Devereaux Mortgage Co. v. Walker

268 P. 37, 46 Idaho 431, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 116
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1928
DocketNo. 4867.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 268 P. 37 (Devereaux Mortgage Co. v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devereaux Mortgage Co. v. Walker, 268 P. 37, 46 Idaho 431, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 116 (Idaho 1928).

Opinions

In 1920 William A. Walker and wife, to secure the payment of certain notes then made by them and later transferred to the appellant, the First National Bank of Driggs, Idaho, gave their chattel mortgage covering, with other property, the crops to be grown during the years 1921 to 1925, inclusive, upon particularly described land in Madison county. The land upon which the crops were to be grown was at that time mortgaged to the respondent, the Devereaux Mortgage Company. The real estate mortgage was later foreclosed and the property was sold, at a date not shown, to the respondent. On April 23, 1923, the respondent and the Walkers entered into an agreement, called a lease, by the terms of which the respondent did "let and farm lease" the real property to the Walkers for the period of one year. Various provisions of the agreement indicate the parties contemplated the operation of the property during the year 1924 under the same contract. The Walkers, called "lessees," covenanted "to pay as rental for said premises one-third of all crops planted and grown upon said premises. . . . to be delivered at the warehouse in Rexburg free of cost to The Devereaux Mortgage Company." It was further provided that upon the default of the lessees, the lessor might terminate the agreement and *Page 434 in that event the lease should "become a lien on any crops that may be at that time in the ground or on the premises for any unpaid rental or any share due or to become due as rental." The 1923 crop was sold by the bank under foreclosure of its chattel mortgage and no part of the crop was delivered to the respondent. After the 1924 crop had been harvested, removed from the premises and placed in a warehouse the respondent commenced this action to recover one-third of the same, and asserted the priority of its claim over the lien of the appellant. By cross-complaint, the appellant sought to foreclose the crop mortgage held by it and asserted the priority of its mortgage lien over any claim or interest of the respondent. The crop was sold and the proceeds were paid into court to await the determination of the action. The trial court decreed that one-third of the proceeds, with respondent's costs, be paid to it and that the balance be paid to the appellant bank.

The appellant takes the position that since the agreement did not expressly reserve to the respondent title to the crop, the Walkers owned it by absolute title, and that the lien of appellant's mortgage attached to the entire crop; that respondent's claim was at most a lien to become effective only upon the termination of the agreement and that such lien, when it came into existence, if at all, was subsequent in time and in right to the lien of its mortgage.

The sole question presented is whether the mortgage of the appellant constitutes a lien upon the share of the crop claimed by the respondent. The validity of the mortgage is, in all other respects, apparently conceded.

It has become the settled law of this state that a mortgage upon crops to be thereafter sown and grown attaches as a lien only to the interest held or retained by the mortgagor in such crops when they come into being. (C. S., sec. 6373; Green v.Consolidated Wagon Machine Co., 30 Idaho 359, 164 P. 1016;Twin Falls Bank Trust Co. v. Weinberg, 44 Idaho 332,257 Pac. 31.) The appellant therefore, had no greater interest in the crop than the Walkers had. *Page 435

Contracts by the terms of which the owner of land gives to another the right to occupy and farm the land for a particular period upon the promise and agreement of the other to deliver and return a definite part of the crops to be grown on such land have resulted in much litigation with a variety of results.

The great majority of cases hold that a co-ownership is created between the land owner and the grower in all crops grown by the latter while in possession of land under an agreement by which he covenants to deliver a portion of such crops to the owner of the land. The following authorities, among many others, support that rule: 8 R. C. L., p. 374, sec. 21; Fuhrman v. Interior Warehouse Co., 64 Wn. 159,116 Pac. 666, 37 L.R.A., N.S., 89; Pearson v. Lafferty,197 Mo. App. 123, 193 S.W. 40; Putnam v. Wise, 1 Hill (N.Y.), 234, 37 Am. Dec. 309; Bernal v. Hovious, 17 Cal. 542, 79 Am. Dec. 147; Knoxv. Marshall, 19 Cal. 617; Baughman v. Reed, 75 Cal. 319, 7 Am. St. 170, 17 P. 222; Woodsend v. Chatom, 191 Cal. 72,214 P. 965; Olin v. Martell, 83 Vt. 130, 138 Am. St. 1072, 74 Atl. 1060; Messinger v. Union Warehouse Co., 39 Or. 546,65 P. 808; Halsey v. Simmons, 85 Or. 324, 166 P. 944, L.R.A. 1918A, 321; Niagara Oil Co. v. Ogle, 177 Ind. 292, Ann. Cas. 1914D, 67, 98 N.E. 60, 42 L.R.A., N.S., 714; Simsv. Jones, 54 Neb. 769, 69 Am. St. 749, 75 N.W. 150;Olson v. Olson, 168 Ill. App. 358; Brown v. Lincoln,47 N.H. 468; Kuiper v. Miller, 53 N.D. 711, 207 N.W. 489; FirstNational Bank v. St. Anthony Dakota Elev. Co., 471 Minn. 461,214 N.W. 288; Straight Bros. Co. v. Chicago, M. St. P. Ry.Co., 183 Iowa, 934, 167 N.W. 705. To these might be added the case of Jensen v. Anderson, 50 Utah, 515, 167 P. 811, in which the land owner was permitted to recover his share in replevin action.

While the very great majority of cases are to the effect that the owner of land has a property interest in the crops before division and delivery and that he and the producer own the crops, there is much diversity of opinion as to the reason for that conclusion and the proper classification *Page 436 of the relation created by their agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
268 P. 37, 46 Idaho 431, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devereaux-mortgage-co-v-walker-idaho-1928.