Bohn v. Hill

260 P. 1096, 32 Ariz. 545, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 201
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1927
DocketCivil No. 2604.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 260 P. 1096 (Bohn v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bohn v. Hill, 260 P. 1096, 32 Ariz. 545, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 201 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

*546 ROSS, C. J.

This is an action by appellee, Hill, to recover from appellant, Bohn, a balance on a year’s rent of appellee’s farm, situate in Maricopa county. The farm consists of eighty acres, more or less, and the yearly rental agreed upon was $6,720, beginning February 2d, 1920, and ending February 1, 1921. Three thousand dollars of such rent was paid in March, 1920, as agreed, and the balance of $3,720 it was agreed should be secured by a lien on the cotton crop to be grown on premises, and paid out of the first receipts from sales of cotton, but not later than November 1st, 1920. Under the lease there went with the premises six head of horses and harness, one wagon, and all farming machinery and implements. The lessee (appellant) agreed to plant and cultivate said premises to long staple cotton only. The lease was of all of lessor’s land, except two and one-half acres in the northeast corner thereof, which, with the buildings thereon, were reserved for the use of the lessor and his family and the keeping of three hundred chickens. He also reserved the right to use one team, harness, and wagon when desired, and the right to pasture on the premises one horse and one cow.

The terms of the lease were agreed upon on or before the second day of February, 1920, and on said date appellant went into the possession of premises. The written lease, however was not signed up by the parties until March 13th, 1920.

The appellant planted and grew long staple cotton on about seventy-eight acres, and harvested therefrom twenty-eight bales of lint. After the cotton was picked and baled, but before it was sold, to wit, on December 2d, 1921, appellee signed an agreement with appellant consenting to the latter’s depositing the warehouse bale receipts with the National Bank of Arizona, of Phoenix, as security for loans made *547 by such bank to appellant, and in said agreement it was stipulated that:

“Tbe first 20 cents per pound out of all such cotton is to be held by National Bank of Arizona to secure payment of notes given by L. J. Bohn to said bank. Of the balance a sufficient amount is to be held in custody by said bank for B. F. Hill to secure payment of balance of rent, $3,785.28.”

The cotton was later sold by the bank, and, after deducting the amount it had loaned to Bohn, the insurance, and other expenses of sale, there was left a balance in bank to the credit of Bohn of $1,118.55, which on August 4th, 1922, was paid to Hill by check of Bohn, leaving a rent balance of $2,601.45. The purpose of this suit is to recover that sum and the sum of $41.49 for water plaintiff had paid for, but had not used, when the premises were turned over to appellant, and which the latter agreed to pay to appellee.

The complaint was filed on February 1st, 1926. Appellant in his answer says that appellee retained possession of 48 or more acres of the premises up to April 15th, 1920, and kept thereon at least 150 hogs and 30 head of cattle, and during said time deprived him of the full use, occupancy, and enjoyment of the premises by permitting said livestock to roam over and forage and pasture upon 48 acres; that appellee refused to permit him to plow or prepare said land, ordering and directing him to leave same, in order that the said livestock might feed and pasture upon the growing crops, and refused, although requested by appellant so to do, to remove said livestock from the premises nntil April 15th, 1920.

These same facts are alleged in a cross-complaint as a counterclaim, and, in addition thereto, it is averred that, when appellant was finally, on April 15th, given possession of the premises, the land was dry and difficult to plow, requiring a greater length *548 of time and a great deal more labor to plow it; that it broke in large lumps and clods because of its hard and dry condition, and because the livestock had roamed over it, wallowing upon and trampling the soil; that it was necessary to disc and drag the soil and replow it; that by reason of the delay it was necessary to reseed and replant; that a rank growth of weeds,- Johnson grass, and other vegetation accumulated, causing additional work and expense; that more irrigation was necessary, all to his damage in the sum of $1,500; that, by reason of appellee’s unlawful retention of premises, appellant was prevented from completing his planting until about June 1st, and, because of the lateness of such planting, the crop did not mature prior to frost; that, by reason of the trespass of livestock, the crop was much less than it would have been had appellant been given the exclusive use, occupancy, and enjoyment of the premises, and that he was thereby damaged in the sum of $3,500.

The appellee replied to the answer, denying the allegations therein, and setting up the settlement as made on December 2d, 1921, carried out on August 4th, 1922, and his waiver of his landlord’s lien on cotton in order to permit appellant to pledge it' to secure a loan, and asserted that, by reason thereof, appellant was estopped from making any defense to the action.

Upon the issues thus formed, a trial before a jury proceeded, and, after the close of all of the evidence, the court directed a verdict for the appellee.

Appellant assigns several errors, but the one that excepts to the instructed verdict is far-reaching enough to raise practically every question involved in his assignments, and a consideration of it will, we think, dispose of the case and all the points made in this appeal.

*549 The evidence of appellant offered in support of his defense and counterclaim shows that appellee did pasture his cattle and hogs on the premises, but that it was done with the acquiescence or passive consent of appellant, and that the latter acceded to appellee that privilege without any serious objection or protest. This was the situation from the second day of February, 1920, up until or on or about April 12th, when appellant told appellee his hogs (all cattle had some time before been removed) would have to be penned or taken off the premises. Appellant on that date turned irrigation water on the land, and appellee took the hogs off the premises. This evidence, we think, shows appellee’s use of the premises for pasturage was permissive, and was not at the time regarded as wrongful or a breach of the terms of the lease. This construction of the evidence is borne out by a written acknowledgment signed by appellant on March 13th, and indorsed on the lease (of the same date) in these words:

“I hereby acknowledge that I have been in possession of the above-described leased premises and of the personal property hereinabove referred to since February 2d, 1920.”
“[Signed] LOUIS J. BOHN.”

The acts of eviction and trespass appellant now makes the basis of his claim for damages began on the day he took possession, and continued to the date of signing lease and the above acknowledgment of possession, and evidently were not then thought to be wrongful or damaging.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 P. 1096, 32 Ariz. 545, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bohn-v-hill-ariz-1927.