concurring: While I concur in the result of the court’s decision and agree that the trial court, sitting as a court of equity, had full power to settle the differences between the parties, and upon the facts and circumstances presented by the record herein reach the result which it did, I must respectfully dissent from that portion of the opinion which holds paragraph X of the contract invalid and unenforceable for the reasons stated. It was unnecessary for the court to determine the validity of this provision of the contract.
The crux of the appellants’ claim on this appeal is found in paragraph X of the contract which reads:
“Part X: It is agreed that in the event second parties [plaintiffs] fail to carry out any provision of this agreement or in the event first parties [defendants] shall deem themselves insecure, they shall have the right to terminate this contract within thirty (30) days by giving notice in writing of their intention to do so. And within 30 days from the date of service of said notice this contract shall be thereby terminated. That upon such termination second parties agree to vacate said premises forthwith and peacefully deliver possession thereof to first parties. That first parties may enter and take possession of said real estate, personal property and livestock, employ additional help and charge *334any necessary expense incident to operation of the farm until the First day of March following the date of said termination to second parties and deduct the total amount of said expense from any sum due and owing to second parties on said March First.” (Emphasis added.)
Of this provision in the contract the court says:
“. . . But on its face, such provision is rather unequal and overreaching.
No benefit whatever would be realized by plaintiffs for such work, and
the term ‘insecure’ as used in a farm contract may well be considered somewhat nebulous.” (Numbers added.)
From the foregoing language the only conclusion to be drawn is that paragraph X of the contract is of no force and effect in a court of equity for the two reasons given. These reasons will be treated in reverse order.
To say the insecurity clause in a farm contract, such as we have here, is “nebulous” and assign such description of the clause as a reason why paragraph X is unequal and overreaching, thus unenforceable in a court of equity, is in my opinion rather shocking.
Reading all of the provisions of the contract herein together, the validity of a provision authorizing termination of the contract in the event the defendants should deem themselves insecure seems obvious. The plaintiffs herein are not seeking a reformation of the contract, they assert the contract.
The provisions of the contract entered into in February, 1954, material herein, provide that the plaintiffs were to enter upon the land and make it their home during the term of the contract and furnish all necessary labor, machinery, implements, equipment and tools, and all oil, fuel, greases and repairs for machinery. They were to farm the land owned by the defendants and any and all land leased by the parties, including all pasture and hay land, under the general direction and supervision of the defendants. The contract specifically provided the plaintiffs were:
“. . . to harvest all crops; to mow pastures annually; to provide labor necessary to keep all buildings, fences and other improvements upon the above premises in good repair; to haul and scatter upon the fields, where most needed, all manure made and produced, to allow no obnoxious weeds to go to seed on said premises, sell or burn no straw, grass or corn stocks; furnish labor and equipment for cutting hedge into posts and wood, first parties to have the posts, second parties to have K of the wood; deliver to said farm at their own expense all materials, paints, fencing and supplies designated by first parties as necessary to repair buildings, build fences, paint or maintain the improvements; also deliver at their own expense, all fertilizer, seeds and feeds necessarily purchased for the feeding and care of all livestock maintained *335on the premises; perform or furnish all labor and equipment necessary for the proper care of all livestock on the farms and leased lands; deliver all produce to local market or selling point at the direction of the first parties and without cost to them; cooperate with first parties for the purposes of entering into any agreement requested by first parties, with the government relative to soil conservation, crop controls or improved farming operations. . . .”
The defendants furnished 560 acres of land in Labette County to the plaintiffs with appurtenances for one year commencing March 1, 1954, to March 1, 1955, and thereafter from year to year until one of the parties gave to the other, prior to the termination of any yearly period, ninety days’ notice in writing of an intention to terminate the contract.
The defendants agreed to put upon the premises a minimum of forty registered polled hereford cattle and one registered polled hereford bull, and give the plaintiffs a copy of a complete inventory of all livestock on the premises as of March Í, 1954; that all livestock was to be listed as inventory from year to year, and remain the property of the defendants and the plaintiffs were not to acquire any interest therein. The plaintiffs were required to perform all necessary labor to properly care for the livestock and, if necessary, hire and pay for any additional help needed in the care and maintenance of said livestock.
The plaintiffs were to be compensated for their services in the following manner:
“. . . any grain, hay and feed raised upon said premises and any hay, grain and feed raised upon any leased land and not used for feed to said livestock, shall be sold by first parties at the prevailing market prices and the proceeds shall be divided equally between the first and second parties, after deduction of the expense of seed, lime, fertilizer and taxes and insurance upon said real estate, and the rent on any leased lands, at the time of the settlement herein after provided for.”
The contract further provided that at the time of annual settlement the plaintiffs:
“. . . shall have from first parties [defendants] a sum of money equal to one half of the value of all calves, hogs and chickens, produced from said livestock during the year, less one 'half the cost of all feed purchased and not raised on said premises and fed to said livestock during contract year, and further less one half of all veterinary fees, medication, breeding and recording fees, advertising, sales cost, insurance and taxes upon all of livestock.
. . The Value of Registered cattle at the time of settlement shall be commercial market price, by weight and by pound, plus 20%, . . ."
The parties agreed the plaintiffs were to acquire no interest whatever in any of the livestock by reason of this contract, but that *336the increase, at the time of settlement, should serve only as a means of determining the amount of money to which the plaintiffs may be entitled at the time of settlement (see finding No. 3).
The plaintiffs agreed that all selling and purchasing was to be done only with the approval of the defendants, who should act as depository for all funds and proceeds from the sale of all farm products and livestock.
They agreed that March 1, 1955, was to be the date of settlement and that no settlement should be made prior to that date; that the plaintiffs would forbear the making of any demand or the bringing of any cause of action against the defendants until the settlement date or March 1 following any date of termination of this agreement.
It was agreed the plaintiffs were entitled to butcher for their own use one beef and one hog and divide the same equally with the defendants; and further that the plaintiffs were permitted to keep one milk cow which should be and remain the property of the plaintiffs; and that the plaintiffs were to have all the milk produced from said cow. The plaintiffs also received, free of charge, a gárden plot for their exclusive use.
A resort to the evidence presented, in accordance with the allegations of the defendants’ answer in this case, will show the obvious necessity and validity of the insecurity clause in the contract. Supplementing finding No. 3, the evidence discloses that the registered polled hereford cattle owned by the defendants on March 1, 1955, to be used as breeding stock under the terms of the contract, consisted of sixty cows and three bulls, also a large number of hogs. The following is from the abstract concerning defendant Mathis’ testimony:
“In the summer of 1955, he found a bull calf dead in the pasture and Weltmer-had made no mention of it; About September 10 he found cow No. 5, worth $500, dead in the pond; Weltmer had not mentioned it. He asked Weltmer to check the cows; subsequently Mathis checked them himself and found cow No. 47, worth $400, missing. Later discovered she was dead and decomposed in the' pasture;' Weltmer assured him he had checked the cattle that morning and they were all there.- Mathis found Cow' No.'73 dead and' decomposed. On the day the cattle were weighed, December 1 and 2, 1955, Cow No. 69 was missing. Mathis inquired and Weltmer told him she had been getting out; later Weltmer said that Mathis’ brother Harry had let her out through the- gate. Mathis later found the cow, worth $400, dead and tractor tracks around, her carcass indicated she' had been dragged into the ditch. Weltmer was unconcerned about it. On December. 6.two. of Mathis’, sows were found dead. He called Dr. Alter, *337who stated they had died from poison. The hogs were kept in a shed on the west side of the bam and did not have access to any other building. They were in a regular hog house. Weltmer was still living on the premises; Mathis asked him about the ailing hogs and he would not come out and look at them. Following December 1 and 2, when they were hauling cattle to be weighed, 4 of the calves died as a result of having contracted pneumonia during the cold, inclement weather. Weltmer permitted Mathis’ registered cows to be exposed to grade bulls. In fact, five. That was before Weltmer left and after he left seven more grade calves were dropped from the registered cows. The registered cattle were polled hereford cattle, the herd which Mathis started building in 1944. The difference between the value of a grade calf and a registered calf at the time Mathis commonly sold them, would vary from $100 to $200 per head. Weltmer also permitted several heifers to be bred prematurely. He refused to repair fences as required by contract, after materials were provided.”
The defendant Mathis upon finding the two dead sows on December 6th had a veterinarian examine these animals for the cause of death. It was found they died from rat poison containing warfarin which causes internal bleeding. The plaintiffs’ explanation was that they must have gotten into it in an old house where corn was being stored. The poison was used in this building to control the rats. Mathis’ testimony, above indicated, was that the hogs were never near this building.
Nowhere in the contract does it appear that the plaintiffs were liable for losses of breeding stock owned by ,the defendants and carried on the inventory.
The insecurity clause contained in paragraph X of the contract herein is similar to the insecurity clause in chattel mortgages where it has repeatedly been held to be valid. Under a clause in. a chattel mortgage providing that the mortgagee may take possession of the property if he deem himself insecure, it is immaterial whether the mortgagee has good cause to believe that he is insecure if he in fact deem himself to be so. (Thorp v. Fleming, 78 Kan. 237, 96 Pac. 470; Weldgrube v. Kerns; 111 Kan. 428, 207 Pac. 654; and Motor Equipment Co. v. McLaughlin, 156 Kan. 258, 269, 133 P. 2d 149.)
Conceivably, the court might require more,where the insecurity clause in a farm contract is asserted to terminate the contract than an absolute discretionary, power, as in the case of a chattel mortgage. A requirement that one act in good faith to terminate such contract may be imposed.. Rut this would place in issue the reasonableness, good faith or capriciousness of the defendant Mathis in *338terminating the contract under the insecurity clause. Could it be said upon the evidence heretofore quoted Mathis was acting unreasonably, in bad faith or capriciously in terminating the contract?
The court has been cited to no cases by either of the parties in which an insecurity clause in a farm contract has been considered, and my limited research has disclosed none. Certainly if a precedent is to be established on the point it should receive greater consideration by the court. The kind of farm tenancy contract declared void as against public policy by statute (G. S. 1949, 67-531 to 67-533, inch) is not presently before the court. The defendants placed a valuable registered herd of cattle in the possession of the plaintiffs, and they were free to bargain as they did by contract concerning the security of the defendants relative to this valuable personal property. The reasons for giving the defendants absolute discretion, if they deemed themselves insecure, are equally as strong as they are in chattel mortgage cases.
The first reason assigned by the court for the invalidity of paragraph X is that no benefit whatever would be realized by the plaintiffs for the work performed after the termination of the contract. The extent to which work was done in feeding and caring for the livestock was of benefit to the plaintiffs, since the trial court took the weight of the cattle as of March 1, 1956, presented by the accounting of Mathis showing the profits from all operations for the year, as the basis upon which to settle the parties’ differences (see finding No. 16). If the contract is to have force and effect, it was the plaintiffs’ obligation to spread the manure in connection with the feeding of the cattle and hogs, and also to properly keep the fences in repair during the year, before the plaintiffs were entitled to share in the profits on March 1, 1956, in accordance with the terms of the contract.
In my opinion, however, whether or not the plaintiffs received benefits from the work performed after the termination of the contract by the parties in December, 1955, is immaterial for the reason hereafter stated.
The theory upon which the plaintiffs presented their case is not clear from the petition or from the evidence. However, the position taken by counsel for the plaintiffs in his opening statement was as follows:
“. . . Our theory in this case is that they had this contract; that the contract was in full force and effect up until the time that they verbally agreed *339to rescind it, which was December the 1st, and at that time, under an oral contract between the parties hereto, they agreed to rescind this contract and settle their differences . . .”
The defendants’ theory was that the contract was binding; that negotiations to settle the differences between the parties ended in failure; that under the provisions of the contract the accounting was not due until the 1st day of March, 1956; and that by the terms and provisions of the contract they were entitled to its benefits, including specific enforcement of paragraph X. Upon this theory the defendants charged the plaintiffs with the sum of $2,124.38 shown by the defendants’ records to have been expended by the defendants for farm work between the time plaintiffs vacated the premises in compliance with the defendants’ notice to move and March 1, 1956. The trial court did not approve this item of expense and this is the basis of the defendants’ appeal.
The trial court found that the parties failed and neglected to abide and comply with all of the terms of the contract (finding No. 15) and that the attempted settlements were not in compliance with the provisions of the contract (finding No. 14). Looking beyond these findings to the evidence will give better insight into the conclusion ultimately reached by the trial court.
The parties through their respective counsel conducted negotiations for a period of time in which various accountings were submitted to each other, all of which were introduced in evidence, and as negotiations approached a culmination, the plaintiffs’ evidence indicates the parties made an oral agreement to weigh the livestock and make a complete settlement thereafter. Weltmer was to use his own truck and haul ninety-four head of cattle (not including the sixty cows and three bulls) and the hogs, which were raised on the premises under the terms of the contract, to Angola starting on December 1, 1955, have them weighed and deliver possession of the livestock to Mathis. Pursuant to this agreement Weltmer did haul and weigh the livestock on the 1st and 2nd days of December at Angola, one and one-half miles from the farm. Mathis denied that he agreed to pay any specific sum of money other than is provided in the written contract. Nevertheless, when the cattle were weighed each of the parties had a commission man present at the scales and they valued the cattle and hogs. Upon return of the cattle to the farm Mathis took possession of the livestock and assumed the responsibility of feeding and caring for such livestock.
*340Mathis had requested Weltmer to weigh the truck empty after each load of cattle was weighed, but he refused to do this and weighed the truck empty before the hauling started. At the time the truck was weighed empty it was dry and weighed 6,370 pounds. On December 1st and 2nd when the cattle were hauled, it was wet and muddy. Eleven scale tickets showed the empty weight of the truck used in the hauling as 6,370 pounds and five tickets showed the weight of the truck as 6,810 pounds. The second weight was taken on the morning of the 2nd of December, thus indicating that it had accumulated 440 pounds of mud and droppings during the course of hauling on the previous day, all of which was reflected as an added weight to the livestock on each load as it progressively accumulated. Upon discovery of these facts Mathis declined to go any further in settlement.
Counsel for the plaintiffs contend they have no claim for any accounting in this case after December 15, 1955. Weltmer vacated the premises of the defendants between December 4th and 15th. Had the trial court settled the accounts as of this date considerable grain, hay and forage on hand as livestock feed would have had to have been valued. Instead, the trial court determined the case on the basis of an accounting as of March 1, 1956, as provided in the contract, when most of the livestock feed had been consumed and the weight of the cattle presumably increased accordingly.
It is to be further noted that the notice of termination served upon Weltmer was dated the 15th day of November, 1955, (see finding No. 15) at which time the negotiations for settlement had not been broken off (see finding No. 14).
Upon the foregoing facts and circumstances, this being an equitable action for an accounting by the plaintiffs wherein they assert the contract, it may fairly be said the defendant Mathis by his conduct waived the provision in paragraph X of the contract which authorized the defendants to charge the cost of operating the farm from December 2, 1955, to March 1, 1956, to the plaintiffs. It was within the province of the trial court to determine whether Mathis, under the circumstances, was negotiating in good faith, and whether the plaintiffs had vacated the premises in good faith pursuant to the oral agreement after weighing the livestock. The fact that negotiations did not result in a satisfactory settlement left the matter open for the equitable consideration of the court.
*341A factual situation was presented in Work v. Gas Co., 79 Kan. 118, 98 Pac. 801, wherein a provision in a contract authorizing forfeiture was waived by the conduct of a party entitled thereto. It was there said in granting equitable relief under a contract the court should go only so far as is just and equitable.
The doctrine of estoppel requires of a party consistency of conduct when inconsistency would work substantial injury to the other party. (Lillard v. Johnson County, 102 Kan. 822, 172 Pac. 518, and cases cited therein.)
Whether conduct is to be designated as waiver or estoppel is not very important. (Nogrady v. Fourth National Bank, 136 Kan. 43, 47, 12 P. 2d 787.) In Bank v. Jesch, 99 Kan. 797, 163 Pac. 150, a landlord sought to prevent a tenant from harvesting a crop he had grown on the land on the theory that the term had expired. It was shown the landlord in conversations did not dispute the right of the tenant but recognized the existence of the right of the tenant to do so, and it was held the landlord was estopped by his conduct and apparent acquiescence to dispute the right of the tenant. It was said:
“. . . In order for the conversation narrated to operate as a bar to a subsequent denial of the plaintiff’s interest it is not necessary that there should have been a concurrence of all the elements of an estoppel, as the term is usually defined. ‘Whether the principle is described as equitable estoppel, quasi-estoppel, waiver, ratification, election, or as a requirement of consistency in conduct, is not very important.’ (Powers v. Scharling, 76 Kan. 855, 859, 92 Pac. 1099.) ‘The doctrine of equitable estoppel is frequently applied to transactions in which it is found that it would be unconscionable to permit a person to maintain a position inconsistent with one in which he has acquiesced.’ (10 R.C.L. 694.) . . .” (pp. 799, 800.)
The foregoing reason for denying the appellants’ claim for necessary expense incident to operation of the farm after the plaintiffs vacated the premises is consistent with the findings and conclusions (see conclusion No. 8) of the trial court. It is therefore respectfully submitted the trial court should be affirmed without declaring paragraph X of the contract invalid for policy reasons, for this, in my opinion, impairs the obligation of contract.