102 Mo. App. 326 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
This is an action on the covenants in a general warranty deed to lands lying in the State of Kansas. The plaintiff prevailed in the trial court. Defendant sold the land to plaintiff and conveyed it to him by general warranty deed dated August 15, 1900, containing the usual covenants. It however made the following exceptions to such covenants:
“1. The second party assumes and agrees to pay the taxes levied upon the premises for the year 1900.
“2. The first party shall be entitled to receive the rents of the land for the current year, whether in money or by way of interest in or share of the crops produced thereon, excepting the corn crop which goes to Lee Anthony.”
Tt appears that at and before the execution of this deed the land was in possession of two tenants who had put certain valuable improvements upon it, viz., a barn, granary, windmill, wire fence, etc. The tenants refused to give plaintiff possession of the land and defendant
There is no allegation in the defendant’s answer and cross-petition that there was any fraud, accident or mistake in the execution and delivery of the deed. Nor was there a particle of proof of either. It is so well settled in this State that, in the absence of fraud, acei-, dent or mistake in the execution, of a deed or other written contract, no evidence can be heard of prior or contemporaneous, agreements, that it is sufficient to
The case, then, as made by the pleading is, that defendant executed to plaintiff a general warranty deed to lands which did not except from the covenants the improvements on the land, or that possession thereof should be immediately delivered to the buyer. We have decided in the case of Hickman v. Hickman, 55 Mo. App. 303, that possession of land was a part of the thing conveyed by the deed thereto, and that a failure to deliver was a breach of the covenants in the deed; and that a contemporaneous oral agreement that the seller was to remain in possession was inconsistent with the deed and could not be received in evidence. It necessarily follows from what has just been said that knowledge of a lease by the plaintiff would not affect his right under his covenants. Beach v. Miller, 51 Ill. 206, 211. Knowledge of a lease may be a strong reason for taking covenants against its continuance. There was wide range of the evidence and great liberality on the part of the trial court in hearing it, yet a greater part of it, as well as of the argument, was in the face of the affirmative matter set up in his pleading. It follows that but for the following consideration plaintiff’s judgment should be affirmed in toto.
It is claimed by defendant that the tenants attorned to plaintiff for one hundred and fifty acres of the land by accepting a lease from him for that part of the tract in September. The evidence shows that to be a fact. And it further shows that of the improvements in controversy, the windmill was on that part of the land.
The law is that although a tenant, for a certain term, may have the right to remove fixtures placed by himself, he must do so during his term, or while he holds as tenant; but that if he takes a new lease from another without reserving the right, he loses it. Williams v.
So, therefore, when plaintiff made the new lease to these tenants without reserving the windmill, it became plaintiff’s through his deed from defendant and its subsequent loss can not be charged upon defendant, since plaintiff got possession by the attornment and he got possession of the mill by the lease and he should have protected it for himself. The defendant’s covenant was not broken as to it. Loughran v. Ross, 45 N. Y. 792.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed.