Silfvast v. Asplund

42 P.2d 452, 99 Mont. 152, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 21
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1935
DocketNo. 7,332.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 42 P.2d 452 (Silfvast v. Asplund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silfvast v. Asplund, 42 P.2d 452, 99 Mont. 152, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 21 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

*154 MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action arose out of a contract for the sale and purchase of land and personal property on the time payment plan, the title to remain in the vendor until the sale price was fully paid. It involves the rescission of the contract and the compensation to the parties for payments made and damages sustained. On a former appeal to this court (93 Mont. 584, 20 Pac. (2d) 631), the cause was remanded to the trial court, with directions “to hear such further proof as either side may produce upon the question of rental value and damages, and to thereupon enter judgment in accordance with this opinion, determining the rights of both parties.”

Pursuant to this direction, the respective parties. produced a large volume of testimony touching the various items therein enumerated. The facts pertaining to this case, other than those involved in the present phase of the controversy, are found in the former opinion. The trial court made findings of fact wherein it was determined that the defendants had paid on the purchase price the sum of $3,500 on June 1, 1928, and certain additional sums monthly thereafter, commencing with July, 1928, and ending November 15, 1929, and that all of the payments so made amounted to the sum of $8,005.03. The court computed interest on these sums from the date of payment, amounting to $3,283.59. It also found that defendants had placed improvements on the premises of the value of $846.58; that defendants had paid the sum of $90 to plaintiff on October 14, 1931, and computed interest thereon in the sum of $15.90; also that they had paid $140.65 taxes in 1928, and computed interest thereon in the sum of $54.41, and that the total of all these various items amounted to $12,436.16.

The court further found that the reasonable rental value of the premises and the personal property was the sum of $237.50 per month, which were occupied by defendants for 40% months, and that the total rental value computed on this basis was $9,618.75; also that the defendants failed to return *155 certain personal property and had damaged other property during the period of their possession to the amount of $2,347, making a total sum of $11,965.75, which was deducted from the other total, leaving a balance of $470.41. Judgment was entered in accordance with this finding, awarding the defendants judgment for this balance against the plaintiff. Defendants have appealed from this judgment in their favor.

Defendants assign error to the finding of the court as to the rental value of the lands and premises and to the finding relating to the loss of and damage to the property. Other specifications of error are made, but therein it is sought to challenge the correctness of these findings. Plaintiff has made numerous cross-assignments of error, which we will later notice, but has filed no cross-appeal. It is the contention of defendants that the evidence preponderates against the above findings.

In the ease of In re Mullen's Estate, 97 Mont. 144, 33 Pac. (2d) 270, 273, it is written: “This court will not reverse a judgment unless the evidence strongly preponderates against the decision of the trial court, and where there is a conflict in the evidence, and it furnishes reasonable ground for differing conclusions, the judgment will not be disturbed on appeal. (Kirby v. Hoeh, 94 Mont. 218, 21 Pac. (2d) 732; Baker v. Citizens' State Bank, 81 Mont. 543, 264 Pac. 675.)”

In a case such as this, where it is asserted that the evidence preponderates against the findings, this court enters “upon a review of the evidence indulging the presumption that the judgment is correct (State ex rel. Woare v. Board of Commissioners, 70 Mont. 252, 225 Pac. 389); every legitimate inference will be drawn from the evidence to support this presumption (Security State Bank v. Soule, 70 Mont. 300, 225 Pac. 127); and the testimony will be viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff and considered as establishing every material fact which it tends to prove (Awbery v. Schmidt, 65 Mont. 265, 211 Pac. 346).” (Baker v. Citizens’ State Bank, supra.)

Under the original contract out of which this case arose, defendants went into possession of some 325 acres of land, 47 *156 milk cows, 11 heifers soon to become cows, 2 bulls, numerous articles of farm machinery and dairy equipment. Plaintiff: had theretofore conducted a dairy business on these lands and premises, and disposed of the milk there produced on a retail milk route in Butte. It was contemplated by the contract that defendants would continue this business enterprise, and they occupied the premises for 40% months following June 1, 1928. The contract provided that it should be treated as a whole as regards the real estate and personal property, and should not be divisible. It was specifically provided therein that the milk route and the goodwill of that business were among the properties sold. All of the personal property on the ranch, apparently, with the exception of household goods, was included in the contract. The improvements on the ranch consisted of a dwelling-house, cow barn, horse barn, bunkhouse, milkhouse, two reservoirs used for irrigation, and fencing.

Defendants produced a number of witnesses who expressed their several opinions as to the reasonable rental value of the lands and premises, including the personal property. They testified that the reasonable rental value was from $35 to $50 per month. A number of these witnesses were livestock men, without experience in the dairy business'. Others professed considerable experience in that activity. None of defendants’ witnesses, with possibly one exception, in arriving at their conclusion, took into consideration the outlet for the products of the enterprise through the medium of a retail milk route.

The cross-examination of the witnesses who were testifying as practical dairymen revealed the fact that, as to two of them, they had very little, understanding of the subject on which they were attempting to express an opinion. As to these two witnesses in particular, inquiry was made as to whether they would still insist that the reasonable rental value of the property was $50, if it appeared that a profit in the sum of $600 per month was realized or had been received over and above operating expenses. One of the witnesses, in answer to this inquiry, insisted that the rental value would remain the same. The other, after repeated questioning, being *157 unable to answer, counsel for the defendants admitted that under the assumed facts the rent would be more. Counsel urge upon us the testimony of these two witnesses in support of their contention that the evidence preponderates against the finding on the matter of rental value.

Plaintiff testified that she, together with her then deceased husband, had operated this property for a considerable number of years, and that, to produce the milk and market it, it cost about $800 a month.

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Bluebook (online)
42 P.2d 452, 99 Mont. 152, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silfvast-v-asplund-mont-1935.