Wittmayer v. Security State Bank

224 N.W. 303, 57 N.D. 934, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 86
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 303 (Wittmayer v. Security State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wittmayer v. Security State Bank, 224 N.W. 303, 57 N.D. 934, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 86 (N.D. 1928).

Opinion

Berry, Dist. J.

This case was here on a previous appeal. See Wittmayer v. Security State Bank, 54 N. D. 845, 211 N. W. 436.

A statement of the facts sufficient to an understanding of this case is as follows:

In 1905, John Wittmayer, the father of Otto and Marvin Wittmayer purchased school land of the state, described as follows: E-¿ of section 36, township 160, range 78, in Bottineau county, North Dakota. He received the usual certificate from the state and made the first payment on the principal as required by law and paid the interest and taxes until 1912, when he ceased to pay either. John Wittmayer cultivated the land up until 1922 under his right as such purchaser.

On January 19th, 1923, the board of university and school lands adopted a resolution declaring John Wittmayer’s contract for the purchase of said land void and directed notice thereof to be given to Wittmayer, who admits that he had notice thereof.

In 1923, John Wittmayer again cropped the land under a lease from *936 the state running to one Hanson. Hanson ag'reed to secure a lease for the year of 1924 for John Wittmayer, but did not do so.

In the Fall of 1923, before the Hanson lease expired, on January 1st, 1924, John Wittmayer seeded part of the land to rye. In the Spring of 1924 either John or his boys seeded the rest of the cultivated land to wheat and oats.

Wittmayer was indebted to the defendant, the Security State Bank of Upham, in a considerable amount. He mortgaged the land in question to secure his indebtedness. In July, 1924, one Grimes, cashier of the defendant bank, went to Bismarck, interviewed the land commissioner, learned that the records of the board showéd that the purchase contract of Wittmayer had been cancelled, that the land was to be rented and the minimum price for which it could be rented. He returned home, went to the county treasurer, made a formal application to rent the land for 1924, up to January 1st, 1925, paid the treasurer the amount of the rent, which application and payment were sent to the land commissioner and, on August 1st, 1924, leases in the form used by the board were executed by the land commissioner and returned either to the county treasurer or to the bank, the record being silent on that point. But, on August 4th, 1924, the leases were in the possession of the bank.

On that day, August 4, 1924, Grimes, cashier of the Hpham bank, went to interview John Wittmayer about the matter, told Wittmayer that the bank had leases for the school land and did not want Wittmayer to interfere with the crops on it. Wittmayer told Grimes he had no interest in the crops, that they belonged to the boys, meaning Otto and Marvin. In that talk Otto said, in substance, that he owned the crops and Marvin said nothing. The father, John, then came over and pointedly told Grimes to get off the place, and Grimes went. On that day Otto and Marvin were harvesting the rye, having, as the record shows, cut a few rounds around the field with a binder.

Before the afternoon of August 5th, John Wittmayer, as he testifies, directed Otto to go over to the Hpham bank and see if some settlement could not be made in relation to these crops. That afternoon Otto appeared at the bank and, after much discussion, finally signed two papers, which are marked Exhibits 6 and I, and are in evidence. One of them purports to be a waiver of all claims on the part of Otto to *937 any part of the crops under his father’s contract of purchase or otherwise, and the other is an agreement that Otto shall harvest the grain, the bank furnishing the twine; that the grain shall be threshed and all hauled to the elevator and sold, and then, for his services, Otto should be paid one third of the net proceeds of the grain after all expenses were paid. On one of these documents Otto makes the statement that the Upham Bank is the “sole owner” of all these crops.

Grimes procured a threshing machine to thresh the grain. Before threshing he told Otto that he had the machine and the time when the threshing was to commence. Otto and Grimes say that Otto then told Grimes that he would not be home when the threshing commenced, but that he had arranged with his father, John, to look after his, Otto’s, “share.” John denies this, but when the threshing started he was on hand with teams and took more than one third of the grains, hauling them to his own granary. The balance of the grain was hauled to the defendant elevator company and apparently left therein without the issuance of storage tickets. When the grain was all in John told the buyer at the elevator, not in the presence of Grimes, that that grain was not to be sold until some settlement was made by the Upham Bank with him. At the request of the Upham bank, however, the grains were sold and the gross proceeds turned over to the bank, which deducted all expenses, including the rent it had paid for the land, and endorsed the balance on John’s notes held by it and past due.

Plaintiffs brought this action for conversion of the grain. On the trial the jury returned a general verdict for the defendant and answered three special questions. The special questions and answers are as follows: Question: Were the crops on the premises described in the complaint on the 4th day of August, 1924, ripe and matured and not growing, although unsevered ? Answer: No. Question: Did the defendant Security State Bank of Upham take possession of the 1924 crops upon said premises after they were severed and shocked ? Answer: No. Question: Were the plaintiffs trespassers upon said premises prior to August 4, 1924% Answer: Yes.

Judgment was entered for the defendant on the verdict and from an order denying a new trial the appellants have prosecuted this appeal.

The first question raised by the appellants in their brief is: Who *938 was entitled to the unsevered crops ? The law phase of this question was settled on the former appeal, as follows:

“Where a trespasser occupies school land, tills it, and plants crops thereon, such crops while growing and unsevered, belong to the state, and a general lease of such land, without restriction as to growing crops, passes such ownership to the lessee.”

Appellants are contending that such is not the law and that it should be repudiated on this second appeal. We have again examined the authorities cited by appellants and feel well satisfied that we decided the question correctly on the former appeal. Furthermore, it is a well established rule that questions fairly raised and decided on a former appeal in the same action become the law of the case and are not open for consideration on a subsequent appeal. Such decisions are binding upon the parties and those claiming through or under them in all subsequent stages of the litigation. Schmidt v. Beiseker, 19 N. D. 35, 120 N. AY. 1096; Smith v. Neufold, 61 Neb. 699, 85 N. W. 898; Carpenter v. Carpenter, 126 Mich. 217, 85 N. AV. 576. See also 11 Cyc. 757, 15 C. J. 961.

' The fact phase of this question was submitted to the jury under proper instructions and the jury found that the crops were still growing on August 4th, 1924, when plaintiffs were stopped from harvesting the grain by Mr. Grimes. The answer to the question must therefore be that the defendant bank was entitled to the unsevered crops.

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 303, 57 N.D. 934, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wittmayer-v-security-state-bank-nd-1928.