Keller v. Bolding

2004 ND 80, 678 N.W.2d 578, 2004 N.D. LEXIS 164, 2004 WL 780172
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 2004
Docket20030221
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 2004 ND 80 (Keller v. Bolding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller v. Bolding, 2004 ND 80, 678 N.W.2d 578, 2004 N.D. LEXIS 164, 2004 WL 780172 (N.D. 2004).

Opinion

SANDSTROM, Justice.

[¶ 1] Mildred Bolding, individually and as Trustee of the Kamrath Family Trust appealed from a judgment entered in Robert Keller’s action for intentional interference with his farm lease contract. We conclude the trial court’s findings that Bolding wrongfully terminated Keller’s lease and that Keller was entitled to recover $20,000 for lost profits are not clearly erroneous. We affirm.

I

[¶ 2] On November 1, 1999, Keller leased from Bolding farmland he had previously leased from Bolding’s parents for 16 years. The lease covered 402 acres, of which 343 were subject to cultivation, specified a term running from December 1, 1999, and ending December 1, 2002, and fixed an annual cash rent of $7,000. The lease, which was copied from the one Keller had with Bolding’s parents, (1) required Keller “to well and faithfully till and farm the same in a good and farmer-like manner, according to the usual course of good husbandry” according to specified terms and conditions; (2) provided that Keller was to leave 100 acres of summer fallow at the end of the lease or pay $10 for each acre less than 100 or receive $10 for each acre over 100 acres; (3) provided Keller “may not sub-lease the cultivated *581 acreage”; and (4) provided Bolding could terminate the lease if Keller should “fail to do and perform any of the conditions of this lease.”

[¶ 3] Bolding observed hunters on the land on October 17, 2001, and met with Keller the next day. On October 19, 2001, Bolding gave Keller a written notice terminating the lease “effective immediately, based upon your failure to control noxious weeds, [and] to faithfully till and farm ... in a good and farmer-like manner.” That same day, Bolding executed a habitat agreement with Cannonball Company and placed no hunting signs on the land.

[¶ 4] Keller sued, alleging, in part, that “Bolding terminated the Lease so that she and other family members could share in the income from the property, especially the hunting fees and income,” and that Bolding’s recision of the lease was an intentional interference with his contract. Bolding answered the complaint, denying the lease was terminated to share in income from the property and denying interference with Keller’s contract. Bolding also counterclaimed, alleging, in part:

3. In the late summer of 2001, the Trust, through Bolding as Trustee, became aware of the Plaintiffs fee hunting operation being conducted upon the described property.
6. Upon reviewing the leased property, an infestation of noxious weeds was noted, as well as unharvested grain left standing, both in contravention of the terms of the lease.
7. Bolding met some unknown hunters when she went to look at the property on or about October 18. In a discussion with the hunters, she was informed by them that the Plaintiff was charging each hunter a fee of $150.00 per day per gun.
8. Bolding scheduled a meeting with the Plaintiff to discuss the problems with his operation, of the property and his fee hunting operation, but the Plaintiff refused to address the basic concerns of Bolding.
9. The actions of the Plaintiff were in violation of the terms of the lease in that the Plaintiff failed to “faithfully till and farm the same in a good and farmer-like manner according to the usual course of good husbandry.”
10. The Plaintiffs fee hunting operation was in violation of paragraph 4(C) of the lease which prohibited the sublease of any of the cultivated acreage. In addition, the fee hunting operation was beyond the scope of the agreement in that the lease was for agricultural purposes. The Plaintiff thereby converted the use of the property for hunting purposes to his own uses.

. [¶ 5] On -April, 4, 2002, the trial court granted Keller’s motion for partial summary judgment, explaining:

Since the lease fails to address hunting, it is subject to the general rule and the plaintiff, as tenant, had the right to control the hunting upon the land which he possessed pursuant to a lease.

[¶ 6] After a trial, the trial court found Bolding wrongfully terminated Keller’s lease and found Keller was entitled to recover damages of $20,000 for lost profits. Judgment was entered accordingly, and Bolding appealed.

[¶ 7] The trial court had jurisdiction under ■ N.D. Const, art. VI, § 8, and N.D.C.C. § 27-05-06. The appeal was timely under N-.D.R.App.P. 4(a). This Court has jurisdiction under N.D. Const, art. VI, §§ 2 and 6, and N.D.C.C. § 28-27-01.

*582 II

[¶ 8] Bolding contends the trial court failed to address her contention “that the reason for termination of the lease was Keller’s breach of the provision requiring Keller, in the course of good husbandry, to control noxious weeds.”

[¶ 9] Mildred Bolding testified: (1) on October 17, 2001, she saw hunters on the land; (2) “after we were explained to about the hunting program that had started in the last few years and it had become big business then we were concerned as the time went on”; (3) Keller was charging for hunting on the land and “we thought that was subletting the land”; (4) Cannonball Hunting paid Bolding $15 per bird after Bolding cancelled Keller’s lease; (5) she issued a notice of cancellation of the lease on October 19, 2001, “because there were people out on the land that we didn’t feel had the right to be out there”; (6) “we also ... saw all those weeds that were out in there and the land had not been farmed”; (7) at a meeting on October 18, Keller said he had not sprayed for weeds; (8) there were Canada thistles along the creek, the farmland, and the fence, and there were other weeds; (9) “that termination was for the way the crop land looked with all the noxious weeds on the land”; (10) “when we got out there we saw the condition of the ground, we saw the weeds that were at least two-combine widths wide all the way along the sides of the property, the grain was still standing out there, the ground looked like it hadn’t been tilled, the weed[s] were just all over the place”; (11) “the farming should have been in a good farmer like way”; and (12) leaving some grain lying around would be a good thing to do if you are trying to raise pheasants.

[¶ 10] Keller testified: (1) he has had fee hunting the last ten years; (2) to make the land suitable for hunting, he planted food plots, and he fed birds in the wintertime; (8) he left grain unharvested; (4) pheasants like thistle, which is habitat for them, and they eat part of the thistle; (5) wheat is habitat for pheasants; (6) his 5-year average profit was $20,763; (7) he never received any complaints from the weed board or neighbors while he rented the land from the Trust; (8) he sprayed for weeds in 2001; (9) he collected insurance proceeds in years he had no crop; and (10) he made more money in dry years than in others.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2004 ND 80, 678 N.W.2d 578, 2004 N.D. LEXIS 164, 2004 WL 780172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-bolding-nd-2004.