DocketNumber: Nos. 10,996-(149)
Citation Numbers: 71 Minn. 533, 74 N.W. 891, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 605
Judges: Canty
Filed Date: 4/15/1898
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
Plaintiff, in its complaint, alleged that in the spring of 1896 it was the owner of a certain described quarter section of land. It further alleged that at said time
“The said defendant became the tenant of this plaintiff, and as such tenant has occupied the above-described premises during this present crop season, and has raised a crop of wheat and other grains upon said premises; that the reasonable rental value of said premises during the time of said occupancy by said defendant is the sum of $200, which rental, or in lieu thereof the one-fourth of the crop raised by said defendant upon said premises, has been duly demanded by this plaintiff, and refused by said defendant.”
The prayer for judgment is that plaintiff recover $200, and costs and disbursements. The answer is a general denial.
1. On the trial before the eourt and a jury, the defendant ob
2. On the trial, plaintiff introduced in evidence a mortgage made by the defendant and his wife to another corporation, an assignment by it of the mortgage to plaintiff, and certain foreclosure proceedings thereunder which vested in plaintiff the title of the mortgagors when the year to redeem expired in October, 1895. Plaintiff also gave evidence tending to prove that during the year 1896 defendant was in possession of the premises, and raised a crop on them, and that the rental value for that year was about $35 or $40. Both parties then rested, and the court ordered a verdict for plaintiff for $35. From an order denying a new trial, defendant appeals.
No evidence was introduced showing the character of defendant’s possession. The evidence tended to prove that he was a trespasser, not that he was the tenant of plaintiff. If defendant was a trespasser, plaintiff could not waive the tort, and sue him on contract as its tenant. Hurley v. Lamoreaux, 29 Minn. 138, 12 N. W. 447; Reed v. Lammel, 40 Minn. 397, 42 N. W. 202; Downs v. Finnegan, 58 Minn. 112, 59 N. W. 981; Johnson v. Johnson, 62 Minn. 302, 64 N. W. 905. There was therefore a fatal variance between the complaint and the proof, the evidence will not sustain a verdict for plaintiff, and the court erred in ordering such a verdict.
Order reversed, and a new trial granted.