First Bank of Juntura v. Sitz

6 P.2d 242, 1 P.2d 126, 138 Or. 297
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 6 P.2d 242 (First Bank of Juntura v. Sitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Bank of Juntura v. Sitz, 6 P.2d 242, 1 P.2d 126, 138 Or. 297 (Or. 1931).

Opinions

RAND, J.

On May 21, 1919, the defendant, J. L. Sitz, contracted to sell and one Ralph Chambers to buy for a stipulated price of $59,870 the lands and livestock belonging to Sitz. The contract, as shown by the evi *298 dence, was partly in writing and partly oral. It was agreed that, upon the execution of the contract, Chambers should have the immediate possession of the property; that Sitz should at once execute and place in escrow a deed of conveyance of the land and a bill of sale transferring the personal property; that Chambers should execute promissory notes to bear interest at six per cent per annum from date for the entire purchase price and a mortgage upon the land and personal property securing the payment of the four notes last falling due under the contract, aggregating $40,000, and give notes not secured for the balance of the purchase price, and that all said papers should be placed in escrow with a designated bank at Burns and held in escrow until the unsecured notes had been fully paid, when the deed and bill of sale were to be delivered to Chambers and the mortgage to Sitz. Pursuant thereto, Chambers took possesion of the property, Sitz executed the deed and bill of sale and Chambers executed seven promissory notes and a mortgage securing the payment of the last four, and all said papers were placed in escrow in said bank. Of said promissory notes not secured, one was for the sum of $7,870, payable December 1, 1919; one for $6,000, payable December 1, 1920; and one for $6,000, payable December 1, 1921. Of the notes secured by the mortgage, one was for $10,000, payable December 1, 1922; one for $10,000, payable December 1,1923; one for $10,000 payable December 1, 1924; and one for $10,000, payable December 1, 1925.

Chambers was unable to pay said notes, or any of them, and on March 29,1920, the note which had fallen due on December 1,19.19, not having been paid, Sitz, in writing, extended the time of payment of the principal of each of said notes for the period of one year from *299 and after the date when each matured. Thereafter, Chambers made default not only by failing to pay the notes then due but also by failing to pay a part of the interest that had then accrued. While so in default, Chambers was indebted to the First Bank of Juntura, plaintiff herein, for moneys borrowed for the recovery of which plaintiff, in November, 1923, brought action against Chambers and in said action caused the hay that had been raised and harvested upon the Sitz lands to be attached. Later in the action plaintiff obtained judgment against Chambers and an order for the sale of the attached hay. While that action was pending, the contract between Sitz and Chambers was rescinded by mutual consent and possession of the property mentioned in the contract was delivered to Sitz, who thereupon demanded of the sheriff the surrender of the attached hay. Upon the refusal of the sheriff to surrender the possession thereof, Sitz executed and delivered to the sheriff a rededivery bond with the other defendants herein as sureties. The attached hay was then delivered to Sitz and was fed by him during the ensuing winter to the livestock mentioned in the contract. The sheriff died and said redelivery or forthcoming bond was lost. This is a suit in equity brought by the plaintiff to have the lost instrument restored and to enforce it by a decree and judgment against Sitz and his sureties for the value of the attached hay which the complaint alleges consisted of 384 tons and was of the value of $8 per ton.

The court gave a decree in favor of plaintiff for $2,688 with interest and costs, and found that the hay, at the time of its delivery to Sitz, was of the value of $7 per ton.

There is no dispute in the testimony except upon one point. Defendant Sitz testified that Chambers in *300 July, 1923, some four months before the commencement of the attachment action, offered to surrender possession to him of all the property covered by the contract and that at that time the contract between them was mutually rescinded and that thereafter Chambers was an employee of Sitz during the time the hay was cut and harvested. This testimony was disputed by Chambers. He testified that the contract was not rescinded until November, 1923, and that he was in possession under the contract of the lands and livestock at the time the hay was harvested and the attachment was made. If the testimony of the defendant Sitz is to be believed, then the hay was cut and harvested by Chambers as an employee of Sitz and, of course, Chambers could have had no interest in the attached hay, while, if Chambers’ testimony is true, then the hay was cut and harvested pursuant to the terms of the contract and the rights and obligations of the parties must be determined by the provisions of the contract under which Chambers was acting at the time the hay was harvested. For the purposes of this discussion, we shall assume that Chambers’ testimony is true and that the contract was not rescinded until after the attachment had been made.

The question then presents itself: Did Chambers have an attachable interest in the hay? And this is the only question necessary for decision upon this appeal.

Plaintiff relies upon Sievers v. Brown, 34 Or. 454 (56 P. 171, 45 L. R. A. 642), to support its right to recover in this suit. In that case the defendant had given plaintiff a bond for a deed to lands on which plaintiff had raised a crop of wheat, oats, vegetables and hay and defendant had appropriated the crop to his own use. *301 The action was for conversion. Plaintiff recovered for the hay "but failed to recover for the wheat, oats and vegetables for the reason that he had not shown that those crops were planted or sowed before his tenancy had terminated. Plaintiff alone appealed and, of course, his right to recover for the hay was not questioned or passed upon. Hence, all that the court said in that case related to emblements only and had no application to a crop of hay spontaneously growing from perennial roots such as the hay crop involved here. In this case, the crop, not having been sown annually, was fructus naturales as distinguished from fructus industriales. In 17 C. J., P. 380, footnote 17a, the authors say: ‘ ‘ The fruit of trees, perennial bushes, and grasses growing from perennial roots are fructus naturales.” Numerous decisions are cited in support thereof.

The written contract on its face shows that it was not a contract which could have been completely performed by the purchase of the lands or livestock separately. It was an entire contract and could not be completely performed except by the payment of the entire consideration. It was definite in amount and in terms and the evidence shows that it involved the sale and purchase of some seven or eight hundred head of livestock as well as of the land on which the hay was grown. Without the use of the hay grown annually on this land for feeding purposes, the livestock could not exist during the winter months of any ordinary year.

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Related

Oregon Railway & Navigation Co. v. Gates
10 Or. 514 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1883)
Sievers v. Brown
45 L.R.A. 642 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1899)
Lyons v. Chaffee
154 P. 688 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 242, 1 P.2d 126, 138 Or. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-bank-of-juntura-v-sitz-or-1931.