Turner v. Johnson

50 S.W. 675, 106 Ky. 460, 1899 Ky. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 26, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 675 (Turner v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Johnson, 50 S.W. 675, 106 Ky. 460, 1899 Ky. LEXIS 53 (Ky. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

JUDGE HOBSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a second appeal of this case. The opinion, on the former appeal will be found in 18 Ky. Law Rep., 202; [31 S. W., 1028], and as the facts of the ease are fully stated there, they need not be repeated here. On the return of the case it was transferred to equity, and, the court having allowed appellants less than they were willing to accept, they have again brought the case to this court, appellee taking a cross appeal.

At the threshold we are met with a motion to disregard substantially all the proof in the case, on the ground that it is not properly before the court. This objection arises in this way: When the case was last here, this court struck out the bill of exceptions because it had not been filed in time, and this part of the transcript was then withdrawn from this court by appellants, and on the trial below, by consent of parties, and for convenience, this bill of exceptions was read; and the clerk, in making out the transcript, has only copied the record made since the last appeal, but he certifies that this record, with what was copied on the former appeal, constitutes a complete transcript of all the proceedings in the case. The judgment appealed from shows what was read on the trial, and the old record being now filed with the new, and both duly certified by the clerk, we see no substantial objection to •the record as it is presented; and the conclusion heretofore reached, overruling the motion to strike out the bill of exceptions, is now adhered to.

The court below properly held that the effect of the bond [465]*465sued on must be determined by the law of Kentucky. There is no allegation that the laws of Missouri gave the bond a different effect from the laws of Kentucky. The law of another State must be pleaded, and, unless it is alleged to be different from our law, the legal effect of an obligation must be determined by the laws of Kentucky.

Tested by our law, <the bond sued on obligates the appellee to pay appellants the reasonable and fair rent of the property during the time he was kept out of the possession of it by reason of the bond, and any damages he sustained from waste or injury to his property during this time. The evidence of the public renting of the property and the amount appellee received for the rent is competent to be considered in determining what was a fair rent, but it is not conclusive. In determining this question, we have had great difficulty. The proof shows: There were 2,735 acres in the tract. That it was a very valuable piece of land— worth $20 or $25 per acre. Sis hundred and forty acres of it were in timber, 374 acres were old plow lands, and the rest of it was in grass lands or new plow lands. In 1885, 266 acres were new plow lands, and 1,455 acres were in grass. In 1886, 1887, and 1888, 586 acres were new plow lands, and 1,135 acres in grass.

There is some conflict in the proof on these points, but we think the weight of the evidence establishes the figures given. The contrary proof is mere estimate, and does not appear to be based on positive knowledge. As to the reasonable rent of the different character of lands for the four years in contest, the proof is also very conflicting, and wholly irreconcilable. Seventeen witnesses for appellants put the fair rent of the new plow lands at $3 an acre for each year; three of their witnesses put it at $3.50 or $4, and two at $2.50 — none putting it at less than this. On [466]*466the other hand, a number of the witnesses for appellee put it at about $2 a year — some a little lower, and others a little higher. Several of them put it at $2.25, and appellee himself, when on the witness stand, stated that most of it was worth $2.25 an acre.

As to -the grass land the proof was equally irreconcilable. Thirteen witnesses for appellant place its fair rent at $2 an acre and over, and five at $1.50. Two witnesses for appellee put-it at $1.50, two at $1.25, one at $1, and several at less than this. Appellee not being allowed to testify on the subject, as he had not seen the grass, it was avowed that he would-state it was not worth exceeding $1,25 an acre.

The same conflict of evidence occurs as to the old plow land; the proof for appellants putting it at considerably over $1 an acre, and the proof for' appellee at $1 or less. Appellee averred that he would state that it was not worth exceeding 75 cents to $1 an acre.

The land is shown to have been good bluegrass land, equal to the bluegrass land of this State, and producing from forty to fifty bushels of corn to the acre wfhen in good condition and properly worked. But there were only three houses on the entire tract of 2,700 acres, and it was difficult to rent out the land in large bodies at such prices as might have been obtained if there had been more houses, and it could have been subdivided into smaller tracts. We concur in the conclusion of the judge below that appellants should not be limited to the amount appellee received for the land. He rented it at public outcry, and in large bodies, at less than -the clear preponderance of the evidence shows was a fair rent. By the judgment of the [467]*467court it had been determined that appellant Turner was entitled to redeem -the land, and to have possession, upon payment to the appellee of the amount due him, which was about $18,000, of which $13,236 was bearing interest at 8 2-3 per cent, and $3,181 at 10 per cent. Turner was kept out of possession for four years by reason of the bond sued on, and at the end of that time had to pay appellee the amount due him, with interest at these rates for the time, besides the cost of áction. Under such circumstances, we think appellee should be held responsible to Turner for such rent as he might have realized from the place by diligence, and for any damages done to the property by appellee’s improper management of it.

The proof for appellants shows that the timbered land was set more or less in grass, and they claim that it was worth for pasturage at least $1 an acre. On the other hand, the proof for appellee shows that the grass was only in patches, that the bushes on much of the land were very thick, and that, in the condition and situation of the land, it could not reasonably be rented so as to bring in anything.

The discrepancy in the testimony of the witnesses as to ■the fair value of the rent may perhaps be accounted for, in a large measure, from the fact that some had in mind its intrinsic value, and others what it would have been practicable to realize from it, considering the situation of the land, the amount to be rented, and -the difficulty of renting it in small bodies without more tenant houses. Under all the circumstances, we have concluded that little ought to be allowed for the rent of the ¡timbered grass land, on account of the difficulty of making it available. The proof shows that m the subrenting a great deal of the new [468]*468plow lands was put at $2 an acre, and that there was difficulty in renting for its full value such a large body of land as this — especially the grass land — with no more fences or houses than this had on it. Considering all the facts, we have reached the conclusion that, taking it one year with 'another, $2 an acre for the new plow land, and fl an acre for the old plow land and the open grass land, considered as a whole, will be a fair rent. Figuring out the rent on this basis, we have made it about the same as the circuit judge, and 'so adopt his figures for the rent of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 675, 106 Ky. 460, 1899 Ky. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-johnson-kyctapp-1899.