History
  • No items yet
midpage
Bourcy v. Kaufman
146 N.W. 1074
S.D.
1914
Check Treatment
POLEEY, J.

Plaintiff brings this action for the recovery of a quantity -of hay thaj had been cut and stacked by defendant during the season of 1912, on an Indian allotment in Roberts county. The allotment had been leased to plaintiff and another, in 1911, by the Indian agent in charge cf the allotment, for farming and grazing purposes for the years 19x1 and 1912. The lease had been approved by the Secretary of the Interior. Plaintiff and his co-lessee paid the rent and cut the hay on the land in 1911, but, in 1912, plaintiff’s co-lessee having left that vicinity, plaintiff paid all the rent and intended to cut the hay himself. Defendant had no right or authority from any source to go upon, or cut hay on, that particular piece of land, but undertook to defeat plaintiff’s right -of recovery on the ground: first, that the Indian agent had no authority to- execute the lease in question and that plaintiff acquired no rights by virtue thereof; and, second, that plaintiff, *637being a part owner only, could not.maintain an action for the recovery of the hay in his own name alone.

[ij It is not necessary to make an extended examination of the first proposition, because, whether or not the Indian agent and the Secretary of the Interior had authority to execute the lease in question, they believed they had such authority, and plaintiff and his co-lessee believed they had, and entered into the contract in good faith and for value. This is not a question as to whether the lease is good against the owner of the land or some one claiming under him. The lease was made by parties acting under proper authority, provided the owner of the leased premises was under the disability specified in the act conferring such authority, and as between one claiming in good faith by virtue of such authority and one without any right whatever, it will be presumed, in the absence of anything to the contrary, that facts existed authorizing the making of the lease. The lessees were placed in the peaceable possession of the land and they used it for the purposes for which it was rented during the first year covered by the lease, and plaintiff was still in such possession by virtue of the same right, at the time defendant undertook to appropriate the hay. This, as against a mere trespasser, showed sufficient title in plaintiff, and he must prevail on the first proposition.

[2] As against appellant’s 'second proposition, respondent claimed that his co-lessee had released his interest in the lease to respondent, and that at the time of the trespass by appellant, respondent was the sole owner thereof. If this were true, of course he has the right to maintain the action in his own name. As between respondent and his co-lessee, respondent could have been the sole owner. But it is not necessary to inquire whether respondent was the sole owner or not. Being a co-lessee, he has an individual interest in every particle of the hay grown on the leased premises and has a right to the possession of the whole of it as against all persons, except his co-lessee. Appellant, in support of his contention, relies upon what is said by this court in Palmer et al. v. Hurst, 22 S. D. 68, 115 N. W. 516; but that is a case where several plaintiffs joined in an action for the recovery of personal property, specific portions of which belonged to the different plaintiffs in entirety, and the case is not in point. This case should be governed by what is said in Mather v. Dunn, 11 S. D. 196. 76 N. W. *638922, 74 Am. St. Rep. 788. T-rue, that was a case involving-title to real property, -.but the principle is the same in both cases.

The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.

Case Details

Case Name: Bourcy v. Kaufman
Court Name: South Dakota Supreme Court
Date Published: Apr 27, 1914
Citation: 146 N.W. 1074
Court Abbreviation: S.D.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.
Your Notebook is empty. To add cases, bookmark them from your search, or select Add Cases to extract citations from a PDF or a block of text.