Gentry v. Alexander

224 S.W.2d 143, 311 Ky. 344, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 1, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 224 S.W.2d 143 (Gentry v. Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gentry v. Alexander, 224 S.W.2d 143, 311 Ky. 344, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1131 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Judge Helm

Affirming.

This is an action for a declaration of rights.

Mrs. Bernice VanArsdall died April 12, 1949, the owner of a life estate in a farm of 246 acres, about two miles east of Harrodsburg on the Lexington turnpike. Rufus VanArsdall, who was the husband of Bernice VanArsdall, owned this farm at the time of his death in 1920. The farm is described as haying been in a high state of cultivation, “one of the show places of central Kentucky.” Mrs. VanArsdall was a competent farm manager, and was operating this farm under a sharecropper arrangement with Ralph Knight. Crops of corn, wheat, tobacco, red clover and lespedeza were grown. Other parts of the land were kept in grass, such as blue grass, or orchard grass.

Appellant, in his brief, says: “The life tenant sowed something more than 100 acres in wheat in the fall of 1948, and it was growing on the farm at the date of her death. It went to her representative, without question, as an emblement.” At the time of the life tenant’s death, 30 acres of the tract was in red clover. The clover seed had been bought and sown by her in the spring of 1948. It had been clipped in the fall of 1948. Twelve acres had been sown in Korean lespedeza by the life tenant in the spring of 1948. The farm had a tobacco base of twelve and eight-tenths acres. The life tenant, through Ralph Knight, had prepared and sown a tobacco plant bed, between 1,000 and 1,200 *346 square feet, sufficient for setting and resetting the base of twelve and eight-tenths acres. At the time of the life tenant’s death, the tobacco plants in the bed were about the size of a dime, and had not been transplanted. At the time of the life tenant’s death, the corn crop had not been planted.

The question before the trial court was: Were the clover, the lespedeza, and the tobacco plants, emblements within the meaning of KRS 395.350, which provides: “ (1) All the emblements of the lands of a person dying after March 1 which are severed before the following December 31 shall be assets in the hands of his personal representative.”

The word “emblements” is derived from an old French word “ emblaement, ” modern French “emblaver,” meaning to sow with wheat; “the profits of the land sown.” The word is included in the term “fructus industriales.” Fructus industriales, as distinguished from fructus naturales, are crops of the earth produced not spontaneously but by expense, labor and industry of man.

In 15 Am. Jur. 197, it is said: “* * * Attention in recent times, however, has been given to the modern methods of fruit culture and the assistance afforded nature in producing fruit and other products of bushes and trees, and the better rule now regards as ‘fructus industiales’ a growing crop which owes its existence in its final perfection- and abundance to the care and cultivation of man, even though it may proceed from perennial roots.”

Hops, although produced from perennial roots, have long been considered emblements, fructus industriales because of the care and industry required for their production.

In Twin Falls Bank & Trust Co. v. Weinberg et al., 44 Idaho 332, 257 P. 31, 33, 54 A. L. R. 1527, it is said: “It is common knowledge that apple and other fruit trees require annual pruning, spraying, and cultivation in order to produce marketable crops. We are of the opinion that an apple crop is clearly fructus industriales, * *

In N Bar N Land & Livestock Co. v. Taylor, 94 *347 Mont. 350, 22 P. 2d 313, it was held that a crop of alfalfa, a clover, a perennial growing from roots in the ground and requiring industry of man to bring it to maturity, is fructus industriales.

In Tiffany, Real Property, Vol. 2, p. 543, it is said: “It seems, however, that artificial grasses, such as clover, sainfoin and the like, may be taken as emblements. ’ ’

In State v. Crook, 132 N. C. 1053, 44 S. E. 32, 33, the court said: “By the census of 1900 it appears that the value of the hay crop of this country exceeds by more than $100,000,000 the total value of our cotton crop, and, notwithstanding' the large yield from the vast unsown prairies of the West, that more than three-fourths of the hay crop is raised on cultivated land. The same census shows that six out of every seven tons of hay cut in this state are cultivated grass, only one-seventh being natural grass. Hay is not cultivated like cotton, any more than wheat is cultivated in the sense that corn is, but the court could not therefore lay down the proposition that either wheat or hay is ‘not a cultivated crop.’ ”

The trial court, in a well-reasoned opinion, said: “Do the crops of clover and lespedeza, or either, sown by the life tenant, plaintiff’s decedent, in the spring of 1948, belong to her estate or go to the remaindermen, she having died in April, 1949? Does the 1949 tobacco crop grown from the plants she seeded in the bed for that purpose in the spring of 1949, and still in the bed at the time of her death, belong to her estate or the remaindermen? These are the questions for decision.

“'KRS 395.350 provides: * * *

“This statute fixes the respective rights of the estate of the life tenant and of the remaindermen as to the emblements. # * * It has been the law of Kentucky practically ever since its formation as a State. Clore’s Adm’r v. Clore (215 Ky. 532), 284 S. W. 385. But as to what is included in ‘emblements,’ the doctrine on that subject at Common Law must be consulted. . The change in the Common Law rule about it thát this statute makes relates to the time of the death, of the life tenant, * * *. At Common Law, the life tenant, or his lawful representative, was entitled to the annual crops raised by his labor. That in substance seems to have *348 been the rule. The date of that tenant’s death did not, as it does now in this jurisdiction, affect this right of his representative. Blaekstone, vol. 1, bk. 2, page 122; Kent, vol. IV, page 74; Bouvier’s Law Diet., Baldwin’s Edition, p. 345; American Law Institute, Restatement, Property, vol. I, sec. 121; Tiffany’s Real Property, abridged edition, p. 401, sec. 408; Annotation to Re Mischke (136), Neb. (875, 287 N. W. 760), in 125 A. L. R. 280, collating texts and decisions on the rule, * * *.

“In 17 C. J., page 380, after noticing that crops are divided into two classes, fructus industriales and fructus naturales, # * * it is stated:

“ ‘The term “emblement” is synonymous with fructus industriales, * * *.’

“In discussing the distinction taken as between fructus naturales and fructus industriales, the text, on the same page, contains this statement:

“ ‘Formerly, in England, it was held that where the root or tree was perennial, living for a number of years, the fruit produced by it while growing was fructus naturales. But this doctrine is supported now by little authority and less reason; the correct test to apply is to ascertain whether the annual fruit is produced by annual labor of man, such as necessary manurance or other industry, * * #.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.2d 143, 311 Ky. 344, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gentry-v-alexander-kyctapphigh-1949.