McKenzie v. Hopkins

150 N.W. 881, 29 N.D. 180, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 3
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 N.W. 881 (McKenzie v. Hopkins) 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
McKenzie v. Hopkins, 150 N.W. 881, 29 N.D. 180, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 3 (N.D. 1915).

Opinions

SpaudiNG, Ob. J.

This action was brought to determine tbe ownership of tbe proceeds of a certain crop raised by one G. N. Hopkins upon land belonging to tbe plaintiff and appellant during tbe year 1911. Tbe defendants, other than Hopkins, are claimants each to a portion of said proceeds under chattel mortgages, upon Hopkins’s share of tbe crop, duly executed and filed, given by said Hopkins to secure indebtedness owed by him to such defendants respectively. Tbe claim of tbe plaintiff is that be employed Hopkins to sow and harvest tbe crop in question, and was to pay him, as compensation for bis labor and that of bis teams and tbe use of his machinery, one half tbe proceeds of tbe crop so raised, and that tbe whole of such one half was to be applied upon indebtedness owing from Hopkins to him.

The case is here -for trial de novo, and we find tbe facts to be that tbe plaintiff was tbe owner of tbe land; that for several years preceding tbe year 1909 defendant Hopkins had been plaintiff’s tenant on said land, one half tbe crop raised each year belonging to Hopkins. No formal lease was executed for the years 1909, 1910, and 1911, but [184]*184Hopkins remained on tbe land, and continued to cultivate it, with no new agreement or contract. In the meantime he gave separate mortgages on his half of the crop of 1911 to each of the defendants, as follows: September 22, 1910, to the defendant Farmers & Merchants Bank, at Kensal, to secure $335.61, payable October 1, 1911; on the 3d of October, 1910, to the Kensal Implement Company to secure his note for $ 705.73, due October 1, 1911, on which the sum of $149 was paid in November, 1911; on October 12, 1910, to defendant II. M. Tucker Company, to secure his note for $128.05, on which $50 was paid October 12, 1911. Each of said mortgages was properly filed on or about the date it was given. It is found that said McKenzie had sold crops aggregating in value more than the amount involved in this litigation, and appropriated to his own use the proceeds; that about the 7th day of November, 1911, he shipped to the Minnekota Elevator Company a portion of said crop belonging to the defendant Hopkins, for sale; that said elevator company sold the same, and that the net proceeds thereof were $1403.23; that subsequently and while said elevator company still retained possession of the proceeds of such crop so belonging to said Hopkins, it caused to be presented to the district court of Stutsman county, and filed in the office of the clerk thereof, an affidavit stating the amount of money in its hands derived from the crop so sold, that there were conflicting claims thereto, and setting forth the mortgages of the defendant hereinbefore described, and that it was unable to determine to whom said proceeds of said grain rightfully belonged, or who was entitled to the possession thereof; whereupon the court made its order designating the Stutsman County Bank of Courtney as a depositary with which said sum of money might be deposited, and directing notice to be given to all parties holding conflicting claims thereto, pursuant to § 6995, Rev. Codes 1905; that thereupon said Elevator Company deposited said sum with said bank.

Hopkins furnished all the teams and machinery and most of the labor for the production of the crop, incurred indebtedness to other defendants for supplies, with the knowledge of McKenzie, with no prospect of being able to pay if appellant’s version is correct, unless the one half of the crop paid more than the debt due him; and when appellant learned that the mortgages in question had been given, and [185]*185one balf tbe crop insured as belonging to Hopkins, be said nothing .to the mortgagees. There was no crop in 1909 or 1910.

We cannot reproduce the evidence in full, showing the grounds for our conclusion, but call attention to some of its salient features. The appellant’s family lived in Jamestown during all the time in question, and he testifies that he was on the farm during the farming season most of the time; that he raised the crop; that nobody else had any interest in it; • that he was the owner of the proceeds; that he was on the farm while the crop was being put in and harvested; that there was no written contract for the year 1911,'or for the years 1909 and 1910; that he did not rent it for 1909 and 1910 to anybody; that the agreement was that Hopkins was to farm it, and after appellant got the crop he was to give Hopkins credit on a debt he was then owing, for the amount received from one half the crop; that this applied to the three years, 1909, 1910, and 1911, but that in the spring of 1911 he had no agreement with Hopkins as to what share of the crop he was to receive. After thus testifying, he further states that in the spring of 1909 he had a talk with Hopkins, and it was arranged in such talk that he was to work there, and have for his work the money received from half the crop, to be applied on the indebtedness of Hopkins to appellant; that he had the same talk in the spring of 1911 as to the crop for that year; that he supposed that there was nothing said as to what should be done with the surplus, if there was grain enough to pay the indebtedness, but that it was his intention to give the balance of that half to Hopkins, but that appellant was to handle the crop entirely.

These extracts from the testimony of McKenzie we quote:

Q. At that time (spring of 1911) you had no agreement with him as to what share of the crops he was to receive?
A. No, sir.
Q. But I believe you said you expected to give him credit for one half the proceeds thereof upon his indebtedness, if he received any crop ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. That was true during 1909 and 1910 ?
A. Yes, sir.

[186]*186And again:

Q. Now, when did yon tell Mr. Hopkins for the crop of 1911 that he was not to have any interest in that crop ?
A. I do not know that I ever told him that.
Q. You never told him that?
A. I do not know as I did.
Q. You never told him in the spring of 1911 to that effect?
A. No.
Q. Nor in the fall of 1910 ?
A. I do not remember that I did say anything to him about the 1911 crop in 1910.
Q. And in 1910 you did not tell him that before harvest, did you?
A. I do not remember that I ever did.

The defendant Hopkins testified that it was his horses and machinery that were used to farm the land; that he thought he made an arrangement with McKenzie for farming the land in 1911, about the 1st of April of that year; that he was then living on the farm; that he had no settlement in 1909; that in 1911 he got from McKenzie about $150 for hired help, and McKenzie did not agree to give him any interest in the crop; that he had never had any settlement with him; that McKenzie was the boss; that • he himself. did not engage threshers to thresh the crop; that he did not expect to get anything for his wages and use of his teams and machinery, if there -was no crop.

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Related

Sand v. St. Anthony & Dakota Elevator Co.
191 N.W. 955 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 N.W. 881, 29 N.D. 180, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-hopkins-nd-1915.