130 Minn. 248 | Minn. | 1915
On the twenty-seventh of September, 1912, plaintiff and one J. Nyberg entered into a written contract whereby the latter undertook to seed, cultivate and harvest plaintiff’s farm in Wilkin county for the next season. Nyberg was to plant suoh crops as plaintiff might direct, but plaintiff was to furnish the seed and pay one-half of the machine bill for stack threshing. The contract contained this provision in respect to plowing to be done by Nyberg, viz., “and after taking off the crops to plow immediately in a good and proper manner so much and such parts of said farm suitable for a succeeding crop as shall be plowed at the time the party of the first part (Nyberg) takes possession thereof .* * * and is to plow all land back which is plowed when possession is taken.” Nyberg was also to work out the road tax assessed against the farm. There were provisions that Nyberg was not to remove anything raised upon the farm, and that the title and possession of all the products or crops should remain in plaintiff until a division and until all the conditions of the contract were fully performed by Nyberg. Nyberg was to deliver all grain to the nearest station free of charge. When all of the stipulations of the contract were performed by Nyberg, plaintiff, upon a reasonable demand, was to deliver to him one-half of the crop raised. The contract was properly filed. Nyberg seeded and harvested a quantity of wheat and under- the terms of the contract hauled it to defendant’s elevator. For one-half thereof, storage tickets were issued to plaintiff. But he claims that without his consent, and before Nyberg had performed his contract, defendant converted the other half to which plaintiff held title as security. He sued and recovered a verdict for $164.04, and interest, the amount which he claimed the wheat secured. Defendant appeals from the order denying its motion in the alternative for judgment or a new trial.
There can be no controversy upon the proposition that the title to the wheat was in plaintiff at the time it was stored, and that defendant had both constructive and actual knowledge of that fact. The main question litigated, and determined adversely to defendant, was the alleged consent by plaintiff to a sale of the wheat by Nyberg
The court rightly declined to hold, as a matter of law, that plaintiff waived his right to the wheat as security and consented to accept the personal promise of defendant’s agent to hold out $164.04 of the proceeds from the sale of the wheat for plaintiff’s use. Defendant’s agent was not plaintiff’s. For that reason, Partridge v. Minnesota & D. Ele. Co. 75 Minn. 496, 78 N. W. 85; Winter & Ames Co. v. Atlantic Ele. Co. 88 Minn. 196, 92 N. W. 955; New England Mortg. Sec. Co. v. Great Western Ele. Co. 6 N. Dak. 407, 71 N. W. 130, and Peterson v. St. Anthony & Dak. Elevator Co. 9 N. Dak. 55, 81 N. W. 59, 81 Am. St. 528, cited by defendant, appear inapplicable. The case of Scofield v. National Ele. Co. 64 Minn. 527, 67 N. W. 645, turns upon a matter of pleading, and is not in point.
Defendant attempted to reduce the damages by proving that plaintiff’s interest or lien at the time of the alleged conversion amounted to less than $164.04. It was conceded that had plaintiff not waived his rights, he was to be reimbursed for $14.04 road taxes which Nyberg failed to work out, and also for $1.50 per acre of so much of the 25 acre fall plowing, upon the farm when Nyberg took possession, as was not plowed by Nyberg after the harvest of 1913. Nyberg testified to plowing 6 acres of the 25. This was denied. The matter was for the jury, but through some oversight it was not submitted. This error might be rectified, were defendant in a position to now complain. But we have come to the conclusion that a matter of greater consequence should have been submitted to the jury. The disagreement between plaintiff and Nyberg arose chiefly over 7 5 acres of breaking, or, as plaintiff termed it, summer fallow. It appears that plaintiff, during the summer of 1912 after he became
But we conclude that evidence whether this 75 acres of breaking or summer fallow was regarded as plowed, when the contract was made, was admissible to clear up an ambiguity and to identify the land to be plowed after the harvest of 1913. Enough was proven to show that it was unusual to plant breaking in that locality without first back setting or plowing. And that plaintiff advised Nyberg to thoroughly disc the breaking rather than spring plow it before planting. It would seem reasonable that as to land which Nyberg, according to the usual course of husbandry, might needs plow before putting in the crop, he should not again plow after the harvest. It is also in evidence that considerable more labor and expense was involved in discing this 75 acres than in planting the same quantity of ordinary fall plowed land. Another circumstance- is worthy of notice. Nyberg’s contract ended September 27, 1913. Plowing generally continued for a month longer, and it seems doubtful whether the parties could have contemplated that this whole farm including these 75 acres of breaking should have been plowed before Nyberg surrendered his possession." We are of the opinion that, when the condition of plaintiff’s farm on September 27, 1912, and the surrounding circumstances were shown, a doubt arose as to the application of the provision in respect to what land was to be left plowed at the'termination of the contract. This doubt should have been removed by admitting testimony of the understanding of the
We see no other questions meriting attention. Nyberg was not a party to the action, and claims asserted by him against plaintiff, but not secured by the wheat in question, cannot be here adjusted or offset. Only insofar as such collateral matters tend to corroborate or refute the contentions of the litigants upon the issues of this lawsuit may they be received. The court did not unduly restrict defendant in that respect.
The order appealed from is affirmed insofar as it denies judgment in defendant’s favor, but is reversed insofar as it denies a new trial.