; I knew they had agreed to put in two-thirds under the lease; I had no control over what part they put in.
“Q. You understood at that time that was the part they were not going to sow?
“A. That is what he said he wasn’t going to.
“Q. And you made no objection to that at the time?
“A. I did on August 4th . . . [by] that letter of August 4th.
“Q. You mean in this letter you made some objection to them leaving this middle part as summer-fallowed ground?
*288 “A. I said it should all be plowed.
“Q. But that still didn’t mean that that was not going to be left for summer fallow.
“A.

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Bluebook (online)
232 P.2d 440, 171 Kan. 285, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-wehkamp-kan-1951.