| N.Y. Sup. Ct. | Nov 4, 1861

Bockes, J.

By the complaint it is alleged that Alfred B, Fay, being the owner of certain real property, consisting of a tannery, &c. in Northampton, Fulton county, let and rented the same with “the tools thereto belonging,” to the defendant, for the term of five years from April 1, 1860, at an annual rent of $275, .payable at the expiration of each year; that the defendant entered and occupied under such lease for the year ending April 1, 1861, and that one year’s rent became due for said premises and tools on that day; that said lessor died January 8,1861, having made a last will and testament, which was duly proved and admitted to probate on the 20th March, 1861; and that letters testamentary thereon were duly issued to the plaintiff as sole executor thereof; that he qualified and entered on his duties as such executor, and as *296such executor demanded the rent of the defendant, who refused to pay the same; that said rent is unpaid and due to him as executor, wherefore he demands judgment therefor.

The defendant interposed a demurrer, assigning several grounds; none of which need he noticed, however, except the last—that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The plaintiff claims to recover in his character as executor—not as heir or devisee. He puts his right of action on subdivision 7 of section 6, title 3, article 1, chapter 6, part 2, of the revised statutes, (2 R. S. 82, § 6,) which provides that rent reserved to the deceased, which had accrued at the time of his death, shall be deemed assets, and shall go to the executors or administrators, to be applied and distributed as part of the personal estate of their testator or intestate.

' It must be conceded, that unless the plaintiff can recover by force of the statute above quoted, he must fail. It has been often decided that if the landlord dies before the rent becomes due, it goes to the heir, as incident to the reversion. (3 Kents Com. 464. 2 Black. 43, note 69, Wendell’s ed. Van Rensselaer’s Executors, v. Platner’s Executors, 2 John. Cas. 17. Marshall v. Moseley, 21 N. Y. Rep. 280. Van Rensselaer v. Hays, 19 id. 68.) So it is laid down that, after the death of the lessor, the proper person to seek a remedy for the breach is he to whom the reversion is transmitted. If it be the reversion of a freehold estate, the heiror if the lessor has devised the reversion, the devisee. And although rent be expressly reserved to the lessor, (owner in fee,) his executors, administrators and assigns, the executors cannot have it, being strangers to the reversion, and the heir may sue for arrears accruing after the ancestor’s death. (Note to 2 John. Cas. 24, and cases there cited.)

Nor, in a case like this under consideration, can the rent be apportioned. Judge Comstock gave the doctrine of apportionment of rent a very elaborate examination in Marshall v. Mosely, (supra,) from which it is made clearly to *297appear that no apportionment is allowable between the executor of a lessor owning the fee and the remainderman. He says, that a remainderman who succeeds to the reversion is entitled to the whole rent as an entire sum due to him.

[Saratoga Special Term, November 4, 1861.

The case of Wadsworth v. Allcott (2 Seld. 64) decides nothing inconsistent with the rule as laid down in the books above cited. In that case, the term ended before the testator’s death; and besides, the action was for wheat held at the time of and before the conversion by the plaintiff as executor.

The words “had accrued,” in subdivision 7 of section 6, signify “had become due and payable.” The statute specifying what shall be deemed assets which shall go to the executor or administrator, is but declaratory of the common law. (2 Kent’s Com. 415, note c, 8th ed.)

In Marshall v. Mosely, Judge Comstock, after declaring the rule of the common law to be in favor of the remainder-man, remarks that there is no legislation of this state which the defendant can invoke in support of his claim. In the cases where the word “accrued” is employed in connection with this subject, I find on examination it is used as synonymous with due and payable, quite as often as in any different sense.

It is urged that in this case the rent is in part for the use of tools; and that a recovery may be had for the value of such use. It is stated in the complaint, that the defendant rented and leased from the testator the tannery and the tools thereto belonging, and the two dwelling houses and gardens, and the one and a half acre of land around the tannery, for the yearly rent of §275. As thus described, the tools should be deemed a part of the tannery. Bent cannot be reserved out of chattels personal. If such chattels are demised with land, at an entire rent, the rent issues out of the land only. (2 Black. 42, note 53, Wendell’s ed. 5 Rep. 17, b. 2 N. Y. Rep. 224.)

The defendant is entitled to judgment on the demurrer,

Bockes, Justice.]

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