122 N.Y. 153 | NY | 1890
March 19, 1882, Lineas LeBarron, the elder, died intestate, seized of a farm of 233 acres, and leaving eleven children, his only heirs, one of whom is the plaintiff, *156 and another is the wife of Alphonso House, one of the defendants. The plaintiff was the administrator of his father's estate, and being in possession of the farm in the year 1885, he plowed two and a half acres of land and sowed it to oats. Upon the farm there was about forty acres of meadow land. In August of that year he cut these oats and also the grass on about fifteen acres of the meadow. He left the oats in the swath to dry, and the hay, which had been partly dried, he had raked into windrows. No one but the plaintiff had bestowed any labor on the grain or hay, or on the farm whereon they grew. These products being in this situation, the defendants entered in the night-time and drew away the oats, and entered in the day-time and drew away the hay, claiming to do so in the right of Mrs. House and by her direction. The plaintiff forbade the removal of the property, but openly admitted the right of any one of his co-tenants to cut and take his or her share of the standing grass from the meadow. None of the tenants had ever been excluded from the farm, nor had the right to possess or enjoy it ever been denied to them, or to any one of them.
This action was brought to recover the value of the hay and oats upon the theory that the defendants were liable in trover, and at Circuit it was held that they were so liable, and the plaintiff had a verdict for the value of both, but their values were not separately assessed. The judgment entered upon the verdict was reversed at General Term, where it was held that the plaintiff was the sole owner of the oats, and could recover their value, but that he was a mere tenant in common of the hay, and could not recover its value of his co-tenant who had carried it away.
The oats and hay were personal chattels, the former being such before as well as after they were cut, and the latter became such when severed from the meadow. (2 Steph. Com. [8th ed.] 212.) If they were owned in common by the plaintiff and Mrs. House it was not a conversion in law for the defendants, acting by her (a co-tenant's) authority, to merely draw them away. (Carr v.Dodge,
When one of several tenants in common of a farm (all being of full age) occupies it and has taken, in the usual course of husbandry, the annual products thereof without having entered into any contract in respect to its use and without having ousted or denied the rights of any of his co-tenants, he is not liable to account to them, or to any one of them, for its use, or for the products so taken. (Woolever v. Knapp, 18 Barb. 265;Wilcox v. Wilcox, 48 id. 327; Dresser v. Dresser,
40 id. 300; Roseboom v. Roseboom, 15 Hun, 309;
The plaintiff, having in the due course of husbandry grown and severed the grass and oats while being with the acquiescence of his co-tenants legally and peaceably in possession of the land whereon they grew, became the sole owner of them, and the defendants, by taking them away, became liable for their value. (Calhoun v. Curtis, 4 Metc. 413; Brown v. Wellington,
The order should be reversed and judgment entered on the verdict affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except BRADLEY and HAIGHT, JJ., not sitting.
Order reversed and judgment affirmed.