Thomas v. Williams

39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 257
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 257 (Thomas v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Williams, 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 257 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1884).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.: '

Replevin tor a quantity of wheat, barley and oats raised by defendant on plaintiff’s farm, on sharec.

In February, 1880, the plaintiff leased aer farm to the defendant for the term of three yearn, to be worked on shares. At the time of the lease there was a crop of wheat growing on twenty-seven acres of the farm, and the lease provided that the said crop was to be harvested by the defendant and “ the same equally divided.” The lease also provided that “ all crops and all other products of said farm during said term shall be equally divided on the farm.” The defendant and her husband lived on the farm,- and the plaintiff occupied a part of the house which she reserved in the lease. The first season the defendant raised barley and oats on the farm, and those crops together with the wheat were harvested, put into the barn on the premises and threshed. The'defendant had the control and management of the barn, and was in possession of the grain after it was threshed. The plaintiff, however, had access to the barn, and went into the barn daily while the grain was there. The gravamen of the action is the alleged conversion by the defendant of the plaintiff’s undivided half of the grain referred to. The testimony relied on by the plaintiff to prove a conversion is substantially as follows: The plaintiff testified that shortly after the grain was threshed she asked the defendant to have it cleaned and one-half given to her according to the terms of the lease, and the defendant refused to do it; that the grain lay in the barn till it was replevied in this suit. Orrin S. Bacon, the sheriff who served the replevin papers, testified that at the request' of the plaintiff, or her attorney, he asked the defendant to divide the grain and she said she wanted to see her husband first. The husband came in and the witness requested him to have the grain divided without any trouble. They said they would not do it. On his cross-examination the witness testified that Williams said he would not do it until they came to Canandaigua, and he spoke about aninjiAiction that had been served on them. Benjamin F. Mitchell testified that at the plaintiff’s request he called on the defendants and asked them to divide the [259]*259grain, and Mr. Williams said it could not be' divided “ until this matter was settled.” The injunction referred to was put in evidence by the defendant, and it appeared to have been obtained by the plaintiff in a prior action, the complaint in which sets out, among other things, the provisions of the lease and alleged that the defendant had violated the same in several particulars specified, and among others had refused to execute a chattel mortgage upon her share of the said crops to secure the payment of her indebtedness to the plaintiff as required by said lease, and had mortgaged the same to one Coyle; and the injunction, in terms, restrained the defendant and her husband from selling, disposing of, or otherwise interfering with said crops. The defendant and her husband testified to the effect that their refusal was in consequence of the injunction.

When the plaintiff rested the defendant’s counsel requested the court to nonsuit the plaintiff or to direct a verdict for the defendant, on the ground that it appeared that the parties were tenants in common in the grain, and no undue interference by the defendant with the plaintiff’s share was shown. The motion was denied and the defendant’s counsel excepted.

The court charged the jury that if the defendant was asked to divide and deliver half the grain and refused, that was a conversion, to which the defendant’s counsel excepted.

So far as the injunction is concerned, the defendant has no reason to complain that she had not the full-benefit of the evidence ou that point. The testimony on her part tended to show that she declined to clean and deliver the wheat because she feared she would make herself liable for disobeying the injunction if she did so, and the jury were instructed that if that was true there was no conversion. As the jury found against the defendant, this branch of the case is of no consequence now, except in view of another trial. The only purpose of the injunction, as shown by the complaint in the injunction suit, was to restrain the defendant from disposing of her share of the crops and grain to the prejudice of the plaintiff’s alleged equitable lien thereon. It was not intended to prevent the defendant from delivering to the plaintiff her share. Even if the defendant was induced by the language of the injunction and the advice given to her by counsel to suppose that she was forbidden to separate and deliver to the plaintiff her share on demand, the fact that if she had [260]*260done so she would have acted at the request and with the consent of the plaintiff, would have relieved her from the charge of having thereby violated the injunction. Still the testimony of the defendant and her husband that their refusal was dictated by fear of the injunction .pi’obably required a submission of - that question to the jury, but the fact that the jury did not find in-accordance with it shows that they gave careful and cautious consideration to- the testimony on that point.

But in some other respects we think there was error. The parties were owners in common of the grain. It has been held in this State that owners in common of grain or other personal property, in its nature separable in respect to quantity and quality by weight or measure (as the grain in question here was s-liown'to be), may sever their portions of the common bulk at will; and where one of them, having the entire property in his possession, appropriates the whole to his own use, and refuses on reasonable demand to let the other have his portion of it, he is liable for a conversion. (Lobdell v. Stowell, 37 How. Pr., 88; Channon v. Lusk, 2 Lans., 211.) But we fail to see that the evidence' brings the present case within this rule. The most that is proved is that the defendant refused to clean and divide the grain when requested to do so. Was she under any obligation to perform the labor of cleaning and dividing the grain ? Certainly the lease does not in terms impose it. The lease expressly ■ provides that the harvesting was to be done by the defendant;- that each party was to pay one-half of thresher’s bills, and that the defendant was to draw the plaintiff’s share to market for her at such times as she should reasonably require, but the lease is silent as to 'which party should clean or divide the grain. In this view of the case either party had the right to separate his share from the bulk and take it away at any time. It does not appear that the plaintiff proposed to exercise that right, or that the defendant denied that she had the right or did anything to interfere with its exercise. The evidence is, that although the defendant was in possession of the barn, the plaintiff had daily access to it, and it does not appear that the grain was locked up, or but that the plaintiff could have separated and taken away her share if she had chosen to do so. But instead of proposing to do that, she required that the defendant should do it for her. [261]*261We do not think the defendant’s refusal to comply with that ■demand was equivalent to a conversion.

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Related

Osborn v. . Schenck
83 N.Y. 201 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
Lobdell v. . Stowell
51 N.Y. 70 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Stall v. . Wilbur
77 N.Y. 158 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)
Channon v. Lusk
2 Lans. 211 (New York Supreme Court, 1870)
Lobdell v. Stowell
37 How. Pr. 88 (Chenango County Court, 1865)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-williams-nysupct-1884.