207 N.W. 489 | N.D. | 1925
Plaintiff brought an action in conversion against the defendant, a sole trader doing business as the J.C. Miller Elevator. The defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The complaint alleges that on or about March 1, 1919, one Sandum was the owner of certain real estate, situated in Cass county, and then executed a mortgage thereon securing an indebtedness due the plaintiff; that this mortgage was subsequently foreclosed, owing to defaults thereunder, and that, in due course, a sheriff's certificate of sale was executed to him on January 23, 1924; that such certificate was, on the 28th of January, 1924, recorded in the office of the register of deeds. It is alleged that thereafter the mortgagor rented the land to one Grieger, for the season of 1924, and that the mortgagor "was to receive one third of all grain sown, grown and raised upon said land during said season;" that "pursuant to such rental agreement, said R.R. Grieger farmed the said premises" during the season of 1924, and delivered *713 a part of said one third of the crop to the defendant, to wit: 199 bushels, 20 pounds of wheat; that on January 28, 1925, the sheriff executed to plaintiff a sheriff's deed of the premises.
It is then alleged that under § 7762, Comp. Laws 1913, the plaintiff is entitled to the possession and is the owner of "that portion of the grain so grown upon said premises under and by virtue of said foreclosure proceedings which would otherwise inure to the said K.O. Sandum, and a portion of which as hereinbefore described was delivered to the defendant." It is alleged that a demand was made for the delivery of the grain, or the value thereof, and that such demand was refused; that the action for the recovery of the grain, or its value, has been prosecuted with diligence and that, therefore, under § 7168, Comp. Laws 1913, the plaintiff is entitled to the highest market price, at Mortimer, Cass county, intervening the date of the conversion in October, 1924, and the date of the verdict herein. It is alleged, further, that the plaintiff is the owner and holder of the sheriff's certificate of sale and the sheriff's deed "and by reason thereof is entitled to the said grain as hereinbefore alleged." The plaintiff prays for judgment against the defendant for the highest market value of the grain between the date of the conversion and the date of the judgment, and for his costs.
The trial court overruled defendant's demurrer, whereupon a stay was procured and the defendant appealed from the order. It appears to be the position of the defendant on this appeal that the plaintiff, who is the holder of a sheriff's certificate of sale, has no right, as such holder, to sue the defendant in conversion on the theory that the latter received from one in possession of the land under a lease from the mortgagor, the grain raised upon the premises during the period of redemption, and who had received no actual notice of the claims of the certificate holder to any part of the crop.
We think the complaint is drawn on the theory that the defendant converted a part of that portion of the crop which, under the contract between the mortgagor and the tenant Grieger, constituted the agreed rental for the use of the land during the farming season of 1924, that is, during the period of redemption. On the face of the complaint the sole question seems to be whether, in such circumstances, the holder of the sheriff's certificate, who, under § 7762, was entitled to receive from *714 the tenant in possession "the rents of the property sold, or the value of the use and occupation thereof," may maintain an action in conversion against the purchaser of that portion of the grain which the mortgagor and the renter have agreed shall be delivered to the mortgagor as the stipulated rental for the period of redemption.
Section 7762, Comp. Laws 1913, so far as material, reads:
"The purchaser from the time of the sale until a redemption and a redemptioner from the time of his redemption until another redemption is entitled to receive from the tenant in possession the rents of the property sold, or the value of the use and occupation thereof."
The purchaser at the foreclosure sale — the holder of the sheriff's certificate — is entitled to one of two things, the "rents," or the "value of the use and occupation," of the property sold. "Rent is compensation for the use of land. It is immaterial whether it is paid in money or services." Martin v. Royer,
There seems to be some confusion as to the legal effect of prior decisions of this court involving the construction and application of § 7762. The decisions are entirely harmonious on this subject. The first case is Second Nat. Bank v. Swan,
The next decision under the statute is Clement v. Shipley,
In the case of Whithed v. St. Anthony D. Elevator Co. supra, it was held that the plaintiff, as the certificate holder, stood in the shoes of the owner of the land as to all rights which the latter had pursuant to the contract between the owner (lessor) and his lessee, under which the land was farmed during the period of redemption; and having the same rights as the owner, the certificate holder was entitled to the same remedies to protect and enforce in his own behalf the rights and interests which the owner (lessor) had under the agreement of lease. It was held further that the "rent" contemplated by § 7762 embraced "money, provisions, chattels or labor;" and that the plaintiff could maintain a claim and delivery action to recover possession of that portion of the crop raised on the land which the owner and his lessee agreed should be delivered to the former as compensation for the use of the premises. In other words, the effect of that case is that the certificate holder may claim rent when it has been agreed between the owner and his lessee that it be paid in the form of a part of the crop, as well as when it is stipulated that it be paid in cash. The holder is entitled to thething which the owner and the lessee agreed should be delivered and received as the compensation for the use of the property during the redemption period.
In no one of these cases was the land farmed by the mortgagor himself. It was not until Geo. B. Clifford Co. v. Henry, supra, that the rights of the certificate holder, as against the mortgagor, were considered, when the latter occupied and used the land during the period of redemption. That was an action "to recover the value of the use and occupation of certain lands;" and not to recover the crop, or to enforce any claim of interest in the crop raised and harvested on the premises during the year of redemption. This court again decided, construing § 7762, that the purchaser at a sheriff's sale, held in pursuance *717
of a foreclosure by advertisement, was entitled to the value of the use and occupation of the property sold notwithstanding it was in the possession of and farmed by the mortgagor himself during the period of redemption. The court also expressly overruled the contention, made in view of § 6740, Comp. Laws 1913, which provides that the mortgagee is not entitled to possession of the mortgaged premises unless it be so agreed, that the mortgagor could not be considered as a "tenant in possession," within § 7762. The court refused to draw a distinction based upon the fact that the premises were farmed by the mortgagor himself rather than by some one under a lease from him, and held that the mortgagor, when he farms the land himself, is a "tenant" within the statute, as this court had ruled in Whithed v. St. Anthony D. Elevator Co.
The certificate holder as such, has no right to or interest in the crop except as given him by § 7762. See also Farm Mortg. Loan Co. v. Pettet,
In the case at bar, the lessee of the mortgagor agreed to deliver one-third of the crop to the lessor, the mortgagor, as compensation for the use and occupation of the land during the year of redemption. One third of the crop was "rent," within § 7762, to which the mortgagor was entitled, and for the recovery of which replevin might have been maintained by him. If this one third had been taken by a third person, before division, and held in defiance of the right of the mortgagor under the lease, a conversion action could have been maintained by him. As to these rights and remedies the certificate holder is in the same position as the mortgagor. Such are the rules laid down by this court in the cases to which we have referred. It follows that the plaintiff, as certificate holder, has the right, under the facts alleged, to maintain an action in conversion, unless he has lost it because of failure to give *718 actual notice to the defendant of his claim as a holder of the sheriff's certificate.
The defendant was charged with notice that the owner of the land had, or might have an interest in the crop. Merchants' State Bank v. Sawyer Farmers' Co-op. Asso.
The order overruling the demurrer must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
CHRISTIANSON, Ch. J., and BURKE, BIRDZELL, and NUESSLE, JJ., concur.