McNeeley v. Hart

Decision Date31 August 1849
Citation51 Am.Dec. 377,32 N.C. 63,10 Ired. 63
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesSILAS McNEELEY v. SAMUEL HART.
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Where a person agrees to work on the land of another for a share of the crop, the cropper cannot convey a legal title to his share of the crop to a third person, before an actual division and appropriation.

And the owner of the land, who made the contract, is not estopped to deny the right of such assignee to recover at law.

The cases of the State v. Jones, 2 Dev. & Bat. 544, and Fortescue v. Satterwhite, 1 Ire. 566, cited and approved.

Appeal from the Superior Court of Law of Iredell County, at the Spring Term 1849, his Honor Judge ELLIS presiding.

This was an action of trover, brought to recover damages for the conversion of a parcel of oats and corn, alleged to be the property of the plaintiff.

To prove property, the plaintiff offered a bill of sale, from one Irwin, of all his interest in the crop of corn and oats, then growing on the land of Samuel Hart, the defendant, executed June 1st, 1844. The said Irwin was introduced by the plaintiff and swore, that he had agreed with the defendant to work in the crop with him in 1844, on the defendant's land, and that the defendant agreed to give him one fifth part of all the corn and oats, that should be raised on the plantation during that year, and the witness had transferred the said interest to the plaintiff by the said bill of sale, at the time therein specified and before any part of the said crop was gathered. The witness testified further, that he kept a hand in the crop during the year, and he, himself, left the country. He swore, further, that the oats were cut, and his share, 70 dozen of sheaves, were stacked to themselves in the field, and afterwards put by the defendant into his, the defendant's, barn; and that the corn was put into the defendant's crib without a division. The Court expressed the opinion, that the bill of sale did not vest such a title in the plaintiff, as to enable him to sustain this action; that Irwin's interest in the crop was an executory contract and not any specific property, and that, being a mere chose in action, it could not be transferred to the plaintiff.

In submission to this opinion, the plaintiff submitted to a non-suit and appealed to the Supreme Court.

H. C. Jones, for the plaintiff .

A contingent interest in slaves, dependant upon one person's surviving another, may pass by deed; and the bargainee of such an interest having got possession of the slaves, after the contingency's being resolved in favor of his bargainor by his survivorship, is not liable to answer in an action of trover to the wife of the bargainor, Fortescue v. Satterwhite, 1 Ire. 566.

A deed of land and slaves, upon trust, to apply annually the rents and profit to the use and benefit of a cestui que trust, so that they can not be sold or disposed of or anticipated by him, is assignable, and equity will decree an account against the trustee. Dick v. Pitchford, 1 Dev. & Bat. Eq. 481.

A lessee agrees to pay rent out of the crop; while thus resting in contract or agreement, before any partition or separation is made, it is levied on and sold, and the Court say this sale would be good, but the inference is left from the language used that, had the separation or partition once been made, the landlord's title would have been perfected. Deaver v. Rice, D. &. B. 431.

Where one crops with another for a share of the crop and after it is made, the crop is divided, the share of the cropper is liable to be sold by execution, though it was levied before the division, and though it remains in the crib of the owner. Hare v. Pearson, 4 Ire. 76.

A. assigned all his interest in wheat growing on the land of C., which he had sown on shares. Held, that this interest is assignable, and that an action for taking it away must be...

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6 cases
  • O'Brien v. Webb
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Northern District of California
    • December 20, 1921
    ... ... harvested and before removal, the whole title remains in the ... owner of the land. McNeeley v. Hart, 32 N.C. 63, 51 ... Am.Dec. 377; Brazier v. Ansley, 33 N.C. 12, 51 ... Am.Dec. 408 ... An ... agreement by which the one ... ...
  • Rouse v. Wooten
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • November 11, 1889
    ...In short, he is a laborer, receiving pay in a share of the crop." To the like effect is Hudgins v. Wood, 72 N. C. 256. See, also, McNeeley v. Hart, 10 Ired. 63; Brazier v. Ansley, 11 Ired. 12. Nevertheless, the statute (Code, §§ 1754, 1755) in a measure protects the rights of such cropper t......
  • State v. Austin
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • December 13, 1898
    ...landlord. The landlord must divide off to the cropper his share. In short, he is a laborer receiving pay in a share of the crop. McNeeley v. Hart, 32 N. C. 63; Brazier v. Ansley, 33 N. C. 12." As against a cropper, the landlord always had the right to have possession of the crop. State v. B......
  • John A. Harrison & Son v. Ricks
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • June 30, 1874
    ...Price, 4 Dev. & Bat., 431; Ross v. Swaringer, 9 Ired. 481; Walston v. Bryan, 64 N. C. Rep. 764; Hatchell v. Kimbro, 4 Jones, 163; McNeely v. Hart, 10 Ired. 63; Brazier v. Ansley, 11 Ired. 12; State v. Burrell, 64 N. C. Rep. 661; Denton v. Strickland, 3 Jones, 61; Dalglish v. Grandy, Conf. R......
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