Beckman v. Sikes
This text of 35 Kan. 120 (Beckman v. Sikes) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by W. H. Sikes, to recover the value of a crop of corn and oats alleged to have been converted by the plaintiffs in error, John F. and C. H. Beckman, who were defendants below. It appeared upon the trial that one C. M. Baker was the owner of the land upon which the crop was grown. He had mortgaged the land, and the conditions of the mortgage having been broken, it was foreclosed on December 15,1883. There being a stipulation in the mortgage for a waiver of appraisement, it was decreed that the land should be sold without ^praisement at the expiration of six months from the date of the decree. On June 19, 1884, an order of sale was issued under the decree, and after due notice a sale of the premises was made on August 1,1884, to one H. C. Crump. The sale was subsequently confirmed, and on September 5, 1884, a deed was made by the sheriff to the purchaser. After the decree of foreclosure, but before the sale was made, Baker planted and cultivated a crop of oats and corn upon the premises decreed to be sold. On July 31, 1884, just one day prior to the sale of the premises by,the sheriff, Baker sold, or attempted to sell, the crop to Sikes; and it was under this purchase that he claimed the oats and corn, the value of which he seeks to recover in this action. The Beckmans claimed under Crump, from whom they purchased the land on which the crops were grown. At the trial the plaintiffs in error contended that crops grown upon the [122]*122land at the time it was sold and conveyed, passed with the land to H. C. Crump, the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale. This view was rejected by the trial judge; and instead, he directed the jury that the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale was not entitled to the crop grown upon the land where such crop had been sold by the judgment debtor prior to the day of sale, and that if they believed from the evidence that Sikes purchased the oats and corn from C. M. Baker prior to August 1, 1884, their verdict should be for the plaintiff.
[123]*123
It follows that the instruction given was erroneous, and therefore the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.
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35 Kan. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beckman-v-sikes-kan-1886.