Kennard v. McCrory

136 S.W.2d 710, 234 Mo. App. 626, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 14
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 S.W.2d 710 (Kennard v. McCrory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennard v. McCrory, 136 S.W.2d 710, 234 Mo. App. 626, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 14 (Mo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

TATLOW, P. J.

This is a suit brought by the respondent, M. G. W. Kennard (the plaintiff below), as the landlord, against the appellant, Wilton McCrory (the defendant below), as the purchaser of three bales of cotton from Ollie Brown, respondent’s tenant. Ollie Brown is not a party to the suit.

The suit was instituted by the respondent in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County, on the 18th day of January, 1938. It seeks to recover two items, to-wit: $34.60 as rent; and $92.77 for money or supplies furnished to the tenant to enable her to raise and harvest the crop, or to subsist while carrying out her contract of tenancy. Both items are joined in the petition in one count.

The answer was a general denial.

The verdict of the jury was in favor of the respondent, for $92.17. This would indicate that the verdict was only for the money and supplies furnished to the tenant. There is a difference of 60^ between the amount sued for under this item ($92.77) and the verdict ($92.-17). This is evidently a clerical error.

This action is based on the Act of 1925 (Laws of 1925, p. 281), which is now Section 2590, Revised Statutes, 1929. This is the only statute that deals with or authorizes a recovery against a purchaser from a tenant, for money or supplies furnished to the tenant. Prior to this act the statutes authorized a recovery for rent only, against a purchaser from a tenant.

The controlling question of fact in the instant case is whether the three bales of cotton were grown on the demised premises.

In the course of respondent’s evidence, and at the close of all of the evidence in the case, the appellant requested the court to direct a verdict in his favor. This the court refused to do and its refusal is assigned as error in the case.

We will first state what we understand to be the undisputed facts in the case.

The respondent obtained a right-of-way lease from the Little River Drainage District, for the year 1937, and sublet the land to Ollie Brown. According to the government measurements, there were ten acres in the lease subject to cultivation, which, according to the respondent, should have raised ten or eleven bales of cotton. The cotton was raised between the ditches. On cross-examination, re *628 spondent said that Ollie Brown’s boy “was working 2 acres or approximately 2 acres that she claimed were hers” under another lease.

Respondent’s witness Beulah Keith, testified that Ollie Brown had some land in cultivation that was not in the lease from Mr. Kennard. This other lease- “was supposed to be hers and I think she sold it to the boy.” There were “about two and one-half or three acres” in this lease.

Ollie Brown testified as a witness for the appellant:

“I let Mr. McCrory have some cotton — 3 bales of it. That cotton came off my. own lease and not off the Kennard place. It was off my lease on the other side of the ditch. The cotton that was raised on the Kennard place, I took it to Mr. Stillman’s and Roy Hilderbrand. Mr. Kennard got the money from the Kennard lease, got it all — rent and all — and he was trying to make me pay rent on my own place that I bought on my own. On my own place I got only 3 bales of cotton and I let Mr. McCrory have that. It was raised on my own place that I bought.”

On cross-examination, she testified:

“Yes, I said I had another lease out there. It was right across the Swift ditch, on this side. Yes, the ditches are pretty big but there is not as much space between them as there is in them.
“. . . . No, I did not carry any cotton on Kennard’s lease to McCrory’s gin. I took three bales of cotton to McCrory’s gin that were not extra size bales. . . . The cotton I let him (McCrory) have was not connected with Kennard at all. . . .”

The appellant testified:

“. . . , I bought some cotton from Mrs. Brown, that she hauled to my gin. It was three bales, . . . One bale weighed less than a set bale, one at 530 and one at 518 amounting to 1,048. The loan value was $7.87 on the two bales, amounting to $82.47 less the picking is $59.52. The other, bale burned at the gin, there was 460 pounds of that cotton burned along about that time, it wasn’t link cotton, it was seed cotton. I never did weigh these bales, it was never ginned, it burned in the seed. 460 pounds is the weight of the seed cotton that burned. The quality of the seed cotton that burned was not quite as good as the other two bales. The cotton burned on 10-11-37. . . .”

He further testified:

“. . . . Those two bales of cotton I mentioned are in the Government loan. I got the money on the Government loan, and applied it on Mrs. Brown’s account. . . .”

Charles Cowan,-a son of Mrs. Ollie Brown, testified:

“. . . . I remember one bale of cotton being hauled to Mc-Crory’s gin- — I helped haul it — it came off of my mother’s lease, and did not come off the lease my mother had rented from Kennard. The *629 ■cotton off of the Kennard lease, some of it went to the Lake County Gin and some to Stillman’s gin. I helped haul it but I don’t remember how many bales we got off of that. ’ ’

On cross-examination, he testified:

. . . On my mother’s lease there was between three and three and one-half acres in cotton, .... I don’t know how many acres was in cultivation in cotton on the Kennard lease, but I have an idea it was about nine acres, .... I helped haul cotton to Stillman’s gin and Lake County gin, and the one load to McCrory’s, that’s all I hauled there........I hauled one bale of it to McCrory’s. I don’t know exactly the size of the bale but it was 400 and something at the best I can remember. . . . I hauled one load off mother’s lease and the other cotton off the Kennard lease, I hauled it to Stillman’s and the Lake County Gin. . . . McCrory’s gin burned over there, and our cotton was up in the gin when it burned. . . . ”

Robert Cowan, another son of Mrs. Ollie Brown, testified for the appellant:

“. . . . I know some more land my mother had leased over there by the Swift ditches. I helped gather the crop off my mother’s lease next to the Swift ditch. The cotton that grew there she took to McCrory’s, they tell me — I did not help haul all the cotton to MeCrory’s — me and my brother taken one load over there one evening and they could not gin it and we hauled it over to the barn and came back the next morning. That load came off my mother’s lease. My brother hauled some of the other loads. I didn’t help haul the cotton my mother grew on the land she rented from Kennard. No, sir, I don’t know where they went to, not with all of it. On my mother’s land next to the Swift ditch, she got three bales off of it that was taken to McCrory’s”

Dutch Cowan, another son of Mrs. Ollie Brown, testified for the appellant:

. . . We got that lease from Lee Hatcher — we gave him a hog for it. I cultivated that in 1937, that is I helped to do it. My cotton was over there. She never did measure — it was about three or three and one-half acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.W.2d 710, 234 Mo. App. 626, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennard-v-mccrory-moctapp-1940.