2 Rawle 11 | Pa. | 1829
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— The landlord’s warrant states a lease of a grist mill, a housé, and lot, in Augusta township, Northumberland, county* for .the term of on'e year, commencing on the 1st of April, 1825, for the one-third of the toll which the mill grinds, and avers, that one hundred and sixty, and. a half bushels of different kinds of grain, of the value of seventy-six dollars and eighty-five cents, still remain due and unpaid; and, this- appears to have been the contract bn which the distress was made. The plaintiff in replevin denies the right tó distráin for two reasons: 1st, He contends, that Fry was not the tenant, but. the servant of Jones; and, 2d, That the rent is une’ertain. It would b.e extraordinary if the first proposition of the plaintiff in replevin should avail him, as it would destroy tennancy almost altogether in Pennsylvania. In consequence of the fluctuation in prices, such a thing .as a fixed rent, either in kind or money, is scarcely known. We have almost always adopted the mode of renting, for a share of the produce of the farm, which is preferred by tenant and landlord.' If there is an advánce of price, or an abundant harvest, both partake of the benefit; and, if the price should be low, or the crop should fail, the tenant avoids ruin. A .difficulty has existed in relation to this matter from confounding a crop.per with a tenant. If one hires a man to wórk his farm, and gives him a share of the produce, he is a cropper. He has no interest in the land, but' receives- his share as the price of his labour. The possession is still in the owner of the land, who alone can maintain trespass; nor can he distrain, for he does not maintain the relation of landlord and tenant, which is inseparable from the right of distress, Fry was put into possession Of the house and mill, lives in the house with his family,, and agrees to give Jones one-third of the'toll. To say he is not. a tenant, is confounding two things which are entirely distinct. .
It is said the rent, is uncertain, and, therefore, Jones had no right to distrain.- In Co. Lift. 96, a, the principle which governs this case is- clearly stated.
It is a maxim of law, that no distress can be taken for any services that are not put into certainty, nor cart be reduced to any certainty; for, id est cerium, quod cerium reddi potest; for, oportet qúod certa res deducatur in judicium; for, upon-the avowry, damages cannot be' recovered for that which neither hath c.ertáinty, nor can be reduced to any certainty. And yet, in some cases, the author says, there may be a certainty in an uncertainty; as, a man may hold of his lord to shear all the sheep depasturing within the lord’s manor; and this is certain e'nough, albeit the land has sometimes a greater number, and sometimes a lesser number there-; and.
Judgment affirmed.