99 Mass. 546 | Mass. | 1868
It is settled in this Commonwealth that one tenant in common of a chattel may maintain an action of traver, or tort in the nature of trover, against his cotenant, who has converted the chattel to his own use; and that such a conversion may be proved by the destruction of the chattel; by its sale; or by such an act of appropriation as will, by its nature, finally preclude the other party from any future enjoyment of it 2 Greenl. Ev. § 646, note 4. Daniels v. Daniels, 7 Mass. 135
The defendant contends that, by the contract on which the plaintiff relies, no title or interest in the land was created, but merely a revocable license to enter for the purpose of planting and cultivating the crop; and that this license was revoked. And the authorities are abundant to sustain the doctrine that a mere license to enter upon land is revocable, so far as it remains executory. Drake v. Wells, 11 Allen, 141, and cases there cited. A contract for the sale of growing trees, or growing annual crops, to be severed from the land by the purchaser, does not convey any interest in the land; and, so far as it implies a license to enter upon the land, the license may be revoked before it is executed. Parsons v. Smith, 5 Allen, 578. Giles v. Simonds, 15 Gray, 441.
But the application of this doctrine to the case of a contract for cultivating land on shares is attended with some difficulties; and it is not easy to define with precision the nature of the title or interest created by the contract, either as between the contracting parties themselves, or in regard to third persons. There may be an interest in land of a qualified nature, where the land itself is not conveyed. Thus if one grant to another vesturam or herbagium terree, the land does not pass; but the grantee may have an action of trespass quare clausum, for a disturbance of his right. Co. Lit. 4 b. And, where one had the exclusive right of cutting turf in a several parcel of land, it was held that ae might maintain trespass against one who dug and carried away turf from that place. Wilson v. Mackreth, 3 Burr. 1824. In Clap v. Draper, 4 Mass. 266, it was held that under a grant of all the trees and timber standing and growing on a close, with liberty at all times to cut and carry away the trees, the grantee might maintain trespass quare clausum fregit against the owner of the soil for cutting down the trees. In these cases the right in the land, though limited, was exclusive.
When land was farmed on shares, it was held in Hare v.
The two cases in which the subject has been considered in this Commonwealth are Chandler v. Thurston, 10 Pick. 205, and Walker v. Fitts, 24 Pick. 191. In Chandler v. Thurston, the contract was by paroi, and was to take the land to cultivate, find half the seed, and when the crop was harvested to have half as a compensation for the labor. Bragg, who had contracted to cultivate the farm on these terms, had absconded before completing his agreement; and it was held that he had no right in the crop when harvested, because, if his contract were only regarded as a contract to labor on the land, and receive his pay in produce, he had not performed it; and if it was regarded as a hiring of the land, rendering a rent in produce, he was only a tenant at will, and, having terminated the estate at will by his own act, was not entitled to emblements. In Walker v. Fitts, the contract was very much like that in the case at bar, but by an agreement under seal; and it is said by Mr. Justice Morton, that, “ whatever may be the nature and extent of the interest of the occupant, in the land, and whether he has any possession
And we are all of opinion that in this case the facts which the plaintiff offered to prove were sufficient to maintain the action, and that the exceptions must be sustained. It makes no difference that the contract was by paroi, because he had been put into such possession of the land as his qualified interest required. Although by our statute this interest, being created by paroi, could not exceed a tenancy at will, yet, when the owner of the land undertook to terminate it, the right to emblements remained. The parties were tenants in common of the crop, and the defendant was responsible in tort for the conversion of the plaintiff’s share. Exceptions sustained.