Valley Springs Holding Corp. v. Carlson

227 N.W. 841, 56 S.D. 163, 1929 S.D. LEXIS 257
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1929
DocketFile No. 6695
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 227 N.W. 841 (Valley Springs Holding Corp. v. Carlson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valley Springs Holding Corp. v. Carlson, 227 N.W. 841, 56 S.D. 163, 1929 S.D. LEXIS 257 (S.D. 1929).

Opinion

FULLER, C.

This appeal involves a question as to the priority of liens upon or rights in certain crops. The defendants, C. T. Swanson and August Swanson, herein referred to as the Swan-sons, were the owners of a farm in Minnehaha county. In September, 1925, they entered into a contract with defendants Arvid C. Carlson and Arthur Carlson, herein referred to as the Carlsons, by which the parties agreed to become partners in the ¡business of farming and live stock production; it being declared in the agreement that the Swansons thereby placed the said farm to the uses of the partnership during the term of the contract. The partnership, according to the contract, was to continue until terminated at [166]*166the option of either party. The relation ¡between the partners for the following farming season of 1926 was also evidenced by a lease. The Carlsons, ¡being indebted at the time to the Minnehaha County Bank, executed to the bank a chattel mortgage covering their interest in the partnership property, including crops to be grown on the premises in 19126; but this grain was fed to the live stock and demand for the same was never made by the bank. The bank later suspended operations, and the plaintiff, Valley Springs Holding Corporation, succeeded to its ownership of the Carlson paper. O'n March 3, 1927, the Carlsons executed and delivered to the bank, and there was assigned to plaintiff, a chattel mortgage covering an undivided one-half interest in the property aforesaid and in all crops to be grown during the year 1927 on the above-mentioned farm of the ‘Swansons, which mortgage was at once filed for record. This mortgage secured indebtedness previously existing. On the following day the Swansons and Carlsons entered into a written contract for the termination and cancellation of their partnership agreement. Therein they agreed to a public sale of the partnership property and that one-half of the proceeds of the sale should be delivered to the plaintiff. On March 16, 1927, the sale was had and the Swansons bid $4,200 for the one-half interest of the Carlsons in the property, which sum was turned over to the plaintiff as a payment on account of the indebtedness of the Carl-sons to plaintiff. At this auction no interest of the Carlsons in the crops to be grown during the year 1927 was sold or offered for sale. There is a fair inference deducible from the evidence that no crops, at the time, had been planted, and that subsequent events were brought about to enable the Swansons to safely finance the Carlsons for seed- and other expenses.

Following the auction sale of the partnership property and the termination of the partnership by contract, the Swansons and1 the ■Carlsons’ on April 1, 1927, entered into a new partnership contract similar to the agreement made in 1925, first above mentioned. The contract also provided that the 'Swansons should'have a first and prior lien upon the share or interest of the Carlsons in the partnership property for all money loaned to the 'Carlsons by the Swan-sons or notes signed by the Carlsons in favor of the Swansons, and for all indebtedness due to the Swansons from the Carlsons. It is to be noted that, from- the terms of either the former or the later [167]*167partnership agreement, the grain produced on the' premises was a part of the partnership assets.

On April 2, 1927, the day following the making of the new partnership agreement, the Swansons executed a lease of their farm ■to the Carlsons, which lease,' according to the record, provided, in substance, that the Swansons should have a lien upon, and that they would reserve the title to, all crops produced on said premises in the farming season of 1927, for any and all advances ¡by them made to the Carlsons, and for debts due them from the Carlsons until a division of the grain was had, and that after division the Swansons should retain the share of the Carlsons in the crops as payment for all debts or advances owing to the Swansons from the Carlsons. .

It also appears that on March 17, 1927, on the day following the auction sale, the Carlsons gave to the Swansons a chattel mortgage on their interest in the 1927 crops to secure the sum of $4,200, which amount the Swansons had bid at the sale for the interest of the ¡Carlsons in the partnership property, and which interest, by the new agreement, was turned back into the new partnership by the Swansons as the contribution of the Carlsons. In short, the rights of plaintiff with respect to the interest of the Carlsons in the 1927 crops is evidenced by a chattel mortgage dated March 3, 1927, which was at once filed for record; while the interest of the Swansons therein rests upon a chattel mortgage dated March 17, 1927, a partnership contract dated April 1, 1927, and a lease dated .April 2, 1927.

In October, 1927, the plaintiff commenced this action for the foreclosure of its mortgage' ttpon the one-half interest of the Carlsons in the grain produced in that year and upon a few-articles of machinery hereinafter mentioned. The trial below resulted in judgment of foreclosure. The portion of the judgment by which appellants are most aggrieved provided for a sale of the one-half interest of the Carlsons in the crops or grain, and provided also for an injunction against the use or consumption of the grain by the defendants pending the sale. By appropriate answer to plaintiff’s complaint, the defendants Swanson had alleged their superior rights in the interest of the Carlsons in these crops, by reason of the contract and lease above described; and the decree below adjudicated the rights of plaintiff to be “subject to the provisions and [168]*168conditions of the lease or leases between Swanson -brothers and Carlson brothers.” From the findings and opinion of the trial judge, however, it appears to have been considered that such superior rights as the Swansons may have had were limited to- a lien .for money advanced according 'to the terms of the lease — an amount which is undetermined but obviously small. From the judgment as above described, and from an order overruling a motion for new trial, the defendants appeal. Sufficient for disposition of this appeal is a consideration of the partnership contract of April i, 1927. Plaintiff had a mortgage upon the one-half interest of the Carlsons in the crops to be grown on the premises during that year; but the right of their mortgagors, the Carlsons, to plant or produce crops upon the land could exist only by the consent, authority, or contract of the Swansons, who were the owners of the land. As, on March 3, 1927, the date of plaintiff's mortgage, no lease existed for the year 1927, the rights of the Carlsons depended upon the partnership contract then existing whereby the Swansons had contributed the use of the land to the objects of the partnership. That contract, however, was terminated on March 4, 1927, in strict accordance with the rights of the partners, as expressed in the contract. Although plaintiff’s mortgage purported to create a lien on the Carlsons’ interest in this portion of the firm assets, it is not apparent that there was, at the date of their mortgage, any 1927 crop in existence. W'e are unable to find in this record any evidence to support the assumption that between March 4, 1927, and April 1, 1927, the Carlsons had any right whatever to occupy, farm, or raise crops upon this land during the farming season of 1927. • On the last-named date the new partnership contract was made by which the farm was again contributed to the use of a firm created to conduct the business of farming and live stock raising.

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Bluebook (online)
227 N.W. 841, 56 S.D. 163, 1929 S.D. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valley-springs-holding-corp-v-carlson-sd-1929.