Raymond Slach and Nancy Slach v. Russell Heick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 8, 2015
Docket14-0539
StatusPublished

This text of Raymond Slach and Nancy Slach v. Russell Heick (Raymond Slach and Nancy Slach v. Russell Heick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Raymond Slach and Nancy Slach v. Russell Heick, (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-0539 Filed April 8, 2015

RAYMOND SLACH and NANCY SLACH, Plaintiffs-Appellees,

vs.

RUSSELL HEICK, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Douglas S.

Russell, Judge.

A farm tenant appeals the district court’s denial of his counterclaims

against the lessor for breach of contract and trespass. REVERSED AND

REMANDED.

Willie E. Townsend, Coralville, for appellant.

Thomas D. Hobart and Sean W. Wandro of Meardon, Sueppel & Downer,

P.L.C., Iowa City, for appellees.

Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ. 2

TABOR, J.

The question in this appeal is whether a farm tenant can recover against a

landlord who entered his rented fields before the lease expired and chisel plowed

corn stalks the tenant had planned to bale. To answer this question, we look to

the terms of the lease and the applicability of Iowa Code section 562.5A, which

was enacted in 2010 and allows a farm tenant to take stalks after harvest.

Finding, the statute applies, we reverse the district court’s rejection of the

tenant’s trespass claim and remand for a determination of damages.

I. Factual Background and Prior Proceedings

The present controversy doubtless arises because the original landlord

sold the real estate at issue. In 2010, Gerald Meardon1 owned farmland located

between Iowa City and West Branch. His brother, Edward Meardon, acting as

his power of attorney,2 leased 135 acres of that land to Russell Heick in a farm

lease dated March 7, 2010. The agreement provided annual cash rent of

$18,900 would be payable in installments of $9450, due on March 1 and

December 15.

In January 2011, Raymond and Nancy Slach purchased the Meardon

property. A notice to terminate the farm lease with Heick was sent, but not

properly served by the September 1, 2010 statutory deadline,3 so the Slachs

1 Gerald Meardon lived in a nursing home in Oelwein at the time of the trial. 2 Edward Meardon testified the lease was supposed to run for one year, from March 1, 2011, until March 1, 2012, but he mistakenly wrote in an incorrect ending date. In its ruling, the district court assumed the lease expired on March 1, 2012. Timothy Wilker replaced Edward Meardon as power of attorney in late March 2010. 3 Iowa Code § 562.7(3) (2011). 3

continued to rent the farmland to Heick for the 2011 crop year. Heick made the

$9450 rent payment to the Slachs in March 2011.

The trouble started brewing that spring. On April 12, 2011, Alan Bohanan,

a lawyer representing Gerald Meardon, wrote a letter to Heick informing him that

a condition of the sale of the property to the Slachs was the inclusion of an

access easement across the property that was “not to be tilled or used for any

other agricultural use.” Heick delivered the letter to his attorney Donald Diehl,

who informed attorney Bohanah that Heick intended “to farm the entire parcel

without the new easement as he has in the past.”

Later in April 2011, the Slachs installed tiling in the fields Heick was

renting from them. Raymond Slach testified he gave Heick one day’s notice

before entering the rented fields to plow in the tiling. 4 Heick recalled receiving a

phone call on the same day Slach installed the tiling. Slach told Heick nothing in

the lease prevented the landlord from entering the fields to make that

improvement. Attorney Diehl agreed with that assessment in a letter written to

Slach on Heick’s behalf, but admonished Slach to return the land to the same

condition and reminded the landlord that the tenant had “several covenants

available that prohibit you from interfering with his quiet enjoyment of the land.”

Heick testified the ground was not smoothed to his satisfaction after Slach

installed the tile, causing Heick to spend the “better part of four hours” operating

his field finisher before planting.

4 Slach testified he installed tile lines using a plow, rather than making a trench, because using a plow left the ground smoother. 4

Heick planted corn on the leased acreage. After the 2011 harvest, he

intended to bale the stalks. Heick testified he contemplated taking his cows to

the field after the harvest, but did not know if the fences would hold them, so he

decided he “would bale the stalks, feed some of them myself and sell some of

them.” Heick testified he asked neighbor Barry Lehman to bale the corn stalks

for him. Lehman testified to the terms of his agreement with Heick: “He was

going to prepare the stalks to be baled, and I was going to bale them at a cost of

$10 per bale.”

But before Lehman could do the custom baling, Raymond Slach entered

the leased property sometime after Thanksgiving 2011 “to do fall tillage to

prepare for our crop for the following year.” Slach used a chisel plow to chop the

stalks and partially bury them in the soil. Slach testified, because he had notified

Heick on March 1, 2011, that the farm lease would be terminated for the next

crop year, it was his belief that he, as the landlord, could enter the land and do

the fall tillage. Slach readily admitted he gave no notice to Heick before chisel

plowing the corn stalks. Slach testified: “I own the land and I am the landlord.”

On December 6, 2011, attorney Diehl again wrote to Slach on Heick’s

behalf, asserting his client was damaged by Slach’s actions:

Mr. Heick had corn stalks in the field which he intended to bale and sell. Said corn stalks, when baled, would have brought a price at market between $25 and $40 a bale. Assuming a normal bales- per-acre count of three, and a median price of $32.50, Mr. Heick would have been paid approximately $7,117.50 for the baled corn stalks.

Diehl’s letter stated it was Heick’s intent to subtract his losses from the

$9450 in rent Heick owed to Slach on December 15, 2011. On December 15, 5

2011, Heick sent Slach a check in the amount of $2332.50—which represented

the difference between the $9450 in rent and the alleged loss of $7117.50. Slach

did not cash the check, declining to recognize the legitimacy of the offset. But

after receiving the letters from attorney Diehl, Slach returned to the leased

property and plowed under corn stalks on an additional sixteen acres.

On January 27, 2012, the Slachs filed a petition at law seeking $9450 in

rent allegedly owed by Heick. On February 20, 2012, Heick filed an answer

alleging ouster and interference, as well as asserting counterclaims including

breach of the lease, trespass, conversion, and unjust enrichment. The parties

tried the case to the court on January 17, 2013.

In a decision issued February 25, 2014, the district court concluded Heick

did not prove his claim of breach of the lease by the Slachs, nor did he prove his

claims of trespass, conversion, or unjust enrichment. The court also determined

Heick “failed to prove the loss of his anticipated corn stalk harvest resulted in any

actual damages to him.” Heick appeals.

II. Standard of Review

We review the breach-of-contract and trespass claims tried at law to the

district court for the correction of legal error. See NevadaCare, Inc. v. Dep’t of

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