Edwards v. Eveler

SMITH, P. J.

The defendant, Mrs. Eveler, is the widow of Henry Eveler, deceased, the latter being the son of Bernard Eveler, also deceased. The son with his wife, the defendant, under some kind of an arrangement not disclosed, by the record before us, occupied a farm of one hundred and seventy-three acres, of which the father was owner, for some eighteen years prior -to his death, which preceded that of his father. The defendant, Mrs. Eveler, has continued to occupy the farm ever since the death of her husband. She has exercised the exclusive dominion over it, renting it to tenants and receiving the rents and profits thereof.

*408Eor the cropping season of 1898 and 1899 defendant, Mrs. Eveler, rented the farm to her co-defendant, Keller, for one-half of the produce thereof, which was to consist of corn, wheat and oats. The wheat and oats which were produced were cut and threshed and the share of Mrs. Eveler delivered to her. After this, on August 10, 1899, the farm was sold by the executor of the estate of the father and at which sale the plaintiff became the purchaser, receiving shortly thereafter a deed conveying to him the legal title. On the twenty-fourth of August, following, the plaintiff brought this action under the claim and delivery statute to recover the possession of the wheat, oats and corn grown on said farm, which had been and was to be delivered to Mrs. Eveler in payment of the rent by her tenant, Keller. The wheat and oats were delivered to the plaintiff under the writ, but the corn was not. It was not seized at all.

The trial resulted in a judgment for the defendants and the plaintiff has appealed.

The principal ground upon which the plaintiff assails the judgment is that the trial court erred in its refusal to allow him to take a nonsuit. But, on turning to the bill of exceptions, we find that the only motion filed by him relating to the nonsuit was that in which he moved the court to set it aside. If it be taken as a motion for a new trial, as plaintiff contends it should, then we do not find that the plaintiff assigned as one of the grounds thereof the action of the court in refusing to allow him to take a nonsuit. No reference is made in the motion to such action of the court. Not only this, but we do not find that the bill of exceptions anywhere recites the fact that the plaintiff proposed or asked leave of the court to take a nonsuit and that such leave was disallowed, or that there was any exception preserved to the. action of the court in refusing to allow such nonsuit to be taken. It is thus seen that if the court did refuse to *409allow the nonsuit, that its action was not preserved, so as to be the subject of review by us.

As far as we are able to understand, from an examination of the record, the defendant, Mrs. Eveler, after the death of her husband was in possession of the farm without any semblance of right. It nowhere appears that she had any license or other authority from the father after the death of the son, or from the father’s executor, to occupy the farm. "While so occupying it she rented it to Keller who produced thereon the crops claimed by the plaintiff. Under the well-established law of this state we can not discover that the acquisition of the legal title to the farm by plaintiff’s purchase and deed gave him any title to the crops grown or growing thereon. Mrs. Keller was in the exclusive occupancy of the farm when the crops were planted and when they matured. When the plaintiff brought his suit the wheat and oats had matured and the share of Mrs. Eveler delivered to her. As previously stated, it does not appear that the corn was taken out of her possession under the writ.

The description of the corn in the complaint was, that plaintiff was entitled to the possession * * of corn of about the value of one hundred dollars.” This description, it seems to us, is so vague and indefinite as to amount to no description at all. How could the officer who was required to execute the order of delivery identify the corn the plaintiff claimed? No wonder he made no seizure of any corn under the order. A judgment for the corn by such description would be ineffective and could not be enforced. Cobbey on Eeplevin, see. 1099.

It may be doubted whether or not, under our statute, there was a triable issue in the case as to the corn, since there was no seizure. Haeger v. Marcus, 5 Mo. App. 565.

The parties themselves, however, by their instructions submitted issues in respect to it. The jury were told by an *410instruction for plaintiff that if the property described in-tbe petition belonged to him at the time of tbe commencement of tbe suit, and that be was then entitled to tbe possession thereof, and that it was wrongfully detained by defendants, etc., to find for plaintiff. And for tbe defendants, tbe court instructed that if tbe corn was standing and growing on tbe land in possession of defendants at tbe time tbe same was planted, and bad been in their possession ever since and now, and that plaintiff was not in possession, be was not entitled to recover. Tbe instructions given for plaintiff were quite favorable and those given for defendants were not obnoxious to any serious objection.

Mrs. Eveler was in possession of'the land at tbe time tbe crops were planted and continued so until after they were matured and severed. It would seem, therefore, that under tbe adjudications in this state tbe plaintiff, who bad in tbe meantime by. purchase acquired tbe legal title, but not tbe actual possession, did not thereby acquire tbe title to such crops. McAllister v. Lawler, 32 Mo. App. 91; Adams v. Leip, 71 Mo. 597; Jenkins v. McCay, 50 Mo. 348.

Tbe plaintiff objects that there was no evidence introduced justifying tbe verdict of the jury as to tbe damages assessed for tbe detention of tbe property. It is a sufficient answer to this to say that tbe defendant, Mrs. Eveler, testified, without objection, that she was damaged in tbe sum of one hundred dollars. As to this, she was fully cross-questioned by plaintiff. There was no contradictory evidence offered. Tbe finding of the jury was for a much less amount. It will not do to say, therefore, that there was no evidence to sustain tbe verdict.

Tbe value of tbe wheat and oats taken under tbe writ was admitted by tbe answer. There was no issue as to tbe value of them. It was not necessary for tbe defendants to give the petition and answer in evidence. These pleadings were read to the jury and were therefore before them. *411Where a party desires to get the benefit of an admission contained in an abandoned pleading he is required to introduce it in evidence; but this is not such a case. The value of the property taken and not returned, as found by the jury, was that admitted by the pleadings. The pleadings were conclusive as to value.

The judgment is for the right party and must be affirmed.

Ellison, J., concurs; Gill, J., not sitting.