Warner v. Sohn

125 N.W. 1072, 86 Neb. 519, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 111
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1910
DocketNo. 15,851
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 N.W. 1072 (Warner v. Sohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warner v. Sohn, 125 N.W. 1072, 86 Neb. 519, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 111 (Neb. 1910).

Opinions

Rose, J.

Plaintiff replevied from defendants three stacks of rye. The answer to his petition consisted of a' general denial and a prayer for judgment for a return of the property, or for its value, if a return could not be had, and for damages for wrongful detention. At the trial below witnesses testified on both sides of the case. In obedience to a peremptory instruction at the close of the testimony, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of defendants. The value of the property was fixed at $45, and defendants’ damage by [520]*520reason of the detention at $17.85. From a judgment on the verdict plaintiff appeals.

At a former session an order of affirmance was entered, without deciding the main questions presented by the appeal. Warner v. Sohn, 85 Neb. 571. This regrettable action resulted from the writer’s failure to observe an exception to the peremptory instruction of the trial court. When attention was directed to the oversight by a motion for a rehearing, the affirmance was promptly vacated and the appeal resubmitted on its merits. Plaintiff’s statement of his case, with references to the record omitted, is as follows: “In the spring of 1901 Warner rented a tract of land near the village of Arapahoe, of the owner, William Hall, through his agent. The agreement between the plaintiff and the agent was that the former should give as rent for the use of the land one-third of the crop raised that season. In the,fall of the same year the plaintiff again went to this agent to rent the land for another season, at which time the same agreement was again entered into, the defendants verbally agreeing to pay as rent one-third of the crop. .Pursuant to this agreement the plaintiff seeded the tract to rye in the fall of 1901, and continued in exclusive, unobstructed and peaceable possession of the same until the latter part of June, 1902. On the 31st day of March, 1902, the defendants herein purchased this tract of land from the owner and moved into the buildings thereon. After the defendants moved upon the land the plaintiff testified that he made an oral agreement with the defendants for the division of the rye, after which agreement the defendants fenced off one-third of the rye and pastured the same. The plaintiff, when the two-thirds of rye not fenced became ripe, during the latter part of June, 1902, employed one Carter to harvest the same for him. This Carter did; but, when Warner entered the land to remove the rye, the defendants repudiated their former agreement and refused to permit the plaintiff to remove the grain already severed from the land, but forcibly seized the severed grain and retained [521]*521possession thereof after the plaintiff had demanded possession of the same. This action in replevin was brought to recover possession of that which the plaintiff contends he lost through this unlawful action of the defendants. On the trial in the district court the judge sustained a motion by the defendants’ attorney to direct a verdict for the defendants,, wholly disregarding all the testimony in the case. The plaintiff contends that, when the defendants moved on the land, the plaintiff Avent to the defendants and informed them that, he had the ground rented of the prior owner for one-third of the crop of rye, and that the parties herein then entered into an agreement for the division of crop, ratifying the agreement with the former owner, and thereupon the defendants Solm fenced off one-third the tract of rye as their agreed rent share, and used the same for pasture. The question for consideration is the correctness of the court’s ruling, under these circumstances, in usurping the functions of the jury.”

The questions presented are stated by plaintiff in his-brief as follows: “There were but tAvo questions involved in this case. These questions are not difficult to conjecture. The first is: Did the plaintiff have any right to enter upon the land in question? And, second: Were the stacks of rye in question the sole property of the plaintiff so that he could maintain replevin therefor? In other words, did the plaintiff make a prima, facie case by his own evidence of his right to the land and a division of the rent ?”

It thus appears by plaintiff’s own statement of his case that the first question presented is: “Did the plaintiff have any right to enter upon the land?” In answering this inquiry, it is important to observe that plaintiff says William Hall was owner of the land, and that through his agent plaintiff had rented it in the spring of 1901, agreeing to give the owner one-third of the crop for that season. That season necessarily ended in the fall of 1901, because plaintiff further says: “In the fall of the same year the plaintiff again went to this agent to rent the land for another [522]*522seasonThe latter season included the period from the time of sowing the rye in the fall of 1901 until the" crop was harvested in 1902. Plaintiff was not a tenant from year to year, therefore, but was a cropper for a single season. He took this position in the trial court, and assumed the burden of proving that he procured from Hall in the fall of 1901 authority to take possession of the rye-field for the purpose of cropping it during the ensuing season. Plaintiff did not live on the land in 1901, or at any subsequent time, and his right to enter thereon, so far as this suit is concerned, must be found in authority obtained in the fall of that year. There is no pretense that he procured from Hall directly either a written lease or an oral agreement. Consequently it was incumbent on plaintiff, in making a prima facie case, to prove that an agent having authority from Hall gave him permission in the fall of 1901 to crop the rye-field. Without such proof his case would, be controlled by the doctrine that crops planted by an intruder, so long as they remain unsevered, are regarded as the property of the owner of the land. Baker v. McInturff, 49 Mo. App. 505; Freeman v. McLennan, 26 Kan. 151. Plaintiff undertook to supply the necessary proof by showing that W. S. Morían, as agent for Hall, authorized I. H. Dempsey to look after the land, and that the latter permitted plaintiff to crop it. Plaintiff testified that he first sowed the land in 1901, raising a crop of millet in the spring of that year; that he knew who had been acting as agent for the la'nd; that Dempsey had been acting in that capacity; that plaintiff went to Dempsey and asked him about the leasing of the land, and that the latter gave plaintiff the right to farm it on condition that the owner should have one-third of the crop; that, after the making of the arrangement described, plaintiff sowed the rye; that Dempsey “was acting as sub-agent for Mr. Morían, that is, for Mr. Hall”; that plaintiff had written to Morían about renting the land, and had been referred to Dempsey, but that the letter could not be produced; that in the fall of 1901 plaintiff again went [523]*523to Dempsey, told Um he wanted to sow the rye, asked permission to crop the land for another year, and was told by Dempsey to go ahead and put in the crop.

On his direct examination this is the substance of that part of the testimony on the issue as to Dempsey’s agency. It contains no proof whatever that in the fall of 1901. Dempsey, as the agent of Hall, had authority to give plaintiff permission to crop the land. If Dempsey’s agency to lease Hall’s land is shown by the proof summarized, the testimony on that subject related alone to the previous cropping season.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 1072, 86 Neb. 519, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-sohn-neb-1910.