Stephens v. Steckdaub

217 S.W. 871, 202 Mo. App. 392, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 3
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 871 (Stephens v. Steckdaub) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Steckdaub, 217 S.W. 871, 202 Mo. App. 392, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 3 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

*393 BLAND, J.

This is a suit to replevin corn standing-in a field. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment and both parties have appealed to this court. We will first thke up the points raised by the defendants. This case is a sequel to a long- litigation conducted by Harriett .McQuitty to establish by ejectment title to forty acres of land in Boone County, Missouri. [See McQuitty v. Wilhite, 218 Mo. 591; McQuitty v. Wilhite, 247 Mo. 163; McQuitty v. Steckdaub, 190 S. W. 590.] After the appeal in the Steckdaub case a change of venue was taken to the Randolph Circuit Court. In that court trial was had and a verdict and judgment was rendered on June 21, 1917, in favor of plaintiff for the possession of the land, $1600 damages and $13.33 pen-month rent and profits until restitution. From this judgment Steckdaub again appealed to the Supreme Court where the judgment was affirmed at the April term, 1918. In the meantime the court house at Mo'berly, Randolph County, Missouri, was destroyed by fire, causing the loss of the records in that case. Suit was filed to supply the judgment in that case, which resulted in favor of plaintiff on July 23, 1918. From this judgment Steckdaub sued on a writ of error in this court, which was later dismissed. On August 27, 1918, a writ of restitution was issued out of the circuit court of Randolph County based upon the judgment in ejectment obtained on June 21, 1918, as supplied by the judgment of July 23, 1918. Under this writ the sheriff of Boone County, on September 6, 1918, put Harriett McQuitty in the peaceful possession of the land and collected the rents, damages and costs of Steckdaub to that date. However, Harriett McQuitty, by her attorney, refused to receive the rents accruing after March, 1918, for the reason that there was a valuable corn crop standing upon the- land which she desired to claim and apparently thought or feared that to collect the rents for the current season would prejudice her right to the crop.

Defendant D. C. Steckdaub, in August, 1917, rented to his sons, who are his co-defendants, the land in con *394 troversy under an agreement providing that the father was to furnish the land, teams, tools and seed and his sons the labor. The crop was to he divided five-twelfths to the father and seventh-twelfths to the two sons. The sons plowed the land in the early fall of 3917 and planted the crop of corn in the Spring of 1918. On September 14, 1918, Harriett McQuitty conveyed the land by warranty deed to this plaintiff. The deed included “the crop of corn growing upon said 40 acres of land.” On September 17, 1918, plaintiff went upon the land and cut a small shock of corn upon the premises. Some time prior to that plaintiff notified the defendants that the corn was his and for them not to remove any of it. On the 25th of September, 1918, plaintiff took three negroes out to the land and commenced to enclose the 40 acres with a fence. They cut some of the corn to make a fence row and dug a few post holes. They returned the next day to again work on the fence when they were interrupted by the defendants, Martin and John Steckdaub, and a brother, Frank Steckdaub, who came tc the land with two shot guns and a revolver. With these weapons they drove the negroes off and presented the fire arms to plaintiff, telling.plaintiff that he should not put his foot on the land and should not have an ear of the corn. Evidently believing that discretion was the better part of valor, plaintiff, together with his help, retired from the land. In October, 1918, while the corn was standing on the ground unharvested this suit was filed to replevin the corn. The corn, consisting of 688 bushels, Avas afterwards gathered by defendant and removed to the farther’s place. There was testimony that it was worth from $1.50 to $1.9U per bushel. The jury returned a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $709.

Defendants insist that even though their possession of the land was wrongful that they were entitled to the possession of the crop, as the same was matured at the time Harriett McQuitty was put in possession of the land. There is no merit in this contention. Crops planted *395 by an intruder, so long as they remain on the land up-severed, are the property of the owner of the land. [Baker v. McInturff, 49 Mo. App. 505; Davis Bros. v. Callahan, 66 Mo. App. 168, 173.] Defendants are in no better position than an intruder would be. [Davis Bros. v. Callahan, supra.] The cases of Adams v. Leip, 71 Mo. 597, Edwards v. Eveler, 84 Mo. App. 405, and Johnson v. Cook, 96 Mo. App. 442, cited by the defendants, are not in point. In the first ease the crop was harvested and severed from the land; in the second case, the"title to the land, was acquired after the crops Avere planted; in the third case, it was held that the rights of a tenant Avho has sown his annua!crop are superior to the judgment or execution creditor who had an unforeclosed lion on the land at the time of the sowing. The court at page 447 of the Johnson case distinguishes that ease from one where the land is foreclosed under a deed of trust, pointing out that as between a tenant Avho is in possession of mortgaged property and the purchaser at a foreclosure sale, the latter is entitled to the crops. This was the rule prior to the enactment of section 2841, Revised Statutes 1909, which changed the rule. While the principle has been changed in reference to tenant of mortgaged property, no statute has been enacted in this State changing it as to tenants who plant crops under a landlord who has no title or as to the landlord himself.

It is contended that even though the defendant D. C. Steckdauh is not entitled to his part of the crop that his sons, who AArere his tenants, are entitled to their share, for the reason that in the interests of agriculture a tenant who leases land from the apparent OAvner of the land is in titled to the assurance the his crop will not be taken from him. It is well established that tenants are in no better position than a landlord in a situation of this kind. [McGinnis v. Fernandes, 135 Ill. 69; 8 R. C. L. p. 367 ;Oyster v. Oyster, 32 Mo. App. 270; Salmon v. Fewell, 17 Mo. App. 118.] The sons in this case apparently were mere croppers (Morrill v. Alexander, 215 S. W. *396 764), and their rights could not be any greater than those of a tenant.

It is claimed that because there was no affidavit, bond or seizure of the property by the sheriff before judgment, that no judgment in replevin could have been rendered. ■ Under section 2637, Revised Statute, 1909, suit for replevin in the circuit court may he brought by merely filing a petition without affidavit or bond and the case may proceed, to judgment without taking the property. [White v. Grace, 192 Mo. App. 610, 612.] The case of Heager v. Marcus, 5 Mo. App. 565, cited by defendants, originated in a justice court. It is insisted that a standing unharvested crop is not subject to replevin. There is 'nothing in this contention. Growing crops are subject to replevin without regard as to whether they are growing, or having matured, have ceased to derive any nutriment from the soil. [Garth v. Caldwell, 72 Mo. 622; Baker v. McInturff, supra; Salmon v. Fewell, supra.] The case of Jones v. Dodge, 61 Mo. 368, cited by defendants, is not in point. There, only one of the .oAvners of the 450 bushels of corn was sued. He oAvned but one-third of the corn and no division of the crop was practicable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 871, 202 Mo. App. 392, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-steckdaub-moctapp-1920.