Voss v. Wall

562 S.W.2d 147, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 1965
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1978
DocketNo. 38099
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 562 S.W.2d 147 (Voss v. Wall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Voss v. Wall, 562 S.W.2d 147, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 1965 (Mo. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

ALDEN A. STOCKARD, Special Judge.

In this case, tried before the court without a jury, the defendants have appealed from the judgment in favor of plaintiffs on their petition and against defendants on their counterclaim. We affirm.

Plaintiffs leased 891 acres of farmland from defendants for the year 1972. By the terms of the agreement, plaintiffs were to pay to defendants as rent “one-third of the proceeds received from all crops grown on said farm during period of said lease,” and defendants were to “pay one-third of the costs of all fertilizers and chemicals used in the production of the crops * * *.” In their petition plaintiffs alleged that defendants owed them $2,561.78 as their share of the expenses incurred during 1973 which they refused to pay.

Defendants filed a general denial to plaintiffs’ petition. They also filed a counterclaim in four counts. In Count I defendants alleged that “in the year of 1972” defendants “leased to plaintiffs” certain land, and that “by the terms of said farm lease” plaintiffs “were to deliver to defendants one-third of the crops harvested from the [farm] to the Advance MFA Grain Elevator or any other place designated by the defendants, with any hauling expense beyond Advance to be at the defendants’ expense,” and that they made arrangements to have their one-third share of the soybeans stored in storage bins and so notified plaintiffs, but that plaintiffs refused to take defendants’ share of soybeans to those storage bins. They also alleged that plaintiffs hauled some of the beans from the leased premises without having them weighed at Advance and refused to account for them. Defendants prayed for an accounting, and that they recover the loss sustained by them because all the beans were not weighed at Advance and because plaintiffs’ share was not stored.

By Count II defendants sought damages in the amount of $10,000 because during the year 1972 plaintiffs permitted noxious weeds to grow and did not operate the farm in an efficient and husband-like manner.

By Count III defendants sought “double the yearly rental value” from plaintiffs on the theory that they had given timely notice to terminate the lease at the end of 1972, and plaintiffs held over during 1973.

By Count IV defendants alleged that while wrongfully holding over, plaintiffs planted, cultivated, and harvested 80 acres of soybeans and 620 acres of milo, and that the soybeans were sold to the MFA Exchange at Advance, and defendants have not received payment for the soybeans or any part thereof. Defendants also alleged [149]*149that more soybeans and milo were harvested than plaintiff had reported, and they sought an accounting to determine the amount of soybeans and milo harvested and sold, and the price received.

Attached to a pleading of each party was an unsigned copy of what each claimed to have been the terms of the lease for 1972. The copies are identical except the one attached to plaintiffs’ pleading provided for automatic renewal of the lease from year to year unless either party gave written notice to the other that it be terminated “on or before the 1st day of October * * *” while the date in the copy attached to defendants’ pleading was “the 30th day of October.”

On October 25, 1972, defendants mailed to plaintiffs a written notice, which was received by plaintiffs, that the “lease shall be terminated * * * and will not be renewed for a subsequent year, 1973, or year thereafter.” Additional facts will be set forth in the discussion of the issues.

The trial court entered findings of fact that (1) the parties entered into a written farm lease for the year 1972, and that the lease was the one attached to plaintiffs’ pleading which provided that the lease should run from year to year unless written notice of termination was given before October 1; (2) defendants’ notice of termination was given on October 25, 1972, which was not timely to terminate the lease for 1973, but operated only to prevent the lease from being effective for the year 1974 and thereafter; (3) defendants are indebted to plaintiffs in the amount of $2,561.78 for their share, according to the terms of the lease, for the cost of the fertilizers and chemicals used in 1973 for the production of the crops on the land; (4) the parties settled between themselves for all income and expenses for the year 1972, and neither party is entitled to recover from the other for that year; (5) plaintiffs farmed the property according to the lease agreement and did not allow noxious weeds to grow and defendants suffered no damage in that respect; (There is no point on this appeal pertaining to this finding or to Count II of the counterclaim. No further mention of either is necessary); (6) plaintiffs sold all the milo grown on the farm in 1973 to Monarch Feed Mill at Dexter and the proceeds were properly divided between the parties; and (7) the parties have deposited with the clerk of the court a check from MFA Exchange in the amount of $1,930.72 which represents the proceeds from the sale of all soybeans grown by plaintiffs in 1973 on defendants’ land, and defendants’ share-is $643.58. The court then off-set the $643.58 against the $2,561.78 and entered a net judgment against defendants under plaintiffs’ petition for $1,918.20.

The first two points of appellants turn on the issues of whether there was a valid written lease for the year 1972 which provided for an earlier notice of termination than October 25, 1972, and if so, whether the notice of termination that was given was timely.

Appellants’ first point is directed to the judgment on plaintiffs’ petition, and they assert the trial court erred in that plaintiffs “were not in lawful possession of [defendants’] land during the year 1973” because defendant had given “timely written notice terminating the [plaintiffs’] tenancy and there was no agreement between the parties for [plaintiffs] to lease [defendants’] land for the year 1973.”

The argument under this point ignores the express finding of the trial court that the “parties entered into a written farm lease” for the year 1972 which would automatically be renewed unless a written notice of termination was given before October 1. Nothing is advanced as to why that finding should not be controlling of this point. They only urge that after having received written notice “more than 60 days before the end of the year to surrender possession * * * prior to January 1, 1973 * * * the [plaintiffs] chose to hold over and wrongfully and unlawfully occupy and cultivate [defendants’] farms during the year 1973.” They then assert that “having established there was no agreement between the parties for [plaintiffs] to remain * * * it necessarily follows that [150]*150there could be no agreement in which [defendants] were to pay any portion or had any legal obligation to pay any portion of the expenses * * They cite only Millhouse v. Drainage District No. 48 of Dunklin County, 304 S.W.2d 54 (Mo.App.1957), but that ease holds only that a tenant who holds over does not have an interest for which compensation must be paid when the property is taken or damaged for public use. The whole argument begs the question of whether plaintiffs were holding over, or whether the lease for 1972 was automatically renewed for 1973 because timely notice of termination was not given. The burden to establish that the trial court’s finding was erroneous was on the defendants and they have failed to do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
562 S.W.2d 147, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 1965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voss-v-wall-moctapp-1978.