Ala. Gold Life Insurance v. Oliver

78 Ala. 158 | Ala. | 1884

CLOPTON, J.

The legal effect and import of the conveyance from Mrs. Smith to the defendant, C. D. Oliver, are ro vest in him all the estate in the lands conveyed, which she held and owned at the time of its execution ; and can not, as between the parties, be substantially added to, or diminished, or varied, by evidence of parol agreements, prior or cotemporaneons. The lands having been previously rented for an unexpired term, of which the grantee, being a surety on the note for the payment of the rent, had notice, he accepted and took the conveyance subject to the lease. — Comer v. Sheehan, 74 Ala. 452. The estate residing in the lessor, in such case, is the reversion, and this the conveyance operates to pass. The necessity of attornment has been dispensed with by statute; but rents accruing and maturing after the conveyance, unless severed, pass-as incident to the reversion, and the owner is entitled to them. Each, the rent and reversion, may be assigned without the other. No inseparable connection exists.

The contestation arises on the affirmative charge in favor of the defendants. Such charge should not be given, when any material fact is to be inferred, and is not a legal presumption from the evidence. The question is, could the jury have inferred an effectual severance, on any phase of the evidence as disclosed by the record ? It will be observed that the suit is not between the parties to the conveyance; and, therefore, it is unnecessary for us to decide whether the lessor, holding the claim for rent at the time of making an assignment of the re*161version, absolute in terms, may by parol sever and reserve the rent. It has been held, the effect of our statute is, that rent in arrears, or falling due, is a debt from the tenant to the landlord, with a lien on the crop grown on the premises. Thompson v. Spinks, 12 Ala. 155. The transferability of the claim has been repeatedly recognized by our decisions; and the statute now, in terms, makes the claim for rent assignable, and invests the assignee with all the rights of the landlord. Code, 1876, § 3470; Steed v. Hinson, 76 Ala. 298.

A transfer of the rent-note, after the grant of the reversion, is subject to the rule, that the rent, as an incident, passes and enures to the owner of the reversion.— Westmoreland v. Foster, 60 Ala. 448. On this principle, it was held, that a purchaser, under a decree in chancery, of the lessor’s lands, is entitled to the rent afterwards falling due, as against the assignee of the tenant’s obligation to pay, whose interest was acquired pending suit. The pendency of the suit, involving the title to the land, was notice toffhe assignee of the infirmity of the lessor’s title. An assignment of the lease by the tenant, in such case, would have been subordinate to the decree subsequently rendered; and a severance of the rent from the reversion, pending the suit, could not impair the rights of a purchaser under the decree. — Tubb v. Fort, 58 Ala. 277. The rights of the grantee accrue at the time of, and on the execution of the conveyance, and no right or claim to the rent remains in the lessor, which he can thereafter transfer.

A different rule applies, when the claim for rent is assigned while the lessor is the owner of the reversion. Being the holder and owner of the claim, and having the right to transfer it, his assignment passes to the assignee all his rights thereto, and effectually severs the rent from the reversion. If the lessor subsequently conveys the reversion, the rent, having been thus severed, does not pass as incident thereto. The legal effect of the deed can not operate to pass what the lessor does not own, however general and absolute may be its terms. In Austin v. Sawyer, 9 Cow. 39, the plaintiff and one Wilcox exchanged farms, on which crops of wheat were growing, each reserving by parol his own crop. Quit-claim deeds were executed containing no reservations whatever. Wilcox afterwards assigned without reservation his interest in the farm to the defendant, but stating to him that the wheat was reserved by the plaintiff. The defendant cut the wheat, and put it in his own barn. The court, after holding that parol evidence was inadmissible to vary the legal import of the deed, held the evidence sufficient to authorize a jury to presume a formal and valid contract for the sale of the wheat by Wilcox to the plaintiff; that Wilcox had no to it to the *162assignment, though absolute in terms, conveyed no more than he had a right to convey.

In the present case, we do not have to presume a transfer of the rent-note by the grantee to the grantor, from a parol reservation. The evidence tended to show that the rent-note had been negotiated and indorsed to the plaintiff, a third person, prior to the making of the conveyance to Oliver. Mrs. Smith could not, by a subsequent conveyance, divest the plaintiff of the title to the note thus acquired. She had no right in respect to the claim for rent, of which her conveyance could effect a transfer, and which it could operate to pass as incident to the reversion. On these principles, the rule that rent passes as incident to the reversion, its capability of severance from the reversion, and the statutory assignability of the claim for rent, are compatible. If the rent-note was negotiated and indorsed to the plaintiff previous to the sale and conveyance to Oliver, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. The right of the plaintiff to a recovery does not depend on the validity of a parol reservation, contemporaneous with the assignment of the reversion, or on the admissibility of parol evidence to establish such reservation, but on the prior and independent title obtained by the previous negotiation and indorsement of the note. As there was evidence tending to show such negotiation and indorsement, there is error in giving the affirmative charge in favor of the defendants.

Reversed and remanded.

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