Holton v. Bowman

32 Minn. 191 | Minn. | 1884

Gilfillan, C. J.

Action for converting a large quantity of wheat. 'The court below states, as its findings of fact, that plaintiff was the owner of the wheat, and that defendant converted it, and states the value, and, as a conclusion of law, that plaintiff is entitled to recover *192such value. Upon what state of facts or on what grounds the conclusion as to ownership is based, cannot be told from this meagre finding. The wheat was sown and harvested by plaintiff on land broken by him, and was then taken from him by defendant. There were certain facts as to which there was, at the trial, no controversy. January 10, 1878, one Larson was the owner of the land on which the wheat was grown, and executed a mortgage on it to one Hansen. The latter assigned the mortgage to one Marshall, who, in May, 1879, a part of the mortgage debt being due, attempted to foreclose it by advertisement, and became the purchaser at the sale. This attempt to foreclose was ineffectual, by reason of failure to serve on Larson, who resided on the land, the notice required by statute. In December, 1879, Marshall executed to plaintiff a quitclaim deed of the premises. In thq summer of 1880 the plaintiff, in good faith, believing himself the owner of the premises by virtue of such mortgage foreclosure and quitclaim deed, peaceably entered upon and broke about 90 acres thereof, and in the spring of 1881 sowed it with wheat, and in August cut and put the wheat in shocks, and made preparations to thresh it. After it was cut and shocked, Larson executed a chattel mortgage upon it to defendant, who immediately took the wheat by virtue of it. After sowing the wheat, plaintiff repaired the old and built new fences, so that the 90 acres, at least, were all inclosed. Whether the inclosure took in the house in which Larson was then living, on part of the land, is not very clear from the evidence. It is clear that plaintiff’s entry and breaking were with the knowledge of, and without any expression of dissent or objection by, Larson, who knew under what claim he entered upon the land. And it is also clear that, from the time of his entering, plaintiff’s was the only actual possession of the 90 acres. On these facts there is one obvious ground on which the court might find plaintiff to be the owner of the wheat, and that is, that while raising it, his position was not that of a trespasser, but of a mortgagee in possession. As to this, the ease is not distinguishable from Johnson v. Sandhoff, 30 Minn. 197. As mortgagee in possession he was entitled to the products which he made from the land, and was accountable for the rents and profits.

Order affirmed.