delivered the opinion of the court:
This аction arose following the sale of a parcel of land in Edwards County. The plaintiff, Benny Leigh, a tenant farmer under a year-to-year oral lease, seeded 32 acres of clover on the land prior to its sale. The defendant, Charles Lynch, the new owner of the property, destroyed the clover some five months after plaintiff’s lease expired, but approximately two months before the crop would mature. The plaintiff maintained that under the doctrine of emblements he was entitled to reenter the premises and harvest the clover. He initiated this action to reсover income allegedly lost as a result of defendant’s action. The circuit court of Edwards County entered judgment for the defendant. The appellate court reversed (
The record discloses that, for 14 years under an oral year-to-year lease, the plaintiff, Benny Leigh, farmed prоperty in Edwards County owned by Ralph and Betty Troup. In January 1982, plaintiff seeded clover on 32 acres of the Troup property in a cover crop of wheat. This clover could have produced a crop of stubble hay in August or September of 1982 after the wheat had been harvested. It would have matured to produce a crop of seed and hay in July 1983.
On September 1, 1982, plaintiff received written notice that the Troups were selling the property and that his tenancy would be terminated as of January 1, 1983. On October 21, 1982, the Troups completed the sale of their property to thе defendant, Charles Lynch. In February 1983, the plaintiff sent a letter to Ralph Troup stating that the clover crop was his and that he intended to harvest it. In May or June of 1983, the defendant destroyed the 32 acres of clover. The plaintiff then filed a one-count complaint in the circuit court of" Edwards County, seeking damages for his loss of income.
During the bench trial of this cause, the plaintiff testified that he did not harvest the stubble hay in 1982, because he had no need for it, and because the hay and seed he intended to harvest in July 1983 would have brought a better price. The court found that the plaintiff was entitled to the net profit he would have realized had the clover not been destroyed. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff in the amount of $3,000, based upon the market prices for the respective crops and the projected yield of the clover.
The defendant promptly filed a motion to vacate the judgment. After examining the pleadings and hearing the arguments of counsel, the trial court set aside its initial judgment and entered judgment for the defendant. In its order, the court found that the defendant, not the plaintiff, had been entitled to possession of the property for the time periods involvеd. The court also found the planting of a two-year crop to be irrelevant to the issue of termination of the plaintiff’s farm tenancy. The plaintiff appealed this decision.
The appellate court reversed the trial court’s final decision and entered judgment for the plaintiff in the аmount of $3,000. (
Section 9 — 206 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “[i]n order to terminate tenancies from year to year of farm lands *** notice to quit shall be given in writing not less than 4 months prior to the end of the year of letting.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1983, ch. 110, par. 9—206.) There is no question that the plaintiff received proper notice of the termination of his tenancy.
Illinois has long recognized the right of a tenant who holds farmland for an indeterminate period to remove from the land, after the termination of his tenancy, the emblements which he plantеd prior to such termination. (Keays v. Blinn (1908),
In this action, we must determinе to what extent, if any, this doctrine should be applied to clover, a perennial crop. The plaintiff urges that this right should be extended to allow a tenant farmer to harvest the first mature crop from any perennial planted prior to the termination of his tenancy. We cannot agreе.
Traditionally, the doctrine of emblements applied only to fructus industriales, or any species “which ordinarily repays the labour by which it is produced, within the year in which that labour is bestowed, *** things yielding present annual profit ***.” (Graves v. Weld (1833), 5 Barn. & Adol. 105, 118-19, 110 Eng. Rep. 731, 736; see also Hendrixson v. Cardwell (1876),
Over time, the concept of fructus industriales and of emblements expanded to include growing crops which owe their perfection and abundance to the tenant farmer’s initiative, labor, and expense during the agricultural year. (Gentry v. Alexаnder (1949),
The appellate court classified the clover crop in question as fructus industriales based upon the plaintiff’s intent or purpose for planting the crop. (
We recognize that the owner of land has a right to the undisturbed occupation and enjoyment of his property (Cuneo v. City of Chicago (1942),
It has been held that under the doctrine of emblemerits, the tenant is entitled to only one crop after the termination of his tenancy. (Falk v. Amsberry (1977),
In shaping a policy to protect the respective interests of the property owner and the tenant, we find the modified emblements doctrine stated in sеction 121 of the Restatement of Property (1936) helpful. Restatement (Second) of Property does not address this subject in the same detail as does the Restatement of Property in section 121, but includes a brief discussion of the right of the tenant to harvest crops after the termination of the tenаncy in section 12.3, comment h.
Section 121 of the Restatement of Property provides:
“Except when the conduct of the owner of a possessory estate for life ends his estate, such owner, or the personal representative of such deceased owner, has the privilege to cultivate and to harvest such annual crops as werе planted prior to the event which ended the estate for life.” (Restatement of Property sec. 121, at 379 (1936).)
Comment f to section 121 defines what constitute annual crops as follows:
“Annual crops — What constitute. The term ‘annual crops,’ as used in this Section connotes not only those croрs which have to be placed in the ground each year, such as cotton, wheat, barley, rye, corn, peas, beans, hemp, flax, parsnips, carrots, turnips, potatoes and melons but also those crops as to which the produce in any single year is principally the result of the attention and care exerted in that same agricultural year, such as hops and sugar cane. Artichokes and asparagus are typically not ‘annual crops.’ ” (Restatement of Property sec. 121, comment f, at 382 (1936).)
The significant difference between this definition and the traditional conceрt of emblements is found in the expansion of the application of the doctrine to plants that may not ordinarily be considered fructus industriales or emblements, but which, nonetheless, produce an annual crop as the result of the attention and care exerted by the tenant. However, under the requirement of the Restatement definition, this attention and care must be exerted by the tenant in the agricultural year in which the crop is produced. Presumably, under this definition, that which may properly be considered as a perennial may, nonetheless, produce an annual crop thаt may be removed by the tenant after the expiration of the tenancy, if the production of that crop results from the tenant’s attention and care in the same agricultural year.
In our case no crop of hay or seed was produced as a result of any attention, care or expenditure by the tenant within the definition of comment f of section 121. The effort and expenditure by the tenant that resulted in the crop now claimed was expended in January 1982, when the crop of clover was seeded in a stand of winter wheat. A crop of stubble hay, although of low quality, was available to be harvested in the fall of 1982, but the tenant chose not to harvest it. There is no evidence that the crop of hay and seed now claimed by the tenant was the result of work or expenditure by him before the date that the tenant received notice of the termination of the tenancy in the agricultural year during which it matured.
The cases cited by plaintiff in support of his position do not require a different result, since they either deal with a different perennial crop, a statutory right of emblements, or a different standard for determining what crops will be included within the doctrine.
The Montana case of N Bar N Land & Livestock Co. v. Taylor (1933),
The decision in Falk v. Amsberry (1977),
Finally, in Gentry v. Alexander (1949),
The circuit court of Edwards County was correct in entering judgment for the defendant. For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the appellate court in this action is reversed, and judgment for the defendant entered in the circuit court of Edwards County is affirmed.
Appellate court reversed; circuit court affirmed.
