Hansen v. Dennison

Baker, J.

Appellaiit recovered judgment, at the March term, 1879, of the Jackson Circuit Court, against Martin B. Dennison, on certain promissory notes, for $2,917.79. At the same term a mortgage securing said notes was foreclosed, and a decree entered for the sale of the mortgaged premises. On the 30th day of June following, the mortgaged land was sold by the master, and the proceeds thereof were applied to the payment of said indebtedness, leaving due and unpaid on the judgment the sum of $1,023.75. An execution had been issued on the judgment at law, and placed in the hands of the sheriff on the 3rd day of April, and on the 1st day of July, 1879, this execution was levied upon one hundred and thirty-five acres of wheat, in stacks and in shocks, and two mules and two horses, as the property of the defendant in the execution. All of this property was claimed by apjmllees, sons of said Martin B. Dennison, and they gave notice for a trial of the right of property. The controversy seems to be confined to the wheat, and a trial was had upon appeal, at the December term, 1879, of the circuit court, which resulted in a verdict and judgment adjudging the wheat in question to appellees. The claim of appellees appears to be based upon a certain chattel mortgage; and a further claim, the share of said Martin B. Dennison in said wheat, had not been set off to him at the time of the levy, and was not liable to execution until after it had been so set off. The evidence shows that Martin B. I -unison, in August, 1878, rented his farm, on which the wheat was raised, to appellees, for one year, on halves; he to furnish seed, teams and utensils; they to perform the labor, and the crops to be equally divided, the wheat to be measured out at the thresher; that lie complied with his part of the agreement,-and they put in the wheat, and it was harvested and part stacked and part in shocks, on the land where it grew, at the time of the levy.

The promissory note for $1,207, made by Martin It. Dennison to appellees, and the chattel mortgage executed by him to them, both dated February 5, 1879, were properly admitted in evidence. The note was due one year after date, and the stipulation in the mortgage was, “ that if said Martin R. Dennison shall, on or before the fifth day of February, 1879, pay, or cause to be paid, to, etc., the sum of $1,207, together with the interest that may accrue thereon, at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, from the 5th day of February, 1879, until paid, according to the tenor of one promissory note due and payable one year after date to Edward Dennison and James Dennison, or order, for the sum last aforesaid, with interest at eight per cent, per annum from date; then, etc.”

The identity of the note admitted in evidence with that described in the mortgage, is evident from a consideration of the whole of the stipulation quoted, its several clauses being taken and construed together, and from a consideration of subsequent portions of the mortgage, such as the provision for the retention of the property by the mortgagor until the day of payment, the insecurity clause and other similar provisions.

It would be sheer nonsense to insert such provisions if the mortgage debt fell due the very day the mortgage was executed; and it would be preposterous to provide for the payment of interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from the 5th day of February, 1879, to the 5th day of February, 1879. The object of the statute in regard to chattel mortgages is to give notice to creditors and third parties, and we think no one, as the result of an ingenuous examination of this mortgage, would be misled as to the date of the maturity of the note therein described.

As to the other point of objection made to the introduction of the mortgage, that it was an attempt to create a lien upon property not in existence at the time the mortgage was executed, it is sufficient to say the evidence shows the wheat was put in the ground in the fall of 1878, and the mortgage was executed on the 5th day of February, 1879, and was upon “ the undivided one-lialf of the wheat and other crops now growing” on the land designated. The wheat crop, at the latter date, not only had a potential but an actual and substantial existence, and was a proper subject of conveyance. The note and mortgage were properly in evidence, but, of course, liable to impeachment if fraudulent against creditors.

The evidence on this question of fraud we do not care to discuss, as such discussion is now unnecessary in the view we take of the case, and as that issue must be submitted to another j ury.

Upon the trial, the Court refused to give the following instruction, asked by appellant: “The Court instructs you that the claimants of said property, in order to recover in this cause, must prove to the jury by a preponderance of evidence, that the property in question was and is the property of said claimants, James and Edward Dennison.” In a trial of the right of property it devolves on the claimant to affirmatively show he is the owner. Marshall v. Cunningham, 13 Ill. 20; Craig v. Peak, 22 Ib. 185. Appellant had a right to have the jury instructed upon whom the burden of proof was imposed; and as that information was not afforded by any of the instructions given in the case, it was error to refuse this.

Every conveyance of property, real or personal, made for the purpose of delaying, hindering, or defrauding creditors, is by the statute of Frauds and Perjuries declared to be void as against such creditors. If a conveyance is made with such fraudulent intent and object, it is not purged of the fraud because there may also have been some other purpose in view, such as the discharge of a debt due the grantee. Murry v. Bostwick, 13 Ill. 409; Reed v. Noxon, 48 Ill. 323; Boies v. Henney, 32 Ib. 131. We think, then, the 5th instruction given for appellees was erroneous, and was calculated to mislead the" jury, as it informed them that a debtor “ may pay one" creditor in full and pay the other’s nothing and the transaction would be upheld in lawr,” wholly ignoring the circumstance that the very object of such transaction might be to delay and defraud others.

Assuming, for the sake of the argument., the mortgage to be fraudulent and void as to creditors, and that Martin R. Dennison was to have one half of the wheat crop, yet the evidence shows the wheat was to be delivered to him at the thresher, and the levy was made while the wheat was in the stack and in shocks.

Did he at that time have such interest and property in the wheat as could be levied upon? The solution of this question depends upon the relation existing between him and appellees. If the relation of landlord and tenant existed, then at the time of the levy the property in the wheat was all in appellees, and it could not be levied on as the property of their father. But, if appellees and their father were tenants in common of the crop, then the sheriff could make a levy and take possession of the property, and sell the interest of the father therein. It is a question of intention, and this intention must be gathered from the circumstances of the case, the matter of possession being of controlling importance. In Alwood v. Ruckman, 21 Ill. 200, it was said: “ When the facts are doubtful as to whether the possession and control are absolute and exclusive in the tenant, or jointly in the owner of the land and the cultivator of the crop, the inclination will be and should always be in favor of the latter conclusion.” In Creel v. Kirkham, 47 Ib. 344, it was said: “ It has been held that if land be let xxpon shares, for a single crop only, that does not amount to a lease, and the possession remains in the owner. The occupant is, however, a tenant in common with the owner of the growing crop, and continues so until the tenancy be severed by division. But if the contract be that the lessee possess the land, with the xxsual privilege of exclusive enjoyment, it is the creation of a tenancy for a year, although the land be taken to be cultivated on the shares.” And the court fui’ther there said: “This rule seems to recognize the true distinction between a tenancy for a term and a mere joint undertaking for the cultivation of a single crop on the shares.” It is clear that in Dixon v. Niccolls, 39 Ill. 372, and Sargent v. Courrier, 66 Ib. 245, the tenant had exclxisive possession.

On his cross-examination, Edward Dennison testified: “ The agreement was to last until the crops were made for that year, until the next August. Father remained on the farm; he owned the cows, sheep and other stock; he lived in town part of the time. Mother and youngest sister and brothers lived in town. Father made the farpa his home.” James Dennison testified among other things: “ Father was to live on the farm, help oversee and do chores.”

There is considerable other testimony, some of it even stronger than this, tending to show Martin It. Dennison did not give up to appellees the exclusive possession and control of the farm, and, as we have already seen, in February, 1879, he mortgaged to them an undivided one-half of the wheat; all parties to the transaction thereby recognizing a moiety of the wheat as his property. In the 6th instruction given for appeilees, the court said to the jury that when a party rents land to another and gives such others possession of such land, and is to receive, as rent, one-half the crop in the half bushel, that then the title belongs to him who has raised the crop until it is threshed and measured, and until this division is made the landlord’s part is not subject to execution.

This instruction is not framed with reference to the circumstances of the case on trial, and is expressed in abstract and general terms calculated to mislead. It also assumes as matter of fact, possession of the land had been given to appellees, instead of submitting that question to the jury. The ninthinstruction for appellees is also objectionable; it states a hypothetical case, but does notstate it fairly; it is not based on the evidence, as there is no testimony to show appellees were given “ entire possession and control of the farm.” It assumes to give a summary of the principal facts bearing upon the issue as to the legal relationship existing- between the owner of the land and the cultivators of the soil, but it directs attention only to those favorable to appellees, leaving wholly out of view other facts in proof of equal importance, having a contrary tendency.

If we exclude the circumstances of exclusive possession and control, a statement of which circumstance is not justified by the evidence, there is no fact stated in the hypothetical case that is of nearly the probative force of the single omitted fact, that both the owner of the land and appellees had recognized the property in one-half the growing wheat to he in such owner, by the execution and acceptance of a mortgage and conveyance thereof.

The seventh Instruction is somewhat involved, and difficult to understand. It assumes to state to the jury all the modes in which a witness may be impeached; and it maybe doubted whether a jury would understand the phrase — “direct contradiction ” — to include acts and expressions out of court, contradictory of the claim now pressed. \It then proceeds — “You cannot go beyond this and determine for yourselves that other circumstances not in legal, contemplation, or aside from tiic evidence, tend to impeach the witness; thus leaving it uncertain whether all modes of impeachment not enumerated were excluded, or whether it was left to the jury to determine for themselves what other circumstances, in legal contemplation tended to impeach witnesses.

For the reasons suggested in this opinion, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.