Taylor v. Jackson
Taylor v. Jackson
Opinion of the Court
Mrs. Mary S. Taylor instituted this suit against G. W. Jackson, her farm tenant, to recover Colorado grass hay which had grown on the leased farm and had been cut and baled by Jackson. After the institution of the suit the plaintiff sequestered the hay, and later replevied it. From a judgment denying the plaintiff a recovery and in favor of Jackson for damages on his plea in reconvention, plaintiff, Mrs. Taylor, has appealed. The case was before us on a former appeal, and the opinion of this court upon the question then presented appears in 166 S. W. 413.
The land was leased to Jackson and Ms associate, J. F. Biffle, for the year 1911 by written contract, by the terms of which the tenants agreed to cultivate the same in cotton, corn, wheat, millet, oats, sorghum, and maize, and to give to the landlord as rent one-fourth of the cotton and one-third of the other crops, but the lease contained no reference to any crop of hay. Upon the former appeal we held that the written lease did not confer upon the tenants any right to the Colorado grass hay in controversy, which grew upon part of the land after the crops planted thereon by the tenant had failed by reason of the severe drought. The proof showed that, while the lease was to Biffle and Jackson, Jackson was, in fact, a subtenant of Biffle, who had originally leased the land, but who had no interest in the crops.
In his answer the defendant claimed that subsequent to the written lease a parol agreement was made with the landlord, by the terms of which he had the right to harvest the hay the same as any other crop, the allegation setting forth that agreement being as follows:
“About the 17th day of June, 1911, the defendant informed the plaintiff that the corn had failed, and that he had failed to get a stand of cotton, and that reliance must be had on feed-stuff. The defendant stated that the only chanco was to try maize or rely on Colorado grass for a crop in event of late rains, without which *1144 nothing would do. Thereupon the plaintiff told the defendant to determine what was best course to pursue to make the most for plaintiff and defendant. The plaintiff got what information he could, and determined that Colorado hay crop was more promising and more desirable and valuable than maize. Subsequent results justified defendant’s conclusion to rely on the hay crop, and about 2,800 bales of hay were made on the land. If the plaintiff had not left it to the judgment of the defendant to determine the course to pursue in adjustment of the crops on the failure of the spring crops, the defendant would have replanted it in maize, millet, and sorghum. The defendant charges that the written contract did not contemplate a failure of the spring crops, nor provide for such emergency, and defendant relied on plaintiff’s statement to the defendant that he was authorized to determine what was for their mutual benefit, and the defendant judged wisely.”
Following that allegation the defendant further alleged that it was the custom and common understanding in that vicinity for the tenant to give to the landlord as rent one-third of any Colorado grass hay in shocks, or one-fourth in bale, free of all charges. He further alleged that the yield of hay .was much larger than it would have been because of the cultivation of the land for the crops which had failed before the grass sprang up.
The verdict of the jury was upon special issues, and one of the findings was that the parol contract pleaded by the defendant was, in fact, made as alleged.
“If you know, state what the custom was in the vicinity of the plaintiff’s land for the year 1911 as to the distribution of Colorado grass, between the landlord and tenant, produced on the land that had been cultivated in other crops that had failed on account of climatic conditions. State what part of such hay the tenant received and what part the landlord received, according to the custom of the vicinity of the premises.”
To that question the witness answered as follows:
“The third in the shock or the fourth in the bale. The landlord got one-third in the shock or one-fourth in the bale, and the tenant two-thirds in the shock or three-fourths in the bale.”
The objection to this testimony was that the witness had not qualified, in that he had not stated that he knew of such custom in that particular section of the country. The form of the question being, “If you know,” we think the answer of the witness was equivalent to a statement that he did know of such custom. Accordingly the assignment is overruled.
“That she was familiar with the' custom of the country relative to the cutting of Colorado grass hay, and that the same was that the landlord was entitled to the crop of Colorado grass hay springing up on the place, and that the tenant was not entitled to any of it, and that her other tenants on land adjoining the. defendant Jackson did not claim the hay growing on their land, but that the plaintiff had cut the same herself, and that the other tenants did not object thereto, or claim any of the hay on the land rented by them.”
The defendant Jackson objected to that testimony, on the ground that the same was immaterial and not binding upon him. Appellant has addressed an assignment of error to the action of the court in sustaining that objection. It appears from the bill of exception that the evidence was offered as a whole. In appellee’s brief no contention is made that the testimony relative to the custom of-the country Was not admissible, but it is insisted that proof of individual transactions with other tenants was clearly so, and that, as the evidence was offered as a whole, no reversible error is shown. We are of opinion that none of that testimony should have been excluded. The transactions with other tenants tended to show that the custom mentioned by Parsons was not a general and uniform custom, as his testimony indicates, and hence tended to rebut the presumption which otherwise might obtain that plaintiff contracted with reference to it. S Jones’ Commentaries on Evidence, §§ 463, 464, and other authorities hereinafter cited. It should be noted further that the testimony of the witness Parsons, shown above, as well as all other witnesses introduced by defendant to prove custom, and which was to the same effect, and all of which was offered generally without the limitation of its' purpose placed upon such evidence on the former trial, bore only indirectly upon the issue of custom, if any, obtaining under a specific contract of employment to harvest hay, with no express agreement for compensation to the employé, as pleaded by the defendant. Notwithstanding that fact, plaintiff should have been allowed to rebut such evidence by proof that no such custom prevailed under the circumstances related by defendant’s witnesses.
In his answer the defendant pleaded specially that prior to the levy he had contracted to sell the hay to Vick at 50 cents per bale, and that plaintiff had notice of such contract at the time she replevied the hay, and upon those facts he sought a judgment for special damages in the sum he would have realized from such sale. The findings of the jury in answer to special issues 5, 6, 7, and 8 are made the basis of the claim for such special damages.
We are of the opinion that there was no error in the action of the court in admitting the testimony of Vick referred to, and in submitting the issue of special damages, since, under the circumstances, they were recoverable; no contention being made on either trial that Jackson was insolvent at the time. We so held on the former appeal of this case.
“I own myself no friend to the almost indiscriminate habit of later years of setting up usages or customs in almost all kinds of business and trade to control, vary, or annul the general liability of parties under the common law, as well as under the commercial law. It has long appeared to me that there is no small danger in admitting such loose and inconclusive usages and customs, often unknown to the particular parties, and always liable to great misunderstandings and misinterpretations and abuses, to outweigh the well known and settled principles of law, and I rejoice to find that of late years the course of law, both in England and America, have been disposed to narrow the limits of the operation of such usages and customs, and to discountenance any further extension of them.” 2 Elliott on Contracts, § 1674.
See, also, Wooters v. Kauffman, 67 Tex. 488, 3 S. W. 465.
These general observations are. suggested for the guidance of the trial court upon another trial of this case.
We note in the statement of facts the testimony of plaintiff that, in addition to expenses she herself incurred to finish harvesting the hay, she also paid labor accounts incurred by defendant Taylor for labor performed in harvesting the hay prior to the seizure under the writ of sequestration, and it does not appear that she was allowed credit for sums so paid. Appellant has not raised the question whether or not that expense should be considered on the same plane with expenses incurred by- plaintiff herself, and for which she was not allowed credit; but, in view of another trial, we suggest that perhaps, under a proper showing, plaintiff might be entitled to credit for those sums, even if she be held to answer for the value of three-fourths of the hay crop.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.
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