City Council of Greenville v. White

11 So. 2d 816, 194 Miss. 145, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 40
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1943
DocketNo. 35257.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 816 (City Council of Greenville v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Council of Greenville v. White, 11 So. 2d 816, 194 Miss. 145, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 40 (Mich. 1943).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented here for decision is the ownership of 88 bales of seed cotton and 550 bushels of com, harvested by the appellee from land which the appellant had recently leased to the federal government as a site for the location and construction of a United States Army Airport without expressly reserving, under the terms of the written lease or otherwise, the growing crops thereon, and which leased premises were then being expeditiously converted to such use.

The material facts are not in dispute. The City Council of Greenville, acting pursuant to legislative authority, purchased certain tracts of Delta farm land located a short distance from the corporate limits of the city, consisting of nearly two thousand acres-, to be leased to the United States of America as a military reservation and airport. There was included in the area so purchased a tract of 1,281 acres acquired by warranty deed from George Metcalfe and wife on which this cotton and corn were then being grown in an unmatured state. It is admitted that the title to these crops passed to the City of Greenville under the warranty deed, not having been reserved by the grantors therein. Moreover, the grantors *156 were paid the sum of more than $8,000 as reimbursement to them for expenses incurred in the planting and cultivating of such crops, in addition to the purchase price of approximately $100 per acre for the land. Possession was delivered to the grantee on or about the middle of June, 1941, and the conveyance was executed shortly thereafter.

In the meantime on June 23, 1941, this land was leased to the Federal Government as aforesaid subject to renewal annually for a period of ninety-nine years, “to be used exclusively for a military reservation and airport, United States Army Airport.” The lessee forthwith entered into the exclusive possession and occupancy of the leased premises and began cutting down, ploughing under and otherwise destroying growing crops in order to lay out airport runways, establish building sites, and to get the ground fully prepared for the purpose aforesaid. It was evidently contemplated that the lessee should have the right to destroy all of the crops then growing on the leased premises if deemed expedient or desirable in the full use and enjoyment of its rights under the lease to construct and operate such a military enterprise.

At the time of the execution of the lease contract, it appears from the testimony of the mayor, as witness on behalf of the appellant, that he thought the government might need to destroy the crops on the entire field, and not 'knowing where the construction work would start or over what area it would spread before the completion of the project, nothing was done by the appellant toward cultivating or attempting to preserve any of the crops on the land covered by the lease. No request was made at any time of the government officials in charge for permission on behalf of the lessor to salvage any of the crops, except that the mayor of the city, some thirty days after the cotton-picking season had opened, asked these officials to allow the appellee, W. G. White, to enter upon the premises and gather such of the crops as he should desire, *157 intending that he should do so in his own right and the request being based upon the fact that the said White and his wife had “made definite concessions in establishing the northern boundary line between their property and that of the army air base.” And this permission was accordingly granted by the government’s agents in charge “so long as it did not interfere with the construction operations.” It seems that these army officials were under the erroneous impression that the appellee, White, was to salvage the crops as the agent of the City Council, having overlooked the written suggestion of the mayor that White should be granted the right because of the definite concessions made in regard to his land line, as aforesaid.

At any rate, if it be assumed that the officials of the government, with full authority, granted the mayor permission to enter upon the land on behalf of the City of Greenville and harvest such crops as were not destroyed in the establishment of the airport, although they were not reserved under the lease, the license was never exercised. Apparently the City Council, as a whole, knew nothing about it; nor was there any meeting of the minds of the mayor and the federal authorities on whether the authority to enter upon the land and salvage a portion of the crops was to be granted to the appellee in his own right or as.a representative of appellant. The mayor neither made the request nor intended to exercise the license on behalf of the city, but undertook to serve merely as an intercessor between the appellee and these ofcials in order that the appellee might act in his own right. Neither is it claimed that either the mayor or the appellee understood or intended that he was to act as the representative of the City Council in the matter, and, as heretofore stated, the other Councilmen were not advised in the premises.

While the mayor of the municipality was without authority to give away any of its property, it is also true that his action in this instance, together with the failure *158 of the City Council as a whole to take any steps to salvage these crops until after the appellee had harvested them and stored the cotton in the compress, plus the further fact that they permitted such of the matured crops as were not salvaged by the appellee to go to waste and ruin on the land not then being used in the prosecution' of the airport construction work, and had not retained or subsequently acquired any rights of ingress and egress in its own behalf for such purpose, clearly discloses a total absence of any intention whatever on the part of the lessor at the time of the execution of the lease to reserve such of the crops as should mature before it would become necessary for the lessee to destroy them in the exercise of its rights under the lease.

In 36 C. J. 106, it is stated that “where no prior tenant has a valid claim to the growing crops as emblements, such crops generally pass to the lessee having the right to immediate possession under his lease.” This seems to be the well settled rule in regard to unmatured crops, such as those here involved were at the time of the execution of the lease in question. In the case of Frishkorn v. Ogden, 16 Ala. App. 358, 77 So. 970, 971, the court said: “It is well settled that a lease, like any other conveyance of a present estate in land, transfers to the lessee the right to the unmatured vegetable products growing upon the land at the time, unless they aré expressly excepted from its operation. 2 Tiffany, Landlord & Tenant, sec. 249; Edwards v. Perkins, 7 Or. 149; Willey v. Conner, 44 Vt. 68; Emery v. Fugina, 68 Wis. 505, 32 N. W. 236. Under the rule the crops passed to the lessee, Ogden.” Other decisions are cited to the same effect in the footnote under Section 249 of 2 Tiffany, Landlord and Tenant. Our attention has been called to no cases to the contrary, except that our own investigation discloses that a few courts have upheld an oral reservation of a growing crop under a lease. Such a reservation would involve the application of the parol evidence rule under our decisions as relating to a general warranty, but in the case at bar *159

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 816, 194 Miss. 145, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-council-of-greenville-v-white-miss-1943.