209 P. 1066 | Idaho | 1922
Lead Opinion
This is an action in claim and delivery, brought by respondent to recover possession of about 5,045 pounds of seed beans.
The facts were stipulated in the trial court. Since prior to September 15, 1915, appellant has been the owner of the S.i/2 NE.14 of sec. 6, T. 11 S., R. 17 E., B. M., in Twin Falls county, on which date he leased in writing said premises to one R. A. Norris, for the term beginning October 1, 1915, and ending October 1, 1916. The lease provides that:
*70 “ .... and the said second party (Norris), in consideration of the leasing of the above premises, hereby covenants and agrees with the said party of the first part (appellant) to pay the said party of the first part as rent for the same as follows, to wit: one-half of all the crop or crops . . . . grown on the above-mentioned land. Party of the second part is to deliver the first party’s share of the crop in Twin Falls, Idaho, as soon as the same has been threshed . . . , ”
Norris took possession of the premises under the lease, and about April 1, 1916, made a written offer to respondent, as follows:
“Twin Falls, P. 0., Idaho State,
“April-, 1916.
“Messrs. D. M. Ferry & Co.
“Detroit, Michigan.
“I agree, on the terms and conditions stated below, to raise for you, on lands of suitable quality and condition, located in Section 6, Township of 11-17 East, County of Twin Falls, and State of Idaho, and deliver to you at Twin Falls, the following seeds, 12 acres beans, Black Valentine (12 bushels seed).
“I agree properly to prepare and plant such lands with stock seed to be furnished by you free on board cars at Twin Falls, Idaho, properly to cultivate and care for the crop, to harvest, cure, separate and clean, as well as possible with ordinary farm machinery, its entire seed product, in such manner as to secure the greatest return of seed suitable for seedman’s use; and to sack and deliver all the seed to you free on board cars at Twin Falls, Idaho, as soon as the seed can be put in suitable condition, and before November 30th, 1916, without wasting, feeding, selling, reserving or allowing any portion of the crop or seed furnished to pass from my possession except as delivered to you. The stock seed and seed crop produced from it is, and shall remain your property except as otherwise stated in this contract.
“In order to prevent hybridization and to keep the crop pure, I agree that during the life of this contract I will not grow seeds of the same species for any other person, and*71 as far as I am able to prevent it, there shall be no other plants of the same species grown within ten rods of this crop. I will take at all times every reasonable precaution to keep the crop pure and to prevent seed of any chance plants of a different variety or of a stock of the same variety different from that sent me by you, becoming mixed with seeds grown under this agreement. You or your agents may at any time enter the field and at your own expense make such examinations, selections or rejections as you or they deem desirable for the betterment of the crop for seed purposes, and you or they shall not be liable for necessary damage, if any, to my crop resulting from such work.
“You are carefully to weigh and test the crop upon its delivery. Any remilling is to be done by you at your expense. You may refuse to accept the crop if less than eighty-five per cent (85%) of the seeds are vital, or if in your judgment the crop is in any other respect unfit for seedmen’s use and cannot be made fit without an unreasonable amount of cleaning or hand picking. In case of dispute as to vitality, it is agreed that a sample of the seeds may be submitted to the United States Department of Agriculture for testing, and the report of the Department of Agriculture on the sample submitted shall be final and binding on both of us. The sample shall be taken from the seeds as they stand in your warehouse, by drawing a sample from each sack, then thoroughly mixing the same, and taking a sample from the mixture, which shall be sent by the ordinary course of mail or otherwise to the Department of Agriculture at Washington, D. C. In case you refuse to accept the crop, its title shall vest in me and I agree to reimburse you immediately for stock seed and bags furnished, and for all freight charges paid by you on such rejected crop. If, within 60 days after you mail me Notice of Refusal to accept the seeds, you do not receive directions from me as to their disposition, you may dispose of them as you wish.
“In consideration of the faithful carrying out of this agreement by me and as full compensation for my services, you are to pay me at the rate of (4%) four and one-fourth cents per pound for all seed in excess of the stock seed*72 furnished me, delivered under this contract and accepted by you, payment to be made immediately upon your acceptance of the seed. No payment is to be made for any seed which you do not consider sufficiently pure, clean and dry for seedman’s use and no credit is to be given for dirt, or for damaged or poor seed which has to be removed. In all eases; the screenings and culls are to remain the property of the party who separates them from the crop.
“If so requested in writing, you shall loan for my use free of charge, suitable bags for shipping the crop, and I agree to pay all transportation charges thereon; and you shall allow me full wholesale' market value for all new, sound, undefaced, seamless cotton grain bags which I may put and you receive containing the crop.
“This letter when accepted by you shall constitute our contract, and be construed according to Michigan laws. There are no agreements or understandings regarding the subject matter of this letter other than expressed' above.
“Yours truly,
“R. A. NORRIS.”
“Accepted at Detroit, Michigan, this 10th day of April, 1916.
“D. M. FERRY & CO.
“By L. D. COULTER.”
The above offer was accepted by respondent at Detroit, Michigan, April 10, 1916, and thereafter the seed was furnished by respondent to Norris, by whom it was planted on a portion of the leased premises. As the crop grown therefrom was being threshed, appellant took and retained one-half thereof in his possession, over the protest of respondent’s agent, notwithstanding an oral offer by the latter to pay the contract price thereof and a demand for possession, and a subsequent written offer and demand, both of which were refused by appellant, who stored the property so taken in a warehouse at Twin Falls, from which it was taken by the sheriff under the writ of replevin issued in this action and delivered to respondent.
The cause was tried to the court without a jury. From a judgment awarding respondent possession of 4,606 pounds
The first and principal question presented in this case is whether respondent is the owner of the property here involved, and this must be determined from a consideration of the contract between it and Norris. >
The supreme court of Montana in the case of D. M. Ferry & Co. v. Forquer, 61 Mont. 336, 202 Pac. 193, in construing a contract practically identical with the one here involved to be a contract of bailment rather than sale, said:
“The contract is one of bailment, and title to the seed and the crop produced was in the bailor. A bailment is a delivery of personal property in trust upon a contract, express or implied, that the trust shall be executed faithfully on the part of the bailee. 2 Bl. Com. 451; 2 Kent’s Com. 558; Story on Bailments, sec. 2.....The preponderant authority and better reasoning support the rule that upon the termination of the bailment, the identical thing bailed, or the product of or substitute for that thing, together with the increments, earnings, and gains which may have accrued to it during the period of the bailment, must be redelivered, delivered over, or accounted for by the bailee in accordance with the terms of the contract. 6 C. J. 1139.....it is altogether immaterial whether the compensation of the bailee is fixed at a definite sum in money or is a share of the product itself, a share of the net proceeds of the adventure, a share of the increase, or is computed upon the product of the undertaking. 6 C. J. 1096.”
A contract is to be construed so as to give effect to the intention of the parties making it. (Tilden v. Hubbard, 25 Ida. 677, 138 Pac. 1133; Messinger v. Cox, 33 Ida. 363, 194 Pac. 473), and it was the evident intention of the parties to this contract that respondent should have title to,
In his second assignment, appellant seeks a reversal of the judgment herein under the provisions of C. S., see. 4775, which provides that: “No contract or agreement made in the name of, or for the use or benefit of such (foreign) corporation prior to the making of such filings as provided in sections 4772 and 4773 can be sued upon or enforced in any court of this state by such corporation.”
The respondent, however, is not seeking to enforce a contract in this action, and so far as the record shows no contract has ever existed between it and appellant. • Sec. 4775, supra, has no applicability to an action by a foreign corporation to protect its property lawfully acquired. •
In Katz v. Herrick, 12 Ida. 1, 86 Pac. 873, this court held that contracts entered into by a foreign corporation which has not complied with the provisions of C. S., secs. 4772 and 4773, are not void under the provisions of sec. 4775, supra, but that such corporation cannot maintain a suit in any of the courts of this state for a breach or violation of a contract entered into during the time the corporation failed to comply with the provisions of the statute. Respondent is not suing to recover for the breach or violation of a contract, but to protect its title to property, and the contract with Norris is important only in so far as it shows that the property was in fact the property of respondent. (Junction Placer Min. Co. v. Reed, 28 Ida. 219, 153 Pac. 564.) A foreign corporation, which has not complied with the provisions of sees. 4772 and 4773, supra, may sue in the courts of this state to recover possession of personal property, where such suit is not based upon a breach or violation of a contract made in its name or for its use or benefit.
From what has been, said it follows that the judgment in this case should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Costs are awarded to respondent.
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
A petition for rehearing was granted in this case, and the matter was again fully presented by counsel. After a careful re-examination of the entire case we are unable to find any sufficient reason which would justify a change in the views of the court as heretofore expressed.
The former judgment of the court is therefore reaffirmed.