Kern v. Kelner

27 N.W.2d 567, 75 N.D. 292, 1947 N.D. LEXIS 67
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1947
DocketFile 7022
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 N.W.2d 567 (Kern v. Kelner) 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
Kern v. Kelner, 27 N.W.2d 567, 75 N.D. 292, 1947 N.D. LEXIS 67 (N.D. 1947).

Opinions

Bure, J.

This is" an action for specific performance of a written contract wherein the plaintiff was given an option to buy the land hereinafter described. The trial court found for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed demanding a retrial in this court.

Fundamentally the determination of one major fact settles the dispute. In December 1930, the defendant loaned to the plaintiff $3000 and obtained his promissory note for this amount due in one year with interest at 8%. The plaintiff had the note signed by his father and his mother, as joint makers. Owing to the financial condition of the plaintiff the defendant made little attempt to collect the money due, no part was paid and the statute of limitations ran against suit. Prom time *294 to time thereafter defendant tried to induce the plaintiff to make payments on the note hut it was not until November 30, 1940 that the parties came to an agreement. At that time the debt amounted to over five thousand dollars and on November 30, 1940 the plaintiff gave to the defendant his note for three thousand dollars due November 30, 1942, with interest at the rate of 2% per annum payable annually, the interest not paid when due to bear interest at the same rate.

On November 28, 1941, the defendant, being the owner of the land involved, entered into a written contract with the plaintiff for the renting of this land to the plaintiff “during the season of farming in the year 1942 and subsequent years as hereinafter provided.” This contract contains the common, usual printed provisions of such contracts between landlords and tenants to the effect the tenant was to furnish all of the power and machinery necessary and farm in a good and husbandlike manner “and not to sell or remove . . . any of the produce of said farm ... of any kind . . . until division thereof, without the written consent of the” defendant “and until such division the title and possession of all hay, grain, crops and produce raised, grown or produced on said premises and proceeds of each of the same, shall be and remain in the defendant.” Through some oversight this last provision with reference to the title and possession of the crops is omitted from the copy of Exhibit A, attached to the transcript, but it is a part of the instrument Ex. A signed by the parties to this action. The quotations are from the contract, Ex. A.

The defendant had the right to hold any portion of the crop that would belong to the plaintiff in case the latter should fail to fulfill his contract, in order to reimburse the defendant for any payments he was required to make, and one of such payments was the hail lien hereinafter mentioned. The contract further contains this very significant paragraph:

“It is further understood and agreed between the parties that whereas the said party of the second part is indebted to the party of the first part upon a promissory note of three thousand dollars, dated the 30th day of November, A.D. 1940, with in *295 terest thereon at the rate of two per cent per annum, all of the crops to he raised by the party of the second part upon the said premises each year during the life of this contract shall be delivered to the order of the party of the first part at the Scranton Equity Exchange at Scranton, North Dakota; that the value thereof shall be determined as of the market price thereof on the 1st day of October of the year in which delivered, unless otherwise agreed upon by the parties hereto; and of the proceeds so to be determined, the one-fourth shall be considered as rental due the party of the first part for the use of the said land, and the remaining three fourths thereof shall be applied toward the payment of the said promissory note of three thousand dollars hereinbefore mentioned and the interest thereon, until the same shall have been fully paid; and in consideration of the premises, the party of the first paid hereby grants to the party of the second part an option to purchase the said premises from the party of the first part for the sum of twelve hundred fifty-eight dollars and 85 cents; which option may be exercised within one year after the said note shall have been fully paid, but not otherwise:”

In this contract the plaintiff is the party of the second part and the defendant is the party of the first part. The foregoing phrase “in consideration of the premises” means in this case in consideration of all the antecedent conditions and obligations of the contract.

On the day this contract was executed the plaintiff paid two hundred dollars upon the said note, sixty dollars of which was applied upon the interest, and credit was given the plaintiff for one hundred forty dollars reducing the principal to $2860.

In 1942 the plaintiff raised a crop of 2527 bushels and 20 lbs. of wheat on the land. This is the plaintiff’s own allegation. Under the terms of the contract the defendant had title to all of this grain, but it was his duty to credit three fourths of the value of said crop as determined by the price of wheat on October 1, 1942, upon the note in question unless the plaintiff owed him anything under the farming operations. There was but one item which the plaintiff owed — a hail lien mentioned *296 later. However, the defendant bad tbe right to retain for himself 631 bushels and 50 pounds of wheat. The title to this was in the defendant, and this grain was in fact the rent. The value of the grain on the first day of October 1942, as found by the trial court and not disputed by either party was 95^ per bushel, and for convenience we call the amount of wheat to be credited 1896 bushels.

There was no crop matured in 1943, owing to hail but the record shows the plaintiff had the crop insured against hail and there was a hail lien impressed upon the land and all of the crop to be raised in 1943, amounting to $57.60. The plaintiff admits he owed this and on the trial of the case he agreed this should be collected by the defendant out of this 1942 crop.

Disregarding the hail debt as not an advance for the 1942 crop this would require the defendant to give the plaintiff a credit of $1801.20 approximately on the principal and interest of the note, if the plaintiff had complied with his contract in turning over to the defendant all of the crop of 1942. The defendant received but 2053 bushels at that time. He deducted one fourth of the entire crop as rent from this wheat and gave the plaintiff as credit upon the note $42.90 for interest and $1249.60 on the principal. These are defendant’s endorsements on the note.

The record shows that when the crop of 1942 was ready to be harvested the parties had a discussion in regard to the place of delivery of the grain owing to the fact'that the Scranton Equity Exchange elevator could receive no more grain. The parties were discussing the place of delivery and it was agreed that the plaintiff should deliver the grain in Scranton in a storage bin which the defendant owned there; and if all of the grain could not be delivered there the remainder was to be delivered to the defendant in a granary upon the plaintiff’s land. ' "We use the term delivery because of the terms of the contract though one of the elements of dispute is the apparent contention of the plaintiff that no portion of the grain was delivered to the defendant in 1942, and that no delivery took place until the year 1943 because the wheat was.not sold till that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.W.2d 567, 75 N.D. 292, 1947 N.D. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kern-v-kelner-nd-1947.