Hill v. Turley

710 P.2d 50, 218 Mont. 511, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 957
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1985
Docket84-561
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 710 P.2d 50 (Hill v. Turley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Turley, 710 P.2d 50, 218 Mont. 511, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 957 (Mo. 1985).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Appeal by Bill Hill from a judgment based on jury verdict against him entered in the District Court, Fourteenth Judicial District, Musselshell County.

The principal issues in this case are whether an oral grazing lease for a term longer than one year is invalid under Section 28-2-903, MCA, and whether Bill Hill was entitled to a directed verdict for conversion of his cattle by Turleys under a purported agister’s lien. The judgment was against Bill Hill on both of these issues and we affirm the judgment.

Turla and Delia Turley own a ranch in Musselshell county consisting of approximately 4h sections of timber and grasslands with a small acreage of dry hay land. In March 1982, Hill and the Turleys *514 met to discuss a proposed grazing lease of the Turley ranch by Hill. They entered into an oral lease agreement, the terms of which are controverted.

Hill testified that he wanted a three year lease but the Turleys would agree only to a two year lease. He said he left a copy of a lease form with the Turleys to fill in and sign. Neither that form nor any other writing was executed by the parties.

The Turleys contended that Hill agreed to pay $12,000 annually for a three year lease but that they would accept the rental in monthly payments so long as the entire first year’s balance was paid before the second year of the lease commenced. Turleys also contended that Bill Hill agreed to care for all the livestock, pay for the electricity to run the pumps on the well, and the fences.

Hill moved his livestock onto the Turley ranch on or about May 1, 1982. During the 1982-1983 season, Hill ran approximately 200 head on the ranch. Most of the stock belonged to third parties, including 50 head that belong to Turleys. The Turleys, after agreeing to the lease, had answered an advertisement for grazing for their own cattle, and discovered the advertiser to be Hill. The Turleys paid Hill $13 per month per head to graze their stock on their ranch during the summer of 1982.

Hill paid the total rental payments due during the year beginning May 1, 1982 and ending May 1,1983, though the payments were not made promptly at the beginning of each month.

Hill ran cattle on the ranch during the summer and fall of 1983, and on October 1,1983 terminated the lease. He paid Turleys $5,000 to cover the period from May 1, 1983 to September 30, 1983. On termination, Turleys allowed Hill to remove the cattle belonging to third parties from the ranch when Hill terminated the lease, but would not allow Hill to remove his own cattle. Turleys asserted an agister’s lien on Hill’s cattle.

Hill did not live on the Turley ranch during the time he leased it. His residence was near Acton, Montana, and he would drive to the ranch once or twice a week to look in on the stock. Turleys’ testimony was that Delia Turley and her daughter, Rita, looked after Hill’s stock while he was gone, rounding up strays, and feeding and watering the stock. Delia Turley also testified that Bill Hill agreed that if she would attend to the calving of Hill’s 12 cows and wean the calves during the winter of 1982 and 1983, Hill would care for Turley’s ranch while they went to horse shows during the following summer and that he would clean the corrals and fertilize Section 12 *515 of the ranch. The Turleys performed their part of the further agreement, but Hill did not perform his part of the alleged bargain.

Hill filed suit against the Turleys, claiming conversion of his cattle after the termination of the lease. The Turleys answered the complaint, denying the conversion, and counterclaiming for 7 months rental for the second year of the lease, $4,050 for the care of plaintiffs livestock for which they asserted an agister’s lien, and $5,000 damages for overgrazing.

The contentions of the parties were summarized in the pretrial order. Hill contended that the oral lease was a month-to-month lease and not a yearly lease and that he had fully paid the monthly rental. He also contended that his livestock had been converted and he claimed both compensatory and punitive damages. Hill further contended that the three year oral lease contended for by the Turleys was barred under Section 28-2-903, MCA, the statute of frauds.

The Turleys contended that the lease was an oral lease for a period of three years with a cash rental of $12,000 per year, that the second year of the oral lease was in full force and effect and that Hill still owed $7,000 for the remaining 7 months of the second year. They further contended that they were entitled to $4,050 for calving, doctoring, checking wells, and otherwise looking after the cattle of Hill.

The jury returned two verdicts in the cause. In one verdict, they found in favor of the Turleys and against Hill upon the complaint. In the second verdict, they found in favor of the Turleys and against Hill and assessed Turleys damages in the sum of “$7,000 only and direct that Mr. Hill’s cattle be returned to him.” The court entered judgment for the sum of $7,000 and costs at $78.95 in favor of the Turleys.

After the judgment, Hill filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment and his attorneys claimed an attorneys lien upon Hill’s cattle which were then subject to execution upon the judgment. The District Court denied the motion to alter or amend the judgment, interpreting the verdicts to mean that the plaintiff got nothing on his claims and that the defendants were entitled to $7,000 and no more and that defendants were not entitled to keep the cattle in addition. The court denied the attorneys lien on Hill’s cattle, saying that the lien of the plaintiffs attorneys could not attach where there is no verdict or judgment in favor of Hill.

LEASE CONSTRUCTION

The fact dispute as to the lease is whether it was a month-to- *516 month lease as contended by Hill, or an oral lease partially performed for one year as contended by the Turleys. The District Court instructed the jury, in its instruction No. 9 in the language of Section 70-26-201, MCA, that “[a] hiring of real property, other than lodgings and dwelling houses, in places where there is no usage on the subject, is presumed to be for one year from the commencement unless otherwise expressed in the hiring.” It appears the jury found in favor of the yearly lease.

We held in Roseneau Foods v. Coleman (1962), 140 Mont. 572, 374 P.2d 87, that depending on the circumstances, an invalid oral lease may create a month-to-month or a year-to-year tenancy. In Roseneau, we quoted what is now Section 70-26-201, MCA, and concluded that the fact that the rent was paid on a monthly basis was not in and of itself sufficient to overcome the presumption created in Section 70-26-201, MCA, in favor of a yearly lease.

In Kettlekamp, et al. v. Watkins (1924), 70 Mont. 391, 225 P. 1003, we covered the point of partial performance. There the renters attempted to avoid paying for the balance of the term of the lease, which was not in writing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
710 P.2d 50, 218 Mont. 511, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-turley-mont-1985.