Blodgett Loan Co. v. Hansen

284 P. 140, 86 Mont. 406, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 12
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1930
DocketNo. 6,541.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 284 P. 140 (Blodgett Loan Co. v. Hansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blodgett Loan Co. v. Hansen, 284 P. 140, 86 Mont. 406, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 12 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*408 MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover a crop rental on certain lands for a portion of the year 1927. The cause was tried to the court without a jury on an agreed statement of facts which shows that Alson Blodgett, Jr., was the holder of a second mortgage executed by Isaac G. Hunsberger and his wife on certain described lands in Chouteau county. This mortgage was foreclosed and the property sold at sheriff’s sale; Alson Blodgett, Jr., becoming the purchaser. After obtaining a sheriff’s deed, he conveyed the property by an unrecorded deed to plaintiff, subject to a first mortgage executed by Hunsberger and his wife' and which was held by the predecessor in interest of the University of Vermont, hereinafter referred to as intervener. On February 7, 1925', and after plaintiff became the owner of the property, it executed a lease to defendant Hansen for a period of three years ending December 1, 1927, defendant agreeing to pay as rental one-fourth of all crops produced on the land, to be delivered to plaintiff in an elevator at Montague, and the lease being made subject to the rights of the holder of the first mortgage. In-tervener acquired the first mortgage on the property and on November 24, 1925, commenced foreclosure proceedings and obtained a decree of foreclosure which, by its terms, provided that the purchaser “be let into possession of said premises upon the production of the sheriff’s certificate of sale thereof.” Alson Blodgett, Jr., was made a party defendant in the foreclosure proceedings, he being the record owner of the property. Hansen was not made a party. Intervener bid in the property at the sale and received a sheriff’s certificate of sale on July 28, 1927. On August 11, 1927, intervener entered into an agreement with defendant Hansen whereby Hansen was given the right to harvest the crop growing on the premises and to deliver to intervener one-fourth of the crop grown during the year 1927, the intervener agreeing to indemnify Hansen- from loss on account of so delivering the one-fourth share of the crop. Plaintiff did not consent to the agreement and, upon learning *409 that sucb an agreement bad been made, instituted tbis action to recover tbe proportionate share of tbe rental from December 1, 1926, to July 28, 1927.

Plaintiff concedes that tbe intervener is entitled to the portion of tbe rental for that portion of the year 1927 after July 28, 1927, but contends that it is entitled to rental for tbe balance of the year. Intervener contends that it is entitled to all tbe rental for tbe entire year 1927. Defendant Hansen is bolding storage tickets representing tbe one-fourth of tbe wheat raised in 1927 and is willing to pay tbe rental as it may be awarded by tbe court.

Tbe lower court sustained plaintiff’s contention and awarded to intervener the rental for four months and three days, tbe time between July 28, 1927, and December 1, 1927, and entered judgment for plaintiff for the rental for tbe balance of tbe year. Tbe intervener has appealed from that portion of tbe judgment favorable to plaintiff.

Tbe several assignments of error present tbe question of the correctness of tbe court’s action in apportioning tbe rental. The precise question presented has never before been passed upon by tbis court, but there are decisions which, by analogy, point tbe way to its proper solution.

The contract between plaintiff and Hansen was substantially the same as that involved in the case of Cook-Reynolds Co. v. Wilson, 67 Mont. 147, 214 Pac. 1104, and under tbe ruling there made, as well as in tbe case of Kester v. Amon, 81 Mont. 1, 261 Pac. 288, it constituted a lease and not a cropping agreement. As between plaintiff and Hansen, tbe latter was tbe owner of tbe growing crops as personal property and obligated to deliver one-fourth to plaintiff, his landlord (Kester v. Amon, supra; Power Mercantile Co. v. Moore Mercantile Co., 55 Mont. 401, 177 Pac. 406; Morton v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 80 Mont. 593, 261 Pac. 278), and had the right to take tbe annual products of tbe soil. (Sec. 6761, Rev. Codes 1921.) At tbe time of tbe foreclosure by intervener, Hansen occupied the position of a “tenant in possession” within tbe meaning of section 9448, Revised Codes of 1921. (Citizens’ National *410 Bank v. Western Loan & Building Co., 64 Mont. 40, 208 Pac. 893.)

What effect, then, did the foreclosure of the mortgage by the intervener and the purchase of the property by it at foreclosure sale have upon the tenancy between plaintiff and Hansen?

So far as the three parties to this action are concerned, the foreclosure sale simply operated to place the intervener in the position of the plaintiff. Its effect was equivalent to an assignment of the rights of plaintiff in the land as of the date of the sale. (Reynolds v. Lathrop, 7 Cal. 43.) The purchaser, intervener here, became entitled to the possession of the property as against the plaintiff. (Citizens’ National Bank v. Western Loan & Building Co., supra; Kester v. Amon, supra.) But at least during the period of redemption it did not affect Hansen’s right under the lease or his right to occupy the premises. That this is so is apparent from our statutes. Section 9448, Revised Codes 1921, in part provides: “The purchaser, at the time of the sale until a redemption, and a redemptioner, from the time of his redemption until another redemption, is entitled to receive, from the tenant in possession, the rents of the property sold, or the value of the use and occupation thereof.” Section 9447 provides: “Until the expiration of the time allowed for redemption, the court may restrain the commission of waste on the property, by order granted with or without notice, on the application of the purchaser or the judgment creditor. But it is not waste for the person in possession of the property at the time of sale, or entitled to possession afterward, during the period allowed for redemption, to continue to use it in the same manner in which it was previously used; or to use it in the ordinary course of husbandry; or to make the necessary repairs of buildings thereon; or to use wood or timber on the property therefor; or for the repair of fences, or for fuel for his family while he occupies the property.”

By these sections of the statute the legislature evidently intended that a tenant in possession under facts as shown here should be permitted to use the property in accordance with the terms of his lease during the period of redemption, or until *411 the expiration of the lease if by its terms it expires before the period of redemption, and that he must pay to the purchaser the rents, or the value of the use and occupation of the property from the time of the sale. In other words, the foreclosure sale does not operate to terminate the tenancy so far as the tenant is concerned. It operates merely to substitute the purchaser as the landlord in the place of the original owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P. 140, 86 Mont. 406, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blodgett-loan-co-v-hansen-mont-1930.