Thrasher v. Gillespie

52 Miss. 840
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 Miss. 840 (Thrasher v. Gillespie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thrasher v. Gillespie, 52 Miss. 840 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Takbell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court;

Thrasher leased his plantation to Barnes, for the year 1870,, the term ending with the year. Barnes leased or assigned a portion of the land in cultivation to Gillespie, at the rate-of $5 per acre for so many acres as he should cultivate. It became a question, on the trial in the court below, whether Gillespie was a mere sub-lessee, or tenant, under Barnes, or whether he had not become, by their arrangement, a tenant to Thrasher, and, to the extent of the land occupied by him, standing in the place of Barnes — bound to that extent to keep and observe all the covenants which the latter had entered into with Thrasher. Gillespie knew of the relation of Barnes and Thrasher as lessee and lessor. There was a proceeding in chancery,- wherein a receiver was appointed to receive the rents of the above plantation from Barnes and other tenants, including Gillespie. This receiver, upon affidavit, procured an attachment to be issued, whereby ten bales of cotton, raised by Gillespie, were seized for rent due. It was claimed that Gillespie cultivated ninety acres, and that the amount due was $450. Gillespie replevied the cotton seized, and both the receiver and Thrasher appeared to defend. Thrasher pleaded specially, sotting out somewhat fully his lease or contract with Barnes, the proceedings in chancery, and the attachment of the cotton for the rent due from Gillespie. To this plea the latter replied no rent due, and concluded to the country. On [843]*843tbe trial Gillespie was twice permitted to amend Ms pleadings. First, to enable liim to show damages by the failure of Barnes, to perform his part of the contract, and afterwards to amend his declaration so as to claim fifteen, instead of ten, bales of' cotton, and $1,500 damages, instead of $1,000, The terms of the agreement between Barnes and Gillespie rested in parol. Gillespie contended that his term continued until he could' gather and gin his crop. To show that the. term of Barnes teiv-minated absolutely with the year 1870, the defendants in the action offered in evidence the written contract, or lease, executed between Thrasher and Barnes. This was objected to by the plaintiff in'the suit, and rejected by the court. The trial developed a good deal of feeling on both sides, and the facts were somewhat hotly contested. Upon the question of damages by stock,.and otherwise, claimed by Gillespie, and the terms of the agreement between him and Barnes, the evidence is thoroughly conflicting- and contradictory. A series of nine-instructions were asked by the defendants, all of which were-refused to be given, as a whole, and hone even given for them, either as requested or otherwise, though the series contain several correct and material propositions. Hence the jury were wholly without instructions for the defendants, in a case-involving many complicated questions of law and fact.

On behalf of the plaintiff in replevin instructions were given, numbered 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 9. The 1st directs a verdict for plaintiff in replevin, if the jury believe the rent was not due at the date of the issuance of the attachment. By this charge the term fixed in the lease from Thrasher to Barnes is ignored, and the verdict made to depend solely upon the term agreed between Barnes and Gillespie. The 4th charge is in substance the same as the 1st. By the 5th the jury were told that, unless there was a certain and fixed amount of rent due, they would find for the plaintiff. This is not the law, yet it might, and doubtless did, control the result. The jury should have been instructed that the rent should be fixed and-certain, or capable of being made so by calculation. In this-[844]*844■case Gillespie agreed to pay $5 per acre for so many acres as be should cultivate. The number of acres he cultivated could have been readily ascertained by measurement or estimation, • and then the calculation was of the simplest known in any business. This instruction is wrong, both in law and upon the ■facts. The 6th charge directs a verdict for plaintiff unless the rent was due at a time certain and fixed by the contract. Upon the facts this was also erroneous, and must have been misunderstood by the jury. If Gillespie has a reasonable time to gather and gin his crop, the term would thus be suffi■ciently fixed and certain. The 7th instruction directs a verdict for plaintiff if the jury believe he was prevented from obtaining, by the act of Barnes, the whole of the premises leased by him. This has reference to the occupation of the dwelling-house, and not to the land for cultivation. The evidence ¡shows that Gillespie secured all the land he could cultivate; in fact, that he raised more cotton than he could pick, and left some in the field ungathered. As to the dwelling-house, 'there was evidence that he consented to the occupation of a part of it by a tenant of Barnes, for a consideration. The charge is unconditional and mandatory. It should have presented to the jury the evidence of his acquiescence and compensation, and left the question open‘for their determination. The 9th charge presents in an unobjectionable form, as far as cun be seen, a question of fact as to certain damages ; but, with •or without this, by the refusal of all instructions for the ■defendant, and by the others for the plaintiff, all discretion was substantially withdrawn from the jury.

As a whole, the instructions given and refused left no discretion and no alternative to the jury. All that could leave the scales evenly balanced was withdrawn, and a verdict for the plaintiff was inevitable, right or wrong. Whether upon the whole case the result is just, no opinion can, with propriety, be expressed. The testimony is too contradictory for an appellate court to attempt to assume the province of a jury, especially as it is necessary to determine damages by the tres[845]*845passes of stock, and judge of the veracity and credibility of' witnesses. The examination which counsel on both sides have bestowed upon the important legal propositions involved will doubtless enable them so far to harmonize, on another trial, as to reach a just and satisfactory conclusion.

Judgment reversed, cause remanded, and a new trial awarded.

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Related

N. O. & N. E. R. v. Jones
1 Miss. Dec. 206 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
52 Miss. 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thrasher-v-gillespie-miss-1876.