Starnes v. Newsom

1 Tenn. Ch. R. 239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 239 (Starnes v. Newsom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starnes v. Newsom, 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 239 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

On the 18th of November, 1870, the contract in question was entered into by Samuel E. Hare of the one part, and Wm. S. Newsom and Charles E. Brown of the other part.

The contract recites that whereas Hare has been the lessee of a certain farm for four years, on which he now has forty thousand bunches of garden sage in a high state of cultivation, and whereas Brown & Newsom have leased the said farm for not less than two, nor more than four years, and have made this contract with Hare for the forty thousand bunches of sage, as follows: “We are to take charge of said sage as it now stands in the field, and subdivide the bunches as nearly equal as we can, so as to make one hundred and twenty thousand bunches, and transplant the same on twelve acres of good and well manured soil, so as to plant on each acre ten thousand bunches, and we are to keep the amount of ten thousand bunches to the acre during the specified time we cultivate the farm, for two or four years, say 1871-2-3-4, and will follow the instructions of said Samuel E. Hare in cultivating, cutting and curing the same as fol[240]*240lows: We will plant the sets deep in the ground so as the top of the sets will be two inches from the level out of the ground, or as near on a level with the surface as possible, cultivate the same during the year to keep the grass and weeds out; we will then cut and gather the same four times a year, say in the light of the moon in May, July, September and October, and November in each and every year. We will cut and gather the same, clear and clean of dust and dirt, dry and cure the same in good merchantable order, and deliver all of the same to the said Samuel E. Hare in the city of Nashville, at any house he may select, on or before the 25th day of November in each and every year; and the said Newsom & Brown, at the expiration of their lease of said farm, bind themselves jointly and severally, their heirs, and representatives in a bond of ten thousand dollars to carry on this contract faithfully, and to deliver to the said S. E. Hare, at expiration of our lease, all of the hundred and twenty thousand bunches of garden sage, by giving him sixty days notice of our intention, and when this contract is faithfully carried out by us, it is to be null and void. And the said S. E. Hare, on his part, for the services rendered and performed as above stated, has agreed to pay to the said New-som & Brown one hundred dollars per acre for every acre they cut and deliver according to contract, binding himself if failing to pay according to this contract when the sage is delivered, to forfeit all the green sage bunches until the contract is complied with on his part.”

On the 24th of November, 1871, a supplement to this contract was entered into by the parties in writing, in which it was agreed that the first cutting of the sage should be in July, and that at all the cuttings the sage should be cut within three inches of the ground, and that the risk of damage by fire or water after the sage was stored should be borne by Hare.

Upon this contract Hare paid Newsom & Brown in advance $496 in horses, plows and other property, and Newsom & Brown early in February, 1871, took possession of the twelve [241]*241acres of land, and proceded to transplant the sage, and execute the contract.

The season proved to be a very dry one, and there was only one cutting of sage made in 1871, and that in July. The sage was permitted to grow up in grass, at first because it would prevent the soiling of the sage at the first cutting, and afterwards on account of the drouth. The sage that was cut was not delivered at the place designated because, upon inquiry, it was found that no provision had been made for payment of the rent on such delivery.

On the 7th of June, 1871, Hare assigned his interest in the contract to complainants. And on the 6th of July, 1871, Brown assigned his interest to the defendant Glasgow. The parties to the assignments seem to have recognized each other as taking the shoes of their assignors respectively.

On the 13th of January, 1872, the original bill was filed to compel the defendants to execute the contract, and for damages for non-compliance, and the crop of sage cut was attached. On the 28th of June, 1872, an amended bill was filed, alleging that the contract had been violated in transplanting and cultivating the sage, that many of the plants had died by reason of the treatment given, and that the defendants had, since the filing of the original bill, “ dug up, removed and totally destroyed all of said sage bunches,” both the original and increase bunches, and this without the knowledge of complainants.

The defendants, on the 24th of January, 1872, filed their answer to the original bill, which they made a cross-bill under which they claimed damages against complainants for failing to comply with the contract by the payment of rent. To this cross-bill one Atha Thomas was made a defendant as a partner of complainants, but this was, it is conceded, a mistake, and no relief is asked against him.

On the 1st of October, 1872, the defendants filed their answer to the amended bill, admitting that they had dug up and destroyed the sage bunches, claiming the right to do so because they were forfeited to them, by the failure to pay rent, according to the terms of the contract.

[242]*242The original coinplainants answered the cross-bill, and proof has been taken on both sides.

The crop of sage raised in 1871 was attached in the cause, and sold under order of the court, and the net funds after paying cost of sale, amounting to $81.08 were paid into court, for the benefit of whom it might concern.

The evidence., consisting principally of the testimony of the parties themselves, shows clearly that there was not a strict compliance on the part of the defendants with the stipulations of the contract, either in the division of the bunches of sage, the covering therewith of twelve acres, the cultivation of the sage, the cutting or the delivery. The defendants claim, however, that the breach of the contract in the division of the bunches, &c., was waived by acquiesence, that the failure to keep down the grass was the fault of Hare and comxDlainants, whose duty it was, they say, to give instructions, and of the season; that the four cuttings were rendered impossible by drouth, without destroying the crop ; and that the failure to deliver was excused by the fact that no provision was made for payment of rent on delivery.

The contract, when it comes to be examined, is the most completely ‘ ‘ heads I win, tails you lose ’ ’ contract that can well be imagined. It is altogether one-sided. It admits the existence of forty thousand bunches of sage, and expressly binds the defendants to take these bunches “ as they stand,” and subdivide them, as nearly equal as they can, so as to make 120,000 bunches, to transplant the same on to twelve acres of land, “so as to plant on each acre ten thousand bunches,” and to keep up this number of bunches during the specified time, which time, however, may be either two or four years at the option of the defendants. The defendants are mistaken in thinking that it was the duty of Hare or his assignees to give them instructions in cultivating the crop, and that they can charge upon complainants any loss by reason of their failure to give instructions. The contract does stipulate that the defendants are to “ follow the instructions of the said Samuel E. Hare in cultivating, cutting, [243]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starnes-v-newsom-tennctapp-1873.