Summerville v. Stockton Milling Co.

76 P. 243, 142 Cal. 529, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 974
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1904
DocketSac. No. 1021.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 76 P. 243 (Summerville v. Stockton Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summerville v. Stockton Milling Co., 76 P. 243, 142 Cal. 529, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 974 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The complaint states a cause of action to recover possession of some 2,509 centals of wheat, in the warehouse of the Stockton Milling Company, or the value thereof in case delivery cannot be had. The defendants other than Hersom, trustee, answered, admitting that the wheat was in the warehouse of the Stockton Milling Company, and denying the other allegations of the complaint. The defendant Hersom answered separately, denying that plaintiff was the owner of, or entitled to the possession of, the wheat; admitting that he took possession of the wheat, but denying that he did so wrongfully. His admission was found by the court to be untrue. He also filed a cross-complaint against the Stockton Milling Company, alleging that it was wrongfully in possession of the wheat, that the cross-complainant was entitled to possr~3Íon, and asking judgment for the recovery thereof, or for the value, if delivery could not be had. The plaintiff answered this cross-complaint against the Stockton Milling Company, denying the right of Hersom to the possession of the Wheat, and setting up certain affirmative matters in further defense. The Stockton Milling Company and the other defendants filed a joint answer to the cross-complaint of Hersom, setting up affirmatively that the wheat in controversy was rightfully in possession of H. H. Hewlett under a certain chattel mortgage executed by Stuart, and that Hewlett was the owner of the property. The cause was tried by the court and judgment given in favor of the defendant Hewlett, declaring that he was the owner absolutely of one fourth of the wheat in question, and that he was entitled to the possession of the remaining three fourths by virtue of the chattel *535 mortgage, for the purpose of securing the debt therein set forth, and further adjudging costs in favor of Hewlett and the other defendants against the defendant Hersom and the plaintiff. Four separate appeals are here presented: First, an appeal by the plaintiff from the judgment; second, an appeal by Hersom from the judgment; third, an appeal by the plaintiff from an order denying his motion for a new trial; and the fourth, an appeal by Hersom from an order denying his motion for a new trial. Numerous points are presented upon these appeals, and in order to a proper understanding of the case it will be necessary to give a preliminary statement of the facts involved.

The wheat in controversy was raised upon a tract of land containing 1,160 acres situated in Stanislaus County. This land was leased by the defendant Hewlett to J. D. Stuart on November 20, 1897, for the term of two years, ending October 1, 1899. The term was afterwards extended for an additional year ending October 1, 1900, and it was during this extension that the wheat in controversy was sown and harvested. The lease provided that Stuart should sow the premises to wheat, and in proper time, at his own expense, harvest, thresh, clean, and sack the same, and when sacked that he should divide and set apart one fourth of the grain as the yearly rental, and deliver the same to Hewlett, that until such delivery the whole crop should be the property of Hewlett, and that upon such delivery, and not before, the remaining three fourths of the crop should become the property of the lessee, Stuart. It further provided that the lessee should in proper season summer-fallow such proportion of the land as in the proper farming thereof should be summer-fallowed, and that if he failed so to do Hewlett should have the right to enter upon the land and do such summer-fallowing thereon as should be proper and necessary, in which event there should be turned over to him such portion of the crop, in addition to the one fourth, as should be necessary to reimburse him for the expenses of such summer-fallowing. Upon" August 22, 1899, Stuart executed to Hewlett a note for $757.62, payable one day after date. As security for this note Stuart pledged to Hewlett certain personal property; and it was agreed that the lease should be extended for the succeeding year, and that when the crop of grain was sown thereon Stuart should execute to *536 Hewlett a chattel mortgage on the crop to secure the note then executed and such further advances as should be made by Hewlett to Stuart. On November 13th Hewlett advanced Stuart the further sum of $210, for which Stuart executed his note, payable- one day after date. On November 15th, in pursuance of the former understanding, Stuart executed to Hewlett a chattel mortgage on the crop to be thereafter raised and grown upon the lands leased, to secure the payment of the two notes. The mortgage provided that Stuart should care for the crop until it was fit for harvest, and then harvest, thresh, clean, and sack the same, and deliver the wheat to Hewlett as security for the payment of the note, and that if he failed in any respect to do so Hewlett should have the right to enter upon the premises, protect the crops, retain possession thereof, and harvest, thresh, and sack the same; that he should also have the right to haul and store the same, and sell and' dispose of it at any time, and for such sums as he should deem proper for the best advantage of all concerned, and out of the proceeds to pay the costs and charges and all of the expenses incurred by Hewlett in the care, protection, harvesting, hauling, storing, and selling, and the residue to apply upon the debts secured by mortgage. The court found that the mortgage was made in good faith, and without design to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, or to give a preference to the said Hewlett. During the months of November and December the wheat was sown upon the land by Stuart, the lessee, from which the wheat in controversy was produced, Hewlett advancing the seed, feed, and money necessary for that purpose.

On November 1, 1897, one James Watson obtained a judgment in the superior court of Stanislaus County against J. D. Stuart for the sum of $680 and costs, which judgment was afterwards assigned to Summerville, the plaintiff in this action. On November 1, 1899, the plaintiff caused an execution to be issued upon the judgment, and on January 17, 1900, under said execution the sheriff of said county sold to the plaintiff the leasehold interest of said Stuart in the land described, and on the same day, in pursuance of said sale, executed to the plaintiff a "deed conveying to him the said property. The execution was not formally levied upon the land, nor upon the growing crop. The claim of the plaintiff *537 in this respect is, that the leasehold interest was real estate, and carried the crop with it, and that, as the judgment was a lien upon the real property of the defendant, no formal levy was necessary. Notice of the sale was given for three weeks previous thereto, as required by law in case of sales of real estate.

On January 25, 1900, Stuart filed his petition and schedules therein, and was duly adjudged a bankrupt by the United States district court in and for the northern district of California. At that time the wheat in question was a growing and standing crop on the land on which it was sown. Thereafter, on February 14,1900, the defendant Hersom was elected a trustee of the bankrupt estate, and ever since has been such trustee. The crop mortgage executed by Stuart to Hewlett was recorded in the recorder’s office in Stanislaus County on November 15, 1899, on the day of its execution. The lease was also recorded in the same office in Stanislaus County on the following day. At the time the mortgage was made Stuart resided in Stanislaus County.

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Bluebook (online)
76 P. 243, 142 Cal. 529, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summerville-v-stockton-milling-co-cal-1904.