100 Kan. 43 | Kan. | 1917
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action was one to replevin^ half of four stacks of hay. The plaintiff recovered and the defendant appeals.
The hay grew on land owned by Van Hook. Van Hook entered into an arrangement with the plaintiff whereby the plaintiff was to put up the hay for half. The plaintiff put up the' hay, which made four stacks. Afterwards Van Hook made a sale to Warner, the subjects of which were thus described in a written memorandum:
“Party of the, first part hereby sells to second party, all the alfalfa and feed of every kind also all use of pasture until May 1st, 1914, feed and pasture being 640 acres described as follows.”
The four 'stacks in controversy stood, with others, on the land described, but Van Hook told Warner that half of the four stacks belonged to the plaintiff. The memorandum of sale was assigned to the defendant, who took possession of all the hay, and refused the plaintiff’s demand for his share. The defendant asked instructions to the effect that if the hay was to be divided in the stack, the title remained in Van Hook, the
The testimony referred to was inconsequential, the instructions asked were properly refused, and the court might well have directed a verdict on the undisputed facts. The plaintiff had nothing to do with growing the hay,, was not a “cropper,” as that term is used in some states, and ownership of the land on which the stacks stood was not important. The contract was to put up the hay for half. When the contract was performed, title vested, and the plaintiff owned half of each stack. He and Van Hook were tenants in common of each stack. The property being readily divisible into portions of equal quantity, weight, and value, either owner could take his own share, and thus make voluntary partition. Van Hook could not, however, pass title to more than his own share, and whether' Warner was notified of the plaintiff’s interest or not, he obtained no more hay than Van Hook owned, and the defendant obtained no more hay than Van Hook owned. There is no claim that the plaintiff assented to the sale to Warner or to the defendant, and he could follow his share of the hay and replevin it or recover its value. Cases sustaining the foregoing principles may be found in footnotes to the article on “Tenancy in Common,” 38 Cyc. 7, 14, 108, 111. See, also, Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, 2d ed., § 252, and the concluding part of § 289; and Childs Personal Property, § 132.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.