25 Cal. 59 | Cal. | 1864
The motion for a new trial was properly overruled. The plaintiff failed to designate the grounds upon which he relied, either in his notice or statement. It is stated in the bill of exceptions that the plaintiff in open Court moved for a new trial, and that the motion was entertained by consent. Even if the consent of the parties could be deemed a waiver of a notice of intention to move for a new trial, it did not waive the statement, in some proper form, of the grounds of the motion. (See Stats. 1863, p. 643.) There is nothing upon which the Court below can act on the hearing of the motion, unless the grounds of the motion are designated.
The statement on motion for a new trial is of no avail as a statement on appeal, for the reason that the grounds upon which the plaintiff intends to rely are not therein set forth. This leaves for examination the errors appearing upon the judgment roll, and the only ones assigned are those set forth in the bills of exceptions.
The point mainly relied upon by the appellant is the error of the Court in excluding as evidence the instrument offered as a lease of the lands in controversy, executed by the plaintiff’s intestate and the defendant. The alleged error can be reviewed upon a bill of exceptions as well as upon a motion for a new trial. (Rice v. Gashire, 13 Cal. 53; Brown v. Tolles, 7 Cal. 399.) In many cases it is preferable, and we think it the better practice, that the party complaining of the exclu
The plaintiff contends that the instrument offered in evidence by him is a lease, and the defendant insists that it is a cropping contract, which constituted the parties tenants in common of the land and of the crops during the time mentioned in the instrument.
The plaintiff’s intestate, Manuel Vera, “demised, leased, and, to farm, let ” the premises unto Preston, “ to have and to hold” the same from the first day of December, 1861, to the first day of October, 1863; and Preston covenanted not to “ underlet the said premises, or yield the possession thereof to any” but Manuel Vera, without his consent in writing, and to properly cultivate and plant the land at his own cost and expense, and to deliver thereon to Manuel Vera, on the premises, one sixth of all the crops as soon as harvested. Is this instrument a lease, or is it only a contract for the services of Preston, to be performed on the land, and for which he is to receive as compensation a portion of the crops he may produce ?
It is competent for the parties covenanting for the use, occupation and cultivation of land, and the payment therefor out of the crops produced, to execute a lease in the usual form, or they may enter into an agreement constituting them tenants in common of the crops, and at the same time may provide that the owner or the occupant may hold the possession of the land, or that both may be tenants in common of the land during the time mentioned in the agreement. It is the general rule that, where a term is created, the possession given to the occupant, and the produce agreed to be paid is to be paid as rent; then the instrument is regarded as a lease. (Taylor, Land, and Ten. sec. 24.) It is also a general rule that
In the last two cases, and the authorities therein cited, there was no question as to which of them (the owner or the occupant) was entitled to the possession of the land under the agreement.
The character of the instrument must be determined upon a consideration of all its terms and provisions, and the Court will give it such a construction as will carry into effect the intention of the parties, without regard to the technical terms employed. Although words are used which, if disconnected from other parts of the instrument, would import a lease, they will not be so construed if the evident intention was merely to make a cropping contract. Nor, on the other hand, will the instrument be so construed as to deprive the occupant of the position of a tenant of the land, if from the whole instrument it is apparent that the parties intended he should enjoy the exclusive possession of the premises.
In Putnam v. Wise, Mr. Justice Co wen says: “The true test seems to lie in the question whether there be any provision, in whatever form, for dividing the specific products of the premises. If there be, a tenancy in common arises, at least in such products as are to be dividedand that case is cited on that point, with approbation, in Bernal v. Hovious, 17 Cal. 544.
The doctrine was deduced by the learned Judge from what he understood to be the test adopted by Mr. Chief Justice Nelson, in Caswell v. Districh, 15 Wend. 379, and that principle has been acted upon and affirmed, almost without question, in a number of cases in New York. (Dinehart v. Wilson, 15 Barb. 595 ; and Harrower v. Heath, 19 Barb. 337.) In all the cases in New York, affirming on this point Putnam v. Wise, and in Bernal v. Hovious, the question was merely who was entitled to the possession of the crop, not whether the owner or the occupant was in possession of the land, not whether the
The two principles deducible from those cases are these: First—If the agreement contains terms which by themselves would import a lease, and other terns which provide for a division of the crops, and it is doubtful which it is—a lease or a cropping contract—it will be deemed a cropping contract, by reason of a division of the crops; and second, where the agreement provides for a division of the crops between the owner and occupant, they are held to be tenants in common of the crop. It cannot be maintained, upon those authorities, and certainly not upon principle, that a lease, in the usual form of a demise, for a term of years, with covenants sufficient to give the lessee the exclusive possession of the land during the time, and to require him to yield up the possession at the end of that term, shall not be a lease, and the occupant shall not be a tenant, but shall be a mere servant of the owner, because the parties have made provision for a division of some portion or all of the crops that may be produced. The term division, as applied to the crops, has no more forcible signification in aid of the interpretation of the instrument, than has the word demise, when employed in connection with the land.
Mr. Justice Co wen, in Putnam v. Wise, cites with approbation, Woodfall, (Land, and Ten.,) who says that the most proper and authentic form of words may be overcome by a contrary intent appearing in the deed of demise. No reason can be assigned, why the same rule of construction should not be applicable to the words providing for a division of the crop.
In Stewart v. Doughty, 9 John. 108, the Court held that the instrument that by its terms would have amounted to a cropping contract, was a lease, because the premises were let for a term certain; and in Putnam v. Wise, it was said that the last case was “ very much shaken, if not entirely overturned,” by Caswell v. Districh, for in the last case the demise was for a year, certain.
In Harrower v. Heath, 19 Barb. 337, the Court held, upon the authority of the cases according with Putnam v. Wise,
The object of Courts in adopting rules of construction, is only to furnish means to so interpret the agreement as to ascertain the intention of the parties. The object is not to make a contract for the parties, nor to vary the terms of the covenants they have entered into; nor is it to arbitrarily insert a covenant they have not agreed to.
Where it plainly appears that the parties have made a lease, the Court will not declare it not to be a lease simply because the parties have inserted a covenant that more appropriately belongs to a contract of a different character. In the cases we have cited, the Courts were endeavoring to ascertain the intention of the parties; and having ascertained it, they declared the rights of the parties under the contract, as they made it, so far as the same were in issue.
There is certainly no rule of law, so absolute in its nature, as to prevent the occupant of land, under a contract which constitutes him a tenant in common with the owner in the crops, from having as entire a control over the premises during the term, if the parties so agree, as a tenant covenanting to pay a money rent would have. In other words, from being a tenant of the land under a lease, and at the same túne a tenant in common of the crop, or of some part of it. Such agreements are constantly made, and it never occurs to the parties, and they do not intend, that the tenant is changed into a servant of the lessor, because the lessor receives a portion or all of his compensation, for the use of the land, in some uncertain quantity of the products of the land.
In Chandler v. Thurston, 10 Pick. 205, where the contract was veiy similar to that in Putnam v. Wise, the Court said
“A lease,” as defined by Bouvier, “is a contract for the possession and profits of land on one side, and a recompense of rent, or other income, on thé otheror “ it is a conveyance of lands and tenements to a person for life, for years, or at will, in consideration of a return of rent or other recompense.” In Hunt v. Comstock, 15 Wend. 667, where Comstock purchased a tract of land from Hunt, and gave him a mortgage, and “ let ” to him the house and garden with certain privileges, the Court adjudged it to be a lease, though there was no reservation of rent. If a reservation of rent, or some benefit or recompense equivalent to rent, is deemed necessary, in order to constitute a contract a lease, the covenant to pay or deliver a portion of - the crop, amounts in every sense to a recompense for the use and occupation of the land, as fully as would a covenant to pay money, or a certain amount of the crops, or to improve the premises, or keep them in repair, or to pay the taxes, or perform labor for the lessor, all of which have been held good, as a reservation of rent. It is apparent from the opinion of the Court in Caswell v. Districh—the case upon which the extreme doctrine in New York was founded— that the Court did not intend to destroy what was plainly a lease, and convert it into a mere contract for work and labor, because it provided for a division of the crops; for Mr. Justice
It clearly appears to us that the parties in this case intended to make a lease, and that the instrument executed by them was a lease; that its effect as such was not destroyed by their having contracted for the payment to the’lessor of a portion of the specific crops to be produced, and that that covenant was an agreement to pay the rent of the premises out of the crops.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.