Kesler v. Heberling

113 Kan. 571 | Kan. | 1923

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Marshall, J.:

The plaintiff sues to recover on a promissory note and to recover damages for the sale of wheat alleged to be the property of the estate. The defenses were that there was no consideration for the note and that the defendant owned the wheat. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff on both causes of action, and the defendant appeals.

The action was tried on an agreed statement of facts, which showed that Lottie Heberling died March 8, 1919, leaving a will which was probated, by which she gave to the defendant certain real property; that the plaintiff was made executor of the will; that at the time of her death, F. I. Jecks and William Madden were her tenants on the land and had sixty-five acres of wheat growing thereon; that by the terms of the lease, Lottie Heberling-was to receive one-half of the wheat and the tenants were to have the other half; that after the wheat was harvested and threshed the defendant took possession of the one-half of the wheat which was to have been delivered to Lottie Heberling, sold a part of it for $873.77 and retained 336 bushels thereof; that the plaintiff claimed all the wheat and the defendant signed a note to the plaintiff for the $873.77 and turned over to him the key to the bin containing the remainder of the wheat; that afterward the defendant demanded of the plaintiff the key to the bin containing the wheat and refused to pay the note; and that thereafter, the defendant without the consent of the *572plaintiff took the wheat in the bin -and sold it. The estate had ample property outside the wheat to pay the debts of. the estate.

The question for determination is: To whom did the wheat belong, the executor or the devisee? Section 4524 of the General Statutes of 1915 reads:

“The emblements or annual crops raised by labor, and whether severed or not from the land of the deceased at the time of his death, shall be assets in the hands of the executor or administrator, and shall be included in the inventory.”

The statute makes no exception in favor of a devisee of land. A reasonable interpretation of the statute excludes devisees from the ownership of the crops growing' on the lands at the death of the testator. In Caldwell v. Custard, 7 Kan. 303, 306, this court said:

“Testimony showing who was the owner of the land is not evidence as to who owns the annual crops growing on it. They are personal estate. [Citations.] So, in this state, they go to the personal representative as personal property, and not to the heir, and therefore evidence showing who owned the land would not show who owned the oats. They were not real estate before they were harvested, and ownership of the oats, which was in question, could not be established by proof as to who owned the land.”

This rule has been followed in Polley v. Johnson, 52 Kan. 478, 483, 35 Pac. 8; Mabry v. Harp, 53 Kan. 398, 36 Pac. 743; McClain v. Miller, 95 Kan. 794, 149 Pac. 399; Dannefer v. Aurand, 106 Kan. 605, 608, 189 Pac. 371.

The rule followed by this court as declared in the cases cited accords with the indicated construction of the statute.

The judgment is affirmed.

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