May v. American Trust Co.

27 P.2d 101, 135 Cal. App. 385, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 289
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1933
DocketDocket No. 4867.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 101 (May v. American Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. American Trust Co., 27 P.2d 101, 135 Cal. App. 385, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 289 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

The action was to recover money alleged due from defendant to plaintiff arising out of certain transactions between the parties, of which more detail hereinafter.

The case was tried by the court sitting without a jury, and judgment went for defendant, by the terms of which judgment plaintiff recovered nothing. Prom this judgment plaintiff appeals.

Appellant, to use his own language, raises only one point, and that is as follows: That the evidence received by the court and the evidence improperly excluded by the court, if the latter evidence had been received, established or would have established conclusively that plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded in his complaint, and that *387 the findings and judgment of the court in favor of defendant are not sustained by the evidence so admitted, and that which should have been admitted. This one point is all-embracing and leaves little else to be said about the judgment and the ground of appeal.

The record presents what might be called an argumentative appeal. In the opening brief of appellant there is not one single citation of authority, and in the final brief one authority is cited upon a point not disputed, as a matter of law.

• The plaintiff, in the year 1925, leased certain lands from one Law. This land, it seems admitted, was of an area totaling in excess of 1,000 acres, though the lease in evidence refers to the demised premises as being in extent 400 acres, more or less. This lease was for the period of one year, and was renewed through riders and other agreements up to September, 1928.

These premises owned by Law were impressed with a trust deed given to secure certain indebtedness to the defendant. In 1928, the defendant, through appropriate proceedings, caused the lands to be sold under the trust deed, and thereafter, on May 7, 1928, defendant became the owner of the lands.

It might be here noted that, as is usual in such cases, the defendant for some time prior to the actual foreclosure on the indebtedness, anticipated that such foreclosure would be necessary, and the testimony in some particulars indicates that it made and was making preparations that would forestall neglect or waste.

On September 25, 1928, plaintiff and defendant entered into a lease agreement by the terms of which defendant leased to plaintiff approximately 1,000 acres of land for farming purposes for the period of three years ending August 31, 1931. This lease contained many detailed provisions for the farming and cultivating of the area and was a rather lengthy document. When presented to plaintiff the first time it was not agreeable to him, and he suggested certain changes, which were made before he signed. No question of fraud, mistake or misunderstanding enters into the case.

For the purposes of the present action, and the appeal here being considered, we may concern ourselves with but *388 two provisions of the lease. Paragraph 17 of the lease reads as follows: “The lessee shall seed during the fall of 1928, the six hundred acres, more or less, of • said demised premises which are now in summer fallow, and the lessee further agrees to summer fallow the remaining acreage of the demised premises in the spring of 1929, excepting the 50 acres of the demised premises formerly in alfalfa, which the lessee may either plow and seed in the fall of 1928 or summer fallow in the spring of 1929, as he may desire. Thereafter the lessee shall, during his occupancy of the demised premises, seed and fallow such portions of said premises in rotation.” Paragraph 19 reads: “In the event that the above described premises hereby leased and demised shall be sold at any time during the term hereby created, then at the expiration of 30 days after the date of mailing by the lessor to the lessee of a notice of such sale, this lease and the term created thereby shall be terminated without further acts or proceedings on the part of the lessor,- provided, however, that if the lessee’s tenancy of the demised premises shall be so terminated as in this paragraph provided after harvest season but before seeding in the fall of any year of the term hereof, then the lessee shall be entitled to receive, and the lessor shall pay to the lessee the going wage in the vicinity for the summer fallowing which the lessee may then have done in accordance with the terms of this lease; and further provided that if this lease be so terminated as herein set forth, after the seeding shall have been done in any year of the term hereof, then the lessee shall be permitted to remain upon the premises and to mature and harvest the crop which shall have thus been seeded, and shall summer fallow a portion of the premises as in paragraph 17 provided. Upon the completion of such harvesting, but in no event later than . September first of any year of the term hereof, the lessee shall immediately vacate the premises.”

Under this lease plaintiff entered into possession of the demised premises and remained thereon throughout the entire period of the lease, vacating the premises at the conclusion of the term. Though some suggestion is made that plaintiff did not fully comply with the terms of the lease, we do not consider this point is necessary to the decision, and we proceed upon the assumption that in all *389 respects, plaintiff fully complied -with the requirements of the lease, and at the termination thereof surrendered possession to the lessor. The date of surrender was in September, 1931.

When plaintiff left the premises, upon surrender of possession, there were 340 acres of the lands in summer-fallow. Defendant took possession of the entire leased premises, including the acreage in summer-fallow.

It is the claim of the plaintiff that he is entitled to compensation for the work and labor performed in summer-fallowing these 340 acres, and his claimed cause of action in the instant controversy is to recover the sum of $1530 alleged to be the ordinary and reasonable value of the said work and labor.

The contention of plaintiff is that in the county of Merced, where the lands are situate, and in the farming community adjacent thereto, there is a usage and custom in regard to the summer-fallowing of lands under lease, which custom is pleaded by plaintiff as follows: “In the absence of express provisions to the contrary: Where a lessee of grain farming lands, farming such lands under provisions for summer fallowing of portions thereof, shall summer fallow portions of said lands during the last year of the term of his lease, such summer fallow shall constitute personal. property, and such lessee shall have an ownership therein to the extent that he has the right to seed the same and grow and harvest a crop thereon subject to the terms of his lease; said right of said lessee to seed such summer fallow being subordinate to the right of the lessor to buy such summer fallow from said lessee at the end of the term of his lease, and to pay the said lessee the reasonable and customary value thereof. Further, that upon failure of the lessor to buy said summer fallow from the lessee, the lessee has the right, at his option, to either seed the said summer fallow, or to sell the same to parties other than the lessor, and such other purchaser shall have the right to seed the same and grow and harvest a crop thereon, subject to the terms of the lease.”.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Preugschat v. Hedges
251 P.2d 166 (Washington Supreme Court, 1952)
Reitman v. Miller
54 N.W.2d 477 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1952)
Ermolieff v. R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc.
122 P.2d 3 (California Supreme Court, 1942)
Lowell v. Harris
74 P.2d 551 (California Court of Appeal, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 101, 135 Cal. App. 385, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-american-trust-co-calctapp-1933.