3 Johns. 216 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1808
delivered the opinion of the court. On the motion for a new trial the defendants’ counsel have insisted,
1. That the plaintiffs did not prove a joint property in the rye, which was the subject of the suit.
2. That the parol evidence offered and overruled, ought to have been admitted, to show that James Litchfield furnished to Foote the purchase money, with which the locus in quo was bought; as it created a resulting trust for James Litchfield.
3. That such resulting trust estate was liable to be sold an the execution issued at the suit of Hunt, and being sold to Colvin, he thereby acquired the legal interest in the land, and in the growing crop.
On the first point, I am inclined to think that the plaintiffs had a joint property in the growing crop. Assuming for the present that Foote was the legal owner of the land, E. Litchfield sowed on shares, and on reaping the crop, they were to have it in certain proportions. This case differs from that of Newcomb and others v. Ramer, (2 Johnson, 421. in the notes) in this, that the rent was of no proportion of the crop, but vims specific as to the amount. This opinion is supported by the case of Hare and others v. Celey, (Cro. Eliz. 143.) and seems best to promote the intentions of landlord and tenant. If the portion reserved for the landlord was to be considered as rent, and in which he had no interest until severance and delivery, it would put it in the power of tenants clandestinely to alienate the produce of the land, to the injury of the person who had enabled them to raise the crop. 1
The second point has been virtually decided in the case of Jackson, ex dem. Kane v. Sternbergh.
There may be an interest in growing crops in one man, whilst the title to the land is in another. The one does not necessarily follow the other; but when the right to any portion of the crop exists in the owner of the soil, there, unless , in certain excepted cases, the ownership of the land draws after it that of the crops, and it cannot admit of a doubt, that a sale of the land simply, by the owner both of. the land and crop, carries the property of the crop to. the purchaser. If a voluntary sale would do this, a sale under an execution will produce the same consequences. It follows, then, that Foote, being a trustee for James Litchfield, and it being a resulting trust susceptible of parol proof, .and . the interest of Litchfield being vendible .under execution, Colvin, as a purchaser on the sheriff’s sale, .acquired all Foote’s right, both to the land and the crop. Foote then ceased to have any interest, and. in this point,.of view the^
This was proper evidence under the general issue, it being a settled and established principle, that any thing may be given in evidence that amounts to a denial of the right, (and particularly of a freehold in the defendant) to the locus in quo. (7 Term, 355. 8 Term, 405. 1 Ld. Raym. 732. 1 Leon. 301. Gilb. Ev. 258.)
The court are of opinion, that a new trial ought to be granted, with costs to abide the event of the suit.
New trial granted.
1 Johnson, 45. in note.
1 P. Wms. 323.
Gascoigne v. Timing.
Rem. Laws. vol. 1. p. 68. sec. 4.