Gallager v. Nelson
This text of 383 N.W.2d 424 (Gallager v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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OPINION
John Gallager brought this action to declare that he is entitled to a growing crop after his landlord’s contract for deed was canceled by Frank Nelson, the vendor. The trial court granted Nelson’s motion for [425]*425summary judgment, and Gallager appeals. We reverse.
PACTS
On February 1, 1985, John Gallager agreed to rent 480 acres of farmland in Pennington County from William Turtle on a cash-crop lease. The lease term was from March 1, 1985, through February 28, 1986. Gallager paid the cash portion of the rent in advance ($6,000) and planted a wheat crop in the spring of 1985. The Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) has a security interest in the crop.
Turtle and others had purchased the property on a contract for deed from Frank Nelson in October 1979. The contract was recorded in May 1984. When Turtle leased the property to Gallager, the contract payments were current. In April 1985, however, Turtle failed to make an $8,250 contract payment, and Nelson commenced cancellation proceedings under Minn.Stat. § 559.21 (1984). Turtle failed to cure the default, and the contract was canceled in August 1985. Nelson then claimed the right to possess the growing crop. Gallager brought this action against Nelson to declare Gallager’s right to possession. The parties stipulated that Gallager could harvest and store the crop until this action is resolved.
On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court concluded that Nelson is entitled to the crop. Gallager appeals.
ISSUE
Is a tenant entitled to possession of a growing crop when the landlord’s contract for deed is canceled by the vendor?
ANALYSIS
Under the common law doctrine of emblements, if a crop is planted by one rightfully in possession of land, and the person unexpectedly loses possession before harvest, he still has ownership rights to the crops he planted. Andersen v. Bureau of Indian Affairs, 764 F.2d 1344, 1347 (9th Cir.1985). The doctrine is premised on the policy of avoiding waste of land and the equity that a tenant should be entitled to the crops or their value since it was his labor that produced them. Id.
According to one commentator, the most important area of operation for the doctrine of emblements is between a tenant having a tenancy of uncertain duration and his reversioner:
Coke, and Littleton before him, stated that a tenant who had lost possession, or his representatives, had a right to return to the land within a reasonable time after the termination of his tenancy, and to harvest his annual crops grown thereon, provided
(1) the tenancy had been of uncertain duration;
(2) the termination of the tenancy had been due to an act of God, or an act of the lessor, rather than to some act or default of the tenant; and
(3) the crop had been sowed, by the tenant or by someone claiming under him, and during the right of occupancy.
5 R. Powell, The Law of Real Property § 663 at 105-06 (P. Rohan rev. ed. 1985) (footnotes omitted).
Closely related to the doctrine of emblements is the rule that one who wrongfully possesses land is entitled to crops grown thereon if they are harvested before the person loses possession, but if the wrongful possessor is dispossessed before harvest the crops go to the landowner. The reason for the rule is that
[i]f the wrongdoer is put out of possession before the crop is harvested the landowner should not be obliged to allow him to re-enter in order to cultivate and sever the crop; any such rule would not only result in inconvenience to landowners but would occasion a custom of surreptitious plantings in the hope of reaping the advantage of such a law. On the other hand, it would be unjust to allow a trespasser, possibly in good faith, to plant, cultivate, and harvest a crop to the advantage of a landowner who stands by until all the work is done and [426]*426then demands the benefit. He must pursue his remedy with a certain diligence, his deadline in the law of crops being the time of harvesting.
5 American Law of Property § 19.16 at 66-67 (A. Casner ed. 1952). The landowner’s remedy, when not entitled to the crops, is the right to recover mesne profits (value of the use and occupancy of the land). See 5 R. Powell, § 663 at 104. Many Minnesota cases recognize this rule.1
When Gallager planted the crop, he had the right to occupy the property. When Turtle defaulted and Nelson canceled the contract, Gallager’s tenancy came to an end. See Schrunk v. Andres, 221 Minn. 465, 22 N.W.2d 548 (1946) (an oral lease made by a vendee terminated with the vendee’s interest in the contract). The termination of the tenancy was thus due to the act of the lessor. If Gallager’s tenancy were of an uncertain duration, the doctrine of emblements would give him the right to harvest and remove the crop.
The reason a tenancy of uncertain duration is required is that a tenant for a fixed term is able to plant his crop with knowledge as to when the term will end. A tenancy of indefinite duration is “subject to termination on the happening of a future event.” 1 American Law of Property § 2.16(g) at 143. For example, a tenancy for a fixed term held from a life tenant as landlord is indefinite because the landlord’s death could happen at any time. Id. A tenancy at will is also sufficiently indefinite. See 5 R. Powell, § 663 at 106.
We conclude that Gallager’s tenancy was for an indefinite term for purposes of this doctrine because the term was subject to Turtle’s compliance with the underlying contract for deed. A tenant who rents from a landlord whose property is mortgaged is not necessarily a tenant for an indefinite term because the mortgagor is entitled to remain in possession through the statutory redemption period, and if the tenant has notice of the foreclosure, the tenant would know of a fixed date for termination of the tenancy. Here it is undisputed that the only notice Gallager had before he planted the crop was constructive notice, because the contract had been recorded, of how the property was financed. Gallager is entitled to the crop he planted and cultivated before his tenancy ended. Application of the doctrine in this case comports with the policy of avoiding waste and doing equity to the tenant. See also Falk v. Amsberry, 279 Or. 417, 569 P.2d 558 (1977) (tenants held entitled to growing crop, after landlord sold the property, under both the common law of emblements and an Oregon statute).
The trial court relied on Roehrs v. Thompson, 185 Minn. 154, 240 N.W. 111 (1932). In Roehrs the vendee on a contract for deed had a crop growing when the contract was canceled. The court held that upon cancellation of the contract, the vendee forfeited all right to the land and crops. The court did not discuss the doctrine of emblements, but it would appear not to apply because a vendee is not a tenant for an uncertain term. Cf. Lake v. Lund, 92 Minn. 280, 282-83, 99 N.W.
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383 N.W.2d 424, 1986 Minn. App. LEXIS 4124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallager-v-nelson-minnctapp-1986.