Bailey v. John W. Sward, Inc.

193 P. 952 | Cal. | 1920

The defendants, Chin Sam Company, appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff.

The action was to foreclose a chattel mortgage executed by John W. Sward, Incorporated, to Dana Burks and afterward assigned to the plaintiff, covering the rice crop grown on certain three hundred acres of land by Chin Sam Company in the year 1915.

The case presents the question whether the right of Chin Sam Company, a copartnership, to hold one-third of said crop as payment for money advanced by Chin Sam Company to Sward Company was paramount to the right of the mortgagee of said part of the crop.

The crop was grown by Chin Sam Company under an instrument denominated a lease, dated January 14, 1915, executed by Sward Company to Chin Sam Company. It provided that Chin Sam Company should have the land during the cropping season of 1914 for the purpose of raising and growing a crop of rice thereon. Sward Company was to plow and check the land, build the necessary irrigation ditches, furnish the lumber necessary to build a barn, house, and cook-house, and for weirs and boxes for irrigating ditches, and survey the land. Chin Sam Company were to put in the necessary weirs and boxes for irrigation, sow and plant the land to rice, irrigate and cultivate the same in a proper manner, and, when ripe, harvest, thresh, and sack the same. The solution of the question depends upon the effect of the following provisions:

"It is hereby mutually agreed that when all of the foregoing provisions have been kept and performed by [Chin *397 Sam Company] as herein provided, they shall be entitled to receive two-thirds of the crop so threshed, the same to be divided between the parties hereto in the field [Sward Company] taking one-third of the entire crop in the field, [Chin Sam Company] taking the remaining two-thirds, the title to the whole crop being and remaining in [Sward Company] until division is made; the one-third retained by [Sward Company] shall be its rental share, for the use and occupation of said premises by [Chin Sam Company], but nothing in the foregoing to be construed so as to prevent said [Chin Sam Company] hauling said crop to cover as soon as threshed. . . . [Sward Company] agrees to haul its share of the crop from the field. . . .

"In consideration of [Sward Company] agreeing to secure financial assistance to [Chin Sam Company] with which to harvest and market the rice crop, [Chin Sam Company] hereby agree to advance to [Sward Company] in United States gold coin, the sum of $2,000.00, payable $1,000.00 upon the execution of this agreement, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged by the first party, $1,000.00 on or before thirty days hereafter. Upon conclusion of the first harvest and threshing of the crop herein provided for to be grown, [Sward Company] agrees to refund the $2,000.00 in gold coin of the United States, or in rice at the prevailing market price when division of the crop is made."

The mortgage held by the plaintiff was executed on June 18, 1915. It purported to mortgage to Burks the entire "crop of rice now being, standing and growing upon that certain piece or parcel of land [describing the land leased to Chin Sam Company], subject to the outstanding crop leases on said described premises by which the lessees are entitled to two-thirds interest in the crops on harvest of the same, providing that they have fulfilled the terms of said crop leases." The mortgage was duly recorded in the office of the county recorder in the chattel mortgage record. The lease to Chin Sam Company was duly recorded in the recorder's office in the record kept for the recording of leases, but was not executed or recorded as a chattel mortgage. The finding of the court was that neither Burks nor Bailey had actual or constructive notice at the time of advancing the money secured by the chattel mortgage *398 of any clause or clauses in the lease aforesaid other than was given by the statement in the mortgage that it was subject to the outstanding crop leases by which the lessees were entitled to two-thirds interest in the crops, but that before making the advances both Burks and Bailey had visited the premises and knew that Chin Sam Company were in the occupation thereof and were cultivating the crop thereon.

After the crop was harvested, threshed, and sacked by Chin Sam Company, as provided in the lease, it was found that one-third thereof consisted of 1,080 sacks. The two thousand dollars mentioned in the last-quoted paragraph of the lease was advanced by Chin Sam Company to Sward Company but had not been refunded to them in money. The 1,080 sacks which comprised the share of Sward Company was not enough to repay the two thousand dollars advanced to it by Chin Sam Company. Thereupon, instead of delivering the 1,080 sacks to Sward Company or to the plaintiff as holder of the mortgage, Chin Sam Company kept the same in their possession, claiming that they were entitled to the share of Sward Company under that part of the lease which provided that Sward Company should refund the two thousand dollars in gold coin, "or in rice at the prevailing market price when division of the crop is made." The only point presented in the case is the question whether or not they are justified in making this claim.

[1] While the instrument executed by Sward Company to Chin Sam Company is named a lease, yet, as the title to the crop was to be in the lessor from the time of planting until the division was made, it is more in the nature of a cropping contract. Whatever be its nature, however, the fact that under its provisions the title to the entire crop was to be in Sward Company until the division took place is a controlling factor in the case. The mortgage purporting to include the entire crop was expressly made subject to the crop lease "by which the lessees are entitled to two-thirds interest in the crops on harvest of the same." Consequently it did not cover the interest of Chin Sam Company in that two-thirds share, although the title to that part of the crop was, at the time of its execution, vested in Sward Company. Chin Sam Company could under *399 no circumstances have or obtain title under the lease to the one-third of the crop going to Sward Company until the division was made. There is nothing in the lease which purports to create a lien on or pledge of that portion of the crop in favor of Chin Sam Company against Sward Company. The provision is, in effect, merely that at the time of the division Sward Company had the option either to pay the two thousand dollars in coin or to pay it in rice at the prevailing market price. It was a promise to pay, not a pledge. It is true Chin Sam Company were in possession of the rice, but in view of the fact that the title thereto was to remain in Sward Company until division and afterward unless Sward Company failed to repay the advances in money, the possession of Chin Sam Company prior to that time was merely as bailee and not as pledgee, and it gave them no right to withhold the rice as against the holder of said mortgage. It follows that the decision of the court below was correct.

In view of this conclusion, it is immaterial whether Burks or Bailey had or had not actual or constructive notice of the provision of the lease whereby Sward Company promised to repay the advances in rice.

The judgment is affirmed.

Olney, J., Sloane, J., Wilbur, J., Lennon, J., Angellotti, C. J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.

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