69 Ga. 804 | Ga. | 1883
The bills of exceptions of the defendants, filed pendente lite, were brought up in the record, error was assigned thereon, and they were ably and exhaustively discussed here. The questions they make relate exclusively to the titles in controversy, and are:
(i.) That when Mary Louise O’Byrne made the lease to John Doe, on the first day of January, 1861, the legal
(2.) There was no title in her as the plaintiff’s lessor at the time of the trial, as she was then dead ; that she left a will, by which she conveyed whatever title she had to Dean, the executor named in her will, to be held upon certain trusts; that he took by purchase and not by descent; that she, having conveyed her title pending the suit and before the trial, there could be no recovery on her demise. It was insisted further, that the legal title was still in Porter, who, as the executor of Lawrence O’Byrne, remained the trustee of Mary Louise until his death, which occurred in December, 1869, and that the defendants acquired a good prescriptive title.
(3.) That inasmuch as the lease was made January 1st, 1861, and the ouster was prior to June 1st, 1865, and the suit was not commenced until October 1st, 1875, the case is barred, upon the face of the pleadings, hy the act of the general assembly, approved March 16th, 1869.
It may well be doubted, if a naked executor, except in a qualified sense and to a limited extent, can even be regarded as a technical trustee ; but be this as it may, this executor had assented to this legacy, and turned it over to James Jeremiah O’Byrne on the 10th of January, 1855, prior to the birth of Mary Louise, and about the time of her birth, in December, 1855, was discharged by the court of ordinary from the administration of the estate, he having
The plaintiff’s lessor was a minor at the commencement of this suit in 1875. When a guardian was appointed for her, does not appear. This court, in Lake vs. Hardee, 57 Ga., 459, 467, held that-the limitation act of 1869 does not bar a minor- — certainly not a minor with no guardian, and cites 45 Ga., 478. Adopting the rule laid down in Jordan vs. Ticknor et al.,62 Ga., 123, which is distinguished from the two last cases, and admitting this cause of action tobe within its provisions, the lessor of the plaintiff would not be barred under the act of the 16th of March, 1869. Her suit was brought before she attained her majority,
There were various requests to charge upon the subject refused by the court, to which exception was taken, and also various charges given by the judge, as will appear from the record in the case. In the view we take, a critical examination of this charge is deemed unnecessary. It was fully as favorable to the plaintiff as it could be under the law, and if there are portions of it to which the defendants might have excepted, they have not seen proper to do so. They make no complaint by any cross-bill of exceptions, and we are not called upon to consider any alleged errors, if such there be, at their instance. The main contention was that James Jeremiah O’Byrne, and those holding under him, held the premises tortiously as trespassers; and if he was not a trespasser, then he held only as tenant for life, and all the improvements, or a greater part of them, having been put on the lot during his life, either by himself or those claiming under him, as purchasers or tenants, they inured to the benefit of the remainderman. Both these questions will be considered together. How did James Jeremiah O’Byrne receive and take possession of this property? Did he take it as tenant for life, or as owner in fee? Did Anthony Porter, the executor of Lawrence O’Byrne, assent to this bequest and turn it over to the divisee as an estate for life, or as absolute owner of the entire fee? We entertain no doubt, from Porter’s returns to the court of ordinary, from his dismissal by the ordinary from the administration upon a final settlement of his accounts, before the birth of Mary Louise, and from the terms of O’Byrne’s final receipt to
“ The evidence of such improvements as were made by the defendant, after the estate expired and he became chargeable with the rent, ought to have been admitted and considered by the jury in measuring the value of the rent and in mitigation of damages. The evidence was competent for this purpose only, and not, in case the improvements were worth more than the rents, to constitute a counter-claim for the excess. The rule is thus stated by Mr. Tyler: ‘The defendant should be allowed the value of his improvements made in good faith to the extent of the rents and profits claimed, and this is the view of the subject supported by the authorities.’ Tyler on Eject., 849. Referring to the action for mesne profits, which might be brought after a recovery in ejectment, Ruffin, C. J., uses this language: ‘The jury can then make fair allowance out of the rents, and to their extents, for permanent improvements honestly made by the defendant and actually enjoyed by the plaintiff, taking into consideration all the circumstances.’ Dowd vs. Faucett, 4 Dev., 92. ‘Thus far the jury should have been allowed to hear and consider the evidence in assessing the sum which the defendant should pay for the use of the premises, for it is
This case is recited at such length, because of its entire coincidence with what we'believe to have been the principles of equity as they existed prior to our adopting statute, and with what we are sure has been settled by our own decisions, and the provisions of our Code upon the subject. It establishes three things :
First. Where a tenant for life, as such, makes valuable improvements upon the land during his occupancy, these improvements are not, a charge upon the property when it comes to the remainderman.
Second. Where improvements of a permanent character are made in good faith by one who has no claim of right to the possession, but is a tenant by sufferance merely, the value of such improvements may be allowed to the extent of the rent found to be due for the use of the land, but no further.
Third, Where the premises are held, bona fide, under independent and adversary claims of title, then the party making such improvements is entitled to have their full value allowed him.
Following this decision, the Code announces the rule for our guidance and direction in both the cases put in the above extract: “A trespasser cannot set off improvements in an action brought for mesne profits, except when the value of the premises has been increased by the repairs or improvements which have been made. In that case, the jury may take into consideration the improvements or repairs and diminish the profits by that amount, but not below the sum which the premises would have been worth without such improvements or repairs.” Code, 3468.
Now, compare this with Code 2906 as follows: “Against a claim for mesne profits, the value of improvements made by one bona fide, in possession under a claim of right, is a proper subject matter of set-off.” No conditions what ever are annexed to the set-off of one bona fide in possession under a claim of right, who has made improvements ; none such, at least, as appears in the last section of the Code above cited, as that the improvements or repairs may diminish the amount of the mesne profits only to what the premises would have been worth had not such improvements and repairs been.made.
We have shown that James Jeremiah O’Byrne and those claiming under him, held this property in good faith, believing that they had title to the entire fee, and that
What improvements were on these premises when O’Byrne took possession by the assent of his father’s executor? Nothing but a cow shed and a privy. All the improvements subsequently made were put there by O’Byrne and his tenants, or those deriving title from him and the;r tenants; they all held by what they supposed was an independent .and adverse title to this present plaintiff and his testatrix, and there seems to have been an acquiescence in this claim from 1855 down to the bringing of this suit in 1875, a period of more than twenty years. The fact that the plaintiff was an infant afterher birth in 1855 until the commencement of.the suit in 1875, cannot change the character of their holding, so far as to affect the good faith and claim of right under which they held, and in accordance with which, from time to time, the improvements and repairs were made.
It was insisted, however, in argument, that after the .suit was commenced, or if not then, after the decision was rendered by this court, in 61 Ga., 77, the defendants ceased to be holders bona fide and under claim of right, and were thenceforward liable for the full rent of the premises in their then impioved condition with interest thereon; that Wylly, who was the landlord of the defendant, Feely, and who claimed to have title to the entire fee, then knew that his title was “ bad that from that t:me he held in bad faith, and as a trespasser. It is true, that Wylly testified that he first knew that his title was “bad” when the suit was commenced, but it is evident from the connection in which the word “bad” was used, he meant to say nothing more than that his title was then, for the first time to his knowledge, called in question. The decision of this court, in the case, did not place the defendants in the condition contended for, as it did not cover all the questions made by the defence; it did not, as we have seen, decide the questions arising upon
Apart from these special circumstances, we deny the correctnesss of this position upon general principles. In McPhee vs. Guthrie, already cited, after reviewing the two sections of the Code above set forth, Warner, C. J., says (51 Ga., 88): “ The equitable right of a trespasser, to be allowed the value of his improvements made on the land, where the value of the premises has been increased thereby, is clearly recognized by our law, as well as where the improvements have been made by one acting in good faith under a claim of right, as in this case. But this is not a new principle introduced into our Code; it was a principle recognized by the courts of equity in England long anterior to 1776. In looking into Viner’s Abridgment (volume xviii, new edition, 124), we find two cases reported, in which purchasers were allowed compensation for improvements, one of which was made without notice of any incumbrance, the other with notice. In the case of Peterson vs. Hickman, ‘the husband made a lease of the wife’s land to one who was ignorant of the defeasible title; the lessee built upon the land, and was at great charge thereon. The husband died, and the wife avoided the lease of the land, but was compelled, in equity, to yield a recompense for the building and bettering of the land, for it was so much the better worth unto her.’ In Walley vs. Whaley, ‘a purchaser who, before his purchase money paid, or deed executed, though not before his contract was made, had notice of a prior settlement; was ordered to be allowed what he had laid out in lasting improvements upon the tenements, though made pending the suits.’ ” After showing that the parties in the case
This claim to set-off improvements and repairs by a mere wrong-doer, and actually fraudulent holder, who was fully charged with notice, against mesne profits, was allowed by the Supreme Court of the United States, in a case arising under the principles of the civil law. Jackson vs. Ludeling, 99 U. S. 513. The doctrine is an equitable one, and was doubtless borrowed from the civil law and incorporated into the English system of equity jurisprudence. See note, 15 Am. Ed., 344. This case of Jackson vs. Ludeling is perhaps an extreme case. Mr. Justice Field dissented upon the sole ground, to use the words quoted by him, that the possession was acquired and held by “ a rank and abominable fraud.” The same high court, in a former case between the same parties, had held these persons “ possessors in bad faith, having obtained control of the property fraudulently.” We need not, nor do we go so far as that high tribunal. We have no such case before us, in any view that may be taken.
We have shown that James Jeremiah O’Byrne held under a title independent of and adverse to the plaintiff, and so far as the judge’s charge directed the jury to assess rents upon the property, as it was improved in the time of his holding, it was erroneous and more favorable to the plaintiff than it should have been; they should have been instructed, in making their estimates of rents, to regard the property as it was improved at the time his title accrued and he took possession.
In limiting the set-off in the case of trespassers, the jury cannot go to a greater extent than the sum which the premises would have been worth without out such improvements or repairs; up to this point they may and ought to go, or in the equally clear words of the Code, §3468, “they may take into consideration the improvements or repairs and diminish the profits by that amount, but not below the sum which the premises would have been worth without such improvements or repairs.” While this is the rule in the case of trespassers, a more liberal one is prescribed for those who are in possession bona fide under claim of right. Their right to set-off is not fettered by any such limitation ; it is unconditional and without qualification ; and such occupants, in equity and justice as well as upon principle, should hold a better position in this respect than mere wrong-doers.
The defendants have argued their right to have a verdict for any excess in value of improvements over the rents, which should constitute a lien upon the land for the payment of such excess. The pleadings in the case do not make the question, and no ruling of the court below upon that subject is excepted to and brought here for our review; we therefore decline to decide the point.
Judgment affirmed.