Pickering v. Moore

32 A. 828, 67 N.H. 533
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 32 A. 828 (Pickering v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickering v. Moore, 32 A. 828, 67 N.H. 533 (N.H. 1893).

Opinion

Carpenter; J.

The plaintiff held tlie farm after the expiration of three years, as tenant from year to year, upon tlie terms *534 expressed in the lease. Russell v. Fabyan, 34 N. H. 218, 223: Conway v. Starkweather, 1 Denio 113. Manure made upon a farm by the consumption of its products in the ordinary course of husbandry is a part of the realty. It cannot be sold or carried away by a tenant without the landlord’s consent. Sawyer v. Twiss, 26 N. H. 345, 349; Perry v. Carr, 44 N. H. 118, 120; Hill v. De Rochemont, 48 N. H. 87, 88. The doctrine “ was established for the benefit of agriculture. It found its origin in the fact that it is essential to the successful cultivation of a farm that the manure produced from the droppings of cattle and swine fed upon the products of the farm, and composted with earth and vegetable matter taken from the land, should be used to supply the drain made upon the soil in the production of crops, which otherwise would become impoverished and barren; and in the fact that the manure so produced is generally regarded by farmers in this country as a part of the realty, and has been so treated by landlords; and tenants from time immeinorial.” Haslem v. Lockwood, 37 Conn. 500, 505.

Whether a tenant, “ where there is no positive agreement dispensing with the. engagement to cultivate his farm in a husband-like manner, is bound to spend the bay and other like produce upon it as the means of preserving and continuing its capacity” (Perry v. Carr and Hill v. DeRochemont, supra), in other words, whether the express or implied obligation to cultivate the farm in “a husbandlike manner” binds him as matter of law to convert into manure all the fodder grown on the premises, is a different and possibly an open question. Wing v. Gray, 36 Vt. 261, 266, 267; Lewis v. Lyman, 22 Pick. 437, 444, 445; Middlebrook v. Corwin, 15 Wend. 169, and cases cited. Brown v Crump, 1 Marsh C. P. 5; Legh v. Hewitt, 4 East 154, 159; Moulton v. Robinson, 27 N. H. 550, 561; Cool. Torts 334, 343, 344. However that may be, no rule of good husbandry requires a tenant to buy hay or other fodder for consumption on the farm. If, in addition to the stock maintainable from its products, he keeps cattle for hire and feeds them upon fodder procured by purchase or raised by him on other lands, the landlord has no more legal or equitable interest iñ the manure so produced than he has in the fodder before it is consumed. It is not made in the ordinary course of husbandry. It is produced “in a manner substantially like making it in a livery stable.” Hill v. DeRochemont, 48 N. H. 87, 90; Corey v. Bishop, 48 N. H. 146, 148. It is immaterial whether the additional stock is kept for hire, or is the tenant’s property. Needham v. Allison, 24 N. H. 355.

The plaintiff did not lose his property in the manure by intermixing it with the defendant’s manure of the same quality and value without his consent. It is not claimed that the plaintiff mixed the manure with any fraudulent or wrongful intent. “ The intentional and innocent intermixture of property of substantially *535 tbe same quality and value does not change tbe ownership. And no one has a right to take the whole, but in so doing commits a trespass on the other owner. He should notify him to make a division, or take his own proportion at his peril, taking care to leave to the other owner as much as belonged to him.” Ryder v. Hathaway, 21 Pick. 298, 306; Gilman v. Hill, 36 N. H. 311, 323; Robinson v. Holt, 39 N. H. 557, 563; Moore v. Bowman, 47 N. H. 494, 501, 502; Cheshire Railroad v. Foster, 51 N. H. 490, 493. “ Even if the commingling were malicious or fraudulent, a rule of law which would take from the wrongdoer the whole, when to restore to the other his proportion would do him full justice, would be a rule not in harmony with the general rules of civil remedy, not only because it would award to one party a redress beyond his loss, but because it would compel the other party to pay not damages, but a penalty.” Cool. Torts 53, 54.

Whether tbe parties were tenants in common of tbe manure; is a question that need not be determined. Gardner v. Dutch, 9 Mass. 427, 430, 431; Ryder v. Hathaway, 21 Pick. 298, 305; Chapman v. Shepard, 39 Conn. 413, 425; Kimberly v. Patchin, 19 N. Y. 330, 341. Assuming tliat they were, tbe action may be maintained. A tenant in common has tbe same riglit to the use and enjoyment of the common property that he lias to bis sole property, except in so far as it is limited by the equal right of his co-tenants. Where two have each an equal title to an indivisible chattel, “as of a horse an oxe or a cowe,” neither, without actual and exclusive possession of the chattel, can enjoy his moiety. Simultaneous enjoyment by each of his equal right is impossible. Hence, neither can lawfully take it from tlie possession of tbe other. Tlie one excluded from possession lias no legal remedy except to take it “when he can see his time.” Lit., s. 823 ; Southworth v. Smith, 27 Conn. 355, 359.

A tenant in common of personal as well as real property has a right to partition if partition is possible, and if not, to a regulation of its use equivalent to partition or to a sale. Co. Lit. 164 b, 165 a; Stoughton v. Leigh, 1. Taunt. 402, 411, 412; Morrill v. Morrill, 5 N. H. 134, 135; Crowell v. Woodbury, 52 N. H. 613. On partition he is entitled to no particular part of tbe properly, but only to bis due proportion in value and quality of tbe wlicffe. Wlien it consists of chattels differing in quality and value, an appraisal of tbe value and a consideration of tlie qualities of tbe several chattels are essential to an assignment to eaeli of bis just share. In this ease, as in that of a single indivisible chattel, if tbe parties cannot agree upon tlie use, sale, or division, judicial intervention is necessary. Until an adjudication of their rights, neither can assert a title in severalty to any portion of the property. When the common property is divisible by weight, measure, or number into portions identical in quality and vaiue, as corn and various other articles, a different case is presented. *536 There is no question of legal or equitable right. There is and can be no dispute that a 'court of law or equity can settle. Counting, weighing, and measuring are not judicial, but ministerial functions.

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Bluebook (online)
32 A. 828, 67 N.H. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickering-v-moore-nh-1893.