Reilly v. Ringland

39 Iowa 106
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 30, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 39 Iowa 106 (Reilly v. Ringland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reilly v. Ringland, 39 Iowa 106 (iowa 1874).

Opinion

Miller, Ch. J.

The record shows that William B. Wells, on the 30th of September, 1868, commenced an action in the [107]*107District Court of Webster county against Hannah Eeilly to set aside her patent to certain lands; that that action was removed to the Circuit Court of the United States, in which a trial was had and a judgment rendered at the October term, 1869, in favor of said Wells, declaring him the true owner of the land and annulling the patent of Mrs. Eeilly, which judgment was afterwards affirmed in the Supreme Court of the United States. On the 4th day of November, 1870, Mrs. Eeilly filed her petition in the Circuit Court of the United States under the occupying claimant law, and at the May term, 1871, of said court she recovered a judgment against Wells for $2,353.39. In October, 1868, for a valuable consideration, Hannah Eeilly conveyed to the plaintiff, her son, a portion of the land embraced in her patent which was subsequently annulled. The plaintiff continued in the actual occupancy of the land conveyed to him until ejected therefrom by process of law. He was not made a party to the action against Hannah Eeilly. By the terms of the judgment in favor of Mrs. Eeilly against Wells it was provided, among other things, that Wells should take no proceedings for the enforcement of his decree against Mrs. Eeilly until the payment of the judgment rendered in her favor for the improvements made on the land by her, and that, in case of a failure to pay the same within three years, said Hannah Eeilly should be entitled to hold the land free from the claim of Wells upon the payment of $3,500 within one year thereafter.

In July, 1871, Wells paid the judgment against him, and, on the 15th of the same month, sued out from the Circuit Court of the United States a writ of assistance, by virtue of which Hannah Eeilly and the .plaintiff were removed from the lands in question, and the grain mentioned in plaintiff’s petition was taken possession of by the defendants. The plaintiff thereupon brought this action to recover back said grain.

The court instructed the jury “that under the possession given by the Marshal in the service of the writ of assistance introduced in evidence in this case, the defendant, Wells, was entitled to the possession of the property in controversy in [108]*108this case at the time of the commencement of this suit, and they will render a verdict accordingly, and will find the value of the property at the amount named in the petition, to-wit: two hundred and five dollars.”

The first question involved in the instruction is, whether 'the writ of assistance, under which Wells obtained possession of the land, entitled him to the crops which were then upon the land, and had been raised by the plaintiff.

1. Ínt: ™Mementis. 2. ——: —. It is a broad and almost universal principle that the tenant who sows a crop shall reap it, if the term of his tenancy be uncertain. 1 Washburn on Real Property, 102, 106; ^ Blackstone’s Com., 122; Stewart v. Doughty, 9 Johns., 108; Williams on Executors, 597. In order to entitle a tenant or his executor or administrator to emblements, his tenancy must be uncertain in its duration. Debow v. Colfax, 5 Halst., 128; Kittredge v. Wood, 3 N. H., 503; Whitmarsh v. Cutting, 10 Johns., 360; Chesley v. Welch, 37 Me., 106; Harris v. Carson, 7 Leigh. In the next place the tenancy must be determined by the act of God, as by the death of the tenant, or by the act of the lessor or owner in expelling the tenant or terminating his tenancy. Ibid.

One of the important rights of a tenant for life is this right to emblements, or profits of the crop which the law gives him, or to his executors, if he be dead, to compensate for the labor and expense of tilling and sowing the land. See Williams on Executors, 597. The same principles apply also to tenancies ’at will. Davis v. Thompson, 13 Me., 209; Davis v. Brocklebank, 9 N. H., 73; Sherburne v. Jones, 20 Me., 70; Stewart v. Doughty, 9 Johns., 108; Chandler v. Thurston, 10 Pick., 205.

3._._'. enter uiKnf tiie premises. A tenant having the right to the emblements, has the corresponding right also to enter upon the premises to harvest the crops growing at the termination 0f hjg tenancy. Forsythe v. Price, 8 Watts, 282; Humphries v. Humphries, 3 Iredel, 362; Coke on Lit., 56, a.

By- statute, in this State, “ any person in the possession of real property with the assent of the owner, is presumed to be [109]*109a tenant at will, unless the contrary is shown.” Eevision, § 2216; Code, §2014.

4. - — : occxipying c ai - Under the law in regard to the rights of occupying claimants, and by the terms of the judgment in the Circuit Court of the United States, (Eev. Ch. 97), the plaintiff wag entitled to the possession of the land until Wells should pay off that judgment, which he could have done at once, or he might do so at any time within three years. He did not choose to pay off the judgment at the time of its rendition, hut delayed such payment for about two months. By so doing he assented to the plaintiff remaining in possession during such delay. Plaintiff’s possession was, therefore, with the assent of the owner. The duration of his tenancy was rendered uncertain by the defendant, and was determined by his act alone.

The case, therefore, is brought within the rule under which the tenant is entitled to the growing crops.

• The defendant was allowed, by the law and the judgment of the court, to pay off the judgment for the improvements at any time within three years. Plaintiff was entitled to the pos-, session in the meantime. The defendant might take the whole three years to make payment if he saw fit to do so. The law would he a mockery if the plaintiff, under such circumstances, would not be allowed to cultivate the land of which he was in the rightful possession, or, after having raised a crop thereon, the defendant should be permitted to take it away from him. When the statute gives the possession of land to an occupying, claimant, as in this case, for three years, unless the owner shall sooner, pay for the improvements, it does not mean that he shall have noné of the fruits or benefits of such possession. It does not intend that the land shall lay idle and uncultivated; during this time, nor that the owner shall reap all of the results of the cultivation thereof by the occupying claimant, during the time he is in the lawful possession thereof.

We have examined the cases cited by appellees’ counsel and find that but one of them sustains their theory of the case, name-: lv: Strode v. Swim, 1 A. K. Marshall, 271, which holds that the successful claimant, electing to pay for improvements under [110]*110the occupying claimant law, is entitled to the crop growing on the premises when possession is taken. We have not seen the statute under which this decision was made. It may not have contained provisions giving time in which the successful claimant has the right to elect whether he will pay. for the improvements or not, as our statute. does, thereby creating a tenancy at will. Our statute on this subject did not originally, as enacted in the Code of 1851, contain this .provision, but on the contrary, it contemplated an immediate election to pay or not at the.time of the rendition of the judgment. (Revision, § 2267; Code of 1851, § 1236.) By Chap.

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Reilly v. Ringland
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Bluebook (online)
39 Iowa 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reilly-v-ringland-iowa-1874.