May v. Ewan

275 S.W. 754, 169 Ark. 512, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 12, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 754 (May v. Ewan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. Ewan, 275 S.W. 754, 169 Ark. 512, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 482 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

'Smith, J.

Appellee, who was the plaintiff below, brought this suit to recover a sum alleged to be due him as rent on a tract of land in Monroe County for the year 1923. The suit was brought against "W. W. May and Van G-. Patrick as partners and against H. C. Pope, and judgment was recovered against all three defendants, and they have all appealed.

May owned a large tract of land in Phillips County, and in 1908 he formed'a copartnership with Patrick, who was his nephew, to clear and cultivate these lands. In connection with these operations, a commissary was operated from which the tenants on the land were furnished with necessary supplies. Patrick furnished certain tenants on other lands in which May was not interested. An agreement to dissolve this copartnership was entered into between May and Patrick' in the fall of 1919, but the agreement does not appear to have been consummated until about February 20, 1920, at which time May sold1his lands and his entire interest in the partnership' to another partnership which was formed for the purpose of buying May out. As May expressed it, the sale was a “walk-out” proposition.

The new partnership to which May sold out was composed of Patrick, T. J. Mott and J. D. May, and that partnership operated under the firm name- of Mott, Patrick & M-ay. In some manner Mott and J. D. May retired from this new partnership- and Patrick continued its business. After appellant May had sold -out to this new partnership, he appears to have had nothing further to do with the operations of the new partnership.

On the 13th day of August, 1919, appellee entered into a written contract whereby he- leased his cleared lands for a period of five years. This contract was signed by appellee, as landlord, and by H. 0. Pope and by May & Patrick by Van G. Patrick, as tenants. This contract was acknowledged August 13, 1922, by Patrick before ,a notary public, and in the certificate of acknowledgment it was recited that he had executed the contract as one of the partners in the firm of May & Patrick, and that he had authority from said partnership so to- do. The contract provided that the land should be surveyed, and that this survey should be conclusive as to the acreage. The survey was made, and according to it there were 900 acres of the cleared land. The lease contract was amended on January 20, 1920, to recite that fact, and it was again signed by the same parties.

The lease contract contained the following agreement in regard to rent: “The parties of the second part agree to pay as annual rental for the said cleared lands forty (40) pounds of lint cotton per acre, said lint cotton to be picked, ginned, baled and delivered to the said party of the first part by the said parties of the second part at the railroad station at Postelle, Arkansas, and to be from the first picking of cotton from said lands, same to be delivered as soon as same is picked, ginned and baled.”

The rent was paid appellee according to the terms of the contract for the years 1920,1921 and 1922, but was not fully paid for the year 1923, and this suit was brought to recover the balance due.

Separate answers were filed by Patrick and Pope and by May. Patrick & Pope defended upon the ground that they had delivered to appellee 'all of the cotton grown upon the place except five bales which were erroneously sold, and as to the value thereof they offered to confess judgment. They had tendered to appellee a quantity of hay raised on the land in 1923, and they alleged that this hay, together with the cotton delivered and the five bales for the value of which they offered to confess judgment, constituted the entire crop grown on the land, and they insist that they are not liable further. Appellee declined to accept the hay on the ground that the rent was payable in cotton, and that, if cotton was not delivered in payment of rent, he was entitled to the value of the cotton which the contract required to be delivered.

Appellants Patrick and Pope insist that, inasmuch as the contract provided that the rent should be paid “from the first picking of cotton from said lands, same to be delivered as .soon as same is picked and ginned and baled,” they cannot be held liable for the value of any cotton not grown, and they asked instructions — which the court refused to give — so declaring the law.

These instructions were properly refused. It is true the contract referred to cotton grown on the land, and it is also true that enough cotton was not grown to pay the rent. But we think it was clearly contemplated by the parties, that enough cotton would be grown to pay the rent, for the contract provides that the rent should be paid “from the first picking of cotton.” .The contract contained no condition that the rent should be payable provided enough cotton was grown to do so, and we think the fair interpretation of the contract is that forty pounds of lint cotton should be paid for each acre of the land, and was to be paid from the cotton first picked, but was payable in any event.

No other error is assigned on the appeal of Patrick and Pope, and the judgment against them is. therefore affirmed.

The appeal of May presents more difficult questions. As we have said, the testimony shows — and we think beyond question — that the partnership of May & Patrick was dissolved not later than February, 1920, and Mav had nothing to do with the cultivation of appellees ’ land and derived no profit or advantage therefrom at any time, and May was not advised of this contract until the fall of 1922 or the spring of 1923. May concedes, however, that, after being so advised, he did not inform appellee that he was not a partner of Patrick and was not interested in the lease, and the court submitted to th« jury the question of ratification under instructions which are not questioned except that it is insisted that there was no testimony in the case which warranted the submission of that issue. We think, however, that it appears from the facts already mentioned and other facts which will be hereafter recited that the testimony was sufficient to warrant the submission of this question to the jury.

Giving the testimony which tends to support the verdict its highest probative value, it may be further summarized as follows. The profits of the commissary were to be equally divided between May and Patrick, and a volume of business exceeding twenty thousand dollars per year was done in the commissary. In 1914 May found the partnership was not getting on satisfactorily, and he took 'charge of it, but in 1916 turned it hack to Patrick to. be operated under the original partnership agreement. Patrick rented a farm known as the Nelson place and certain other small farms during this time, and took these contracts in the name of the firm. These contracts were from year to year, but it appears that when May was advised of these contracts he repudiated them and reproved Patrick for making them and declined to have anything to do with them or to make any settlement regarding them, and Patrick personally settled with his respective landlords. May admitted that he made no inquiry about the operations of Patrick, and when he learned in the fall of 1922 or the spring of 1923 that Patrick had executed a 'contract in his name as a partner of Patrick he did not advise appellee that this had been done without authority, and the 1923 crop was thereafter planted and grown.

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732 S.W.2d 840 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1987)
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295 S.W. 386 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 754, 169 Ark. 512, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-ewan-ark-1925.