60 Vt. 347 | Vt. | 1888
The opinion of the court, was delivered by
The petition in this case was brought to foreclose the right of defendants in certain premises described in a warranty deed from the petitioner to the defendant Robbins, dated April 2, 1882, and all the right and title of the defendants in and to the crops raised upon said premises in the year 1887. Said deed was conditioned for the payment of four promissory notes, one for $400, two for $500 each, and one for $800, signed by said Robbins, and made payable to the petitioner or order, with annual interest yearly thereafter, and contained a reservation of all the crops of every description that should be raised upon the premises described in it as security for the payment of the annual interest accruing on said notes. It was alleged in the petition, and admitted in the answer of the defendant Robbins, that there was interest due and unpaid upon three of said notes. The case was heard on the petition and answer. An agreement was made by the parties, and entered on the clerk’s docket, that there was due
The defendants make no objection to the decree so far as the real estate is concerned, but insist that no decree should have been made foreclosing their right to the crops ; that the only right that the petitioner had to them was based on the reservation made in the deed, and that the reservation being inconsistent with and repugnant to the grant is void.
The question of the right to reserve a lien on crops to be produced between lessor and lessee has been several times before this court, and has always been upheld. In Baxter v. Bush, 29 Vt. 465, an elaborate opinion was delivered by Judge IshaM, in which he reviews the English and American cases, and states as the result that the doctrine is well settled that a party may transfer a title to crops though not then in esse, and which are to be grown upon the land, and the property will-pass as soon a's grown. See also Smith v. Atkins, 18 Vt. 461; Cooney v. Hayes, 40 Vt. 478; Bellows v. Wells, 36 Vt. 599; Batchelder v. Jenness, 59 Vt. 104.
That rule is controlling and decisive here, unless the fact that the petitioner has acquired his title by deed is to distinguish it; and we see no reason for making such a distinction.
Such a reservation is as much an abridgement of the grant in the one case as in the other. An exception or reservation is not void merely because, to some extent, it is inconsistent with the grant, unless by giving effect to it. the grant would become wholly inoperative. Hilliard on Real Property, vol.
An easement, like a' right of way, or to the use of water, has frequently been reserved in the conveyance of premises; and it has never been understood that such a reservation was void on account of its being inconsistent with, or repugnant to, the grant.
By virtue of the reservation made in the deed, the petitioner acquired an equitable lien upon the crops that might be produced upon the premises as security for the payment of the interest that might accrue upon the notes described in the deed ; and the decree made was to enable him to realize upon that security.
The decree of the Court of Chancery is affirmed and cause remanded.