82 Mo. App. 487 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
It is the well-settled rule of law in this state that where a lessor fails to give possession of the leased premises, the measure of damages is the difference- between the actual rental value and the rent reserved. Hughes v. Hood, 50 Mo. 350; Huiest v. Marx, 67 Mo. App. 418.
But this rule is without application in the present case for here the evidence tends to show that the plaintiff and defendant entered into a verbal agreement by which the l-atter agreed to furnish the former 50 acres of corn land for the cropping season of 1898, to be cultivated on the shares. There was some evidence adduced which tended to show that the plaintiff, in the month of March, entered upon the land, cut the corn stalks standing thereon and while engaged in breaking it up, preparatory to planting, the defendant entered and forcibly drove him therefrom; so that he was thereby prevented from cultivating it. It was not in terms proved that the defendant formally put the plaintiff in possession- of the land; yet, there were facts proved which would fairly justify the inference 'that the latter went to work on the land with the permission of the former. As to whether there was a contract by which the land was let on the shares, or whether there was a non-compliance therewith by the defendant were issues of fact which should have been left to -the jury.
The vital question arising on the record is that respecting the measure of damages. Under the agreement, the plaintiff was not the tenant of the defendant. He was -á mere cropper for the season, without any interest in the land, or possession thereof, beyond the mere naked right to enter the same to perform the labor which was required under the agreement. Moser v. Lower, 48 Mo. App. 85; Warner v. Hoisington, 42
In the well-reasoned and somewhat analagous case of Taylor v. Bradley, 39 N. Y. 129, it was said: “To my mind the only rule which can be prescribed, and the only rule which will do justice to the parties is, that the plaintiff is entitled to the value of his contract. He was entitled to its performance; it is broken; he is deprived of his adventure; what was this opportunity which the contract had apparently secured to him worth? To reap the benefit of it, he must incur expense, submit to labor, and appropriation of his stock. His damages are what he lost by being deprived of his chance of profit.” And to this effect 'are other respectable authorities. Hoy v. Gronoble, 34 Pa. St. 9; Wolf v. Studebaker, 65 Pa. St. 461; McClure v. Thorpe, 68 Mich. 33; 2 Sedgwick on Dam., sec. 624.
The damages were fixed by the law of the agreement the moment it was broken. Wolf v. Studebaker, ante. The damages for the breach of the agreement must be ascertained by proving the true value of the right to cultivate the defendant’s land during the said cropping season on the shares, as agreed. It is competent to prove such value by resorting to the judgment of men whose knowledge of the land and
At the trial, the plaintiff called several witnesses, who were farmers and well acquainted with the land in question, and asked them what amount of corn ought it to have produced, with average cultivation, in the year 1898. The court refused to allow the question to be answered, on the ground that it was incompetent for the reason that the measure of damages in the case was the difference between the rent specified in the agreement and the actual rental value of the land. This, in the light of the authorities already referred to, was an erroneous view of the law.
The court rejected the plaintiff’s offer to prove the quantity of corn -that was produced on the land in the year covered, by his agreement. This, we think, was error. Juries
Whether the breach of the agreement consisted in the failure of the defendant to allow plaintiff in the first instance to enter upon the land for the purpose of preparing it for cultivation, or whether after the plaintiff had entered upon the same and cut the corn stalks standing thereon -and begun to plow, defendant forcibly drove him from it and refused to allow him to cultivate it, is of no consequ-en-oe since the measure of damages would be substantially the same in either ease.
It seems to us that the statement of the case filed before the justice is sufficient.
It results that the judgment, which was for defendant, will be reversed and the cause remanded.