91 Minn. 438 | Minn. | 1904
Action to recover the value of certain wheat and hay alleged to have been wrongfully taken from plaintiff by defendant and converted to his own use, 'in which plaintiff had' judgment in the court below, and defendant appealed.
Practically the only question presented by the assignments of error is whether the findings of the trial court are sustained by the evidence. If they are sustained, the judgment appealed from must be affirmed. The evidence tends to show that plaintiff entered into possession of
We think the findings are fully sustained by the evidence. Whether plaintiff’s lease was void or voidable is not important, for he was put into possession of the land under it, and was so in possession at the time defendant committed the acts complained of. He was at least a tenant at will, and his right to occupy the land had never been terminated by any act sufficient for that purpose. Defendant justified seizing the property and carrying it away under a lease from a third person, who, he claims, had the right to lease it to him. It is claimed by defendant that because of a provision in the lease under which plaintiff occupied the land; reserving in the owner the right to sell the same at any time, plaintiff’s rights became terminated by a sale made by the owner subsequent to the time the lease was executed. The lease did reserve in the owner the right to sell and convey it at any time, and the lease was made subject to that right- — -the owner agreeing that, in case he did make such a sale before the expiration of the lease, he would pay plaintiff the sum of $1.25 per acre for all land plowed by him — and the fair import of the contract would permit plaintiff to remove his crops. The land was sold by the owner, but no attempt was made by him or the purchaser to terminate plaintiff’s tenancy, so far as the findings of the court disclose; and we are guided by the
The authorities hold that, where a tenant enters into the possession of land under a void lease, the contract regulates the terms of the tenancy, as respects the rent, to be paid. Evans v. Winona Lumber Co., 30 Minn. 515, 16 N. W. 404. But the duration of the tenancy is not thus governed. The lessee is a tenant at will, and the tenancy can be terminated only in the manner prescribed by statute. Such being the case, it is clear that plaintiff had the superior right to the possession of the land; the crops raised thereon, including the natural crop of hay, belonged to him; and defendant was a wrongdoer and trespasser in the acts committed by him.
Within the findings of the trial court, which are fully sustained by the evidence, judgment was properly ordered for plaintiff, and -it is affirmed.