Gardenhire v. Smith

39 Ark. 280
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 Ark. 280 (Gardenhire v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardenhire v. Smith, 39 Ark. 280 (Ark. 1882).

Opinion

English, C. J.

The complaint in this case was filed in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Lawrence County on the third, and the writ issued' on the eleventh of May, 1880, returnable to the September term following. The substance of the complaint was, that the plaintiff, Samuel S. Smith, about the — day of-, 1880, made and entered into a verbal contract with defendant, BenjaminL. Gardenhire, in Lawrence County, on the terms and conditions, tenor and effect following :

Defendant agreed and bound himself by said contract with plaintiff, that he would furnish him about seventeen acres of good tillable land, on his home farm, in said county, for the purpose of making a crop of corn and cotton for the year 1880, and to furnish plaintiff all necessary tools, harness, feed and team with which to work and cultivate said crop, on said land, in consideration that plaintiff' would take charge of said land and cultivate said crop for said year, and give to defendant one-half of all the corn and cotton grown and cultivated on the said land for said year. That in pursuance of said contract, plaintiff entered into possession of said land assigned him by said defendant, on or about the — day of-, 1880, and with the team, tools, feed and harness furnished him by defendant, began the planting and sowing said land according to the terms of said contract, endeavoring in good faith on his part, to comply with each and every obligation contained therein, until the — day of-, 1880.

That on the day last named, plaintiff had broken nearly all of his said twelve acres of cotton land, prepared the same for seeding, and had seeded about six acres of the same, and had finished planting his corn all according to his said contract; and on said day he was pursuing his work in seeding said cotton land, when defendant came and demanded his team so turned over to plaintiff’, and took said team away from plaintiff' in violation and total disregard of his said obligation to plaintiff', and still refuses to surrender the same, that plaintiff may proceed with his crop.

Plaintiff alleges that he has in every way complied with said contract, on his part with defendant, but that the crop season having so far advanced as to leave it beyond the reach of plaintiff'to get land and team anywhere else, and having no land or team of his own with which to cultivate a crop for said year, he is damaged by said defendant’s acts and conduct aforesaid in the breach of his said contract with plaintiff'to the sum of four hundred dollars.

Plaintiff' further alleges that his expenses and trouble of moving to defendant’s farm under said contract, and the work he has done in pursuance thereof, are worth the sum of two hundred dollars ; and that his half of said crop if he had been permitted to cultivate it, would have been reasonably worth the sum of four hundred dollars, and that by the acts of defendant aforesaid, he is precluded and entirely prevented from making said crop for said year, to his damages in said sum of four hundred dollars.

Wherefore he prays judgment for said sum of four hundred dollars.

Defendant, in his answer, admitted that he entered into a verbal contract with plaintiff as stated in the complaint, but alleged that by the terms of the contract it was expressly stipulated that plaintiff was to work under the supervision and direction of defendant, and perform his part of the contract in a farmer-like manner, and take good care of the team or teams furnished by defendant. Denies that plaintiff complied with each and every obligation imposed upon him by the contract. Denies that he took good care of the team or teams furnished by defendant, as he had obligated himself to do ; and alleges that such failures by plaintiff first caused a breach of the contract. Denies that plaintiff was damaged in the sums alleged in the complaint. Alleges that defendant performed each and every part of the contract that was incumbent upon him, and that plaintiff' failed, refused and neglected to cultivate said land in a farmer-like manner, and to take good care of the team as he had obligated himself to do. That the treatment by plaintiff of the team furnished him by defendant, became so intolerable that defendant was compelled to take his horse from plaintiff or suffer increased damages by allowing him to retain possession and control of the same.

That owing to the unfarmer-like and negligent conduct of plaintiff in failing and refusing to cultivate the land as he had agreed and undertaken to do, defendant could not get his land cultivated for the year 1880, and would get no rents therefrom.

That by reason of plaintiff’s failure to comply with the contract in caring for said team, and to cultivate said land in a farmer-like manner under the supervision and instructions of defendant, as he had obligated himself to do, defendant was damaged in the sum of $75, for which he prayed judgment, etc.

The answer was filed at the September term, 1880, and the case was tried at the March term, 1881, and the verdict and judgment were in favor of plaintiff for $80 damages; a new trial was refused defendant, and he took a bill of exceptions and appealed.

On the trial, evidence was introduced conducing to prove that about the last of April, 1880, when plaintiff had planted four or five acres in corn, which had come up, and broken most of his cotton land, and seeded part of it, defendant took away from him the horse which he had furnished him, under the contract to make the crop, and refused on demand, to return it to him or furnish him another. That plaintiff was unable to procure a horse and made no crop.

Plaintiff' testified that before he was deprived of the horse, he had done work worth $50 ; another witness testified that his work was worth $75; and another, that it was worth from $75 to $100.

Plaintiff' also testified that he rook good care of the horse, treated him well, and worked under the directions of defendant when he gave any. That he complained that the corn was too thick, and plaintiff' thinned it, etc.

Defendant testified that he took the horse from plaintiff' because he abused him, and was breaking him down; that he bore the plow on its point, and rode upon it; planted his corn too thick and refused to thin it, etc.; and it was better to lose the crop than the horse, etc.

There was evidence conducing to prove that the cotton land would have produced that year 800 pounds of seed cotton to the acre, worth two and a half cents a pound, and that the corn land would have produced from twenty-five to thirty bushels per acre, worth forty cents a bushel.

Plaintiff testified that when deprived of the horse, it was too late in the season for him to contract to make a crop elsewhere, and he had no land, tools or team. That he could get but little employment, and made only twelve dollars during the remainder of the year, and that he earned in hoeing time.

Other witnesses testified that labor was in demand during the cotton picking season, and worth from seventy-five cents to one dollar per day.

The above are the leading features of the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Ark. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardenhire-v-smith-ark-1882.