176 Mass. 115 | Mass. | 1900
This is a petition to recover damages for the taking of a leasehold estate by the respondent. It comes here by appeal from a judgment for the respondent upon demurrer. Shortly stated, the facts are as follows. On January 5, 1897, the respondent, being already the owner by purchase of the reversion of the land in question, filed a location under the authority of St. 1896, c. 516, purporting to take in fee (by the right of eminent domain) a tract of land including the premises. Three days later, on January 8, it served a notice on the petitioner that whereas the lease was terminable by the lessor upon such a taking, it elected to terminate it. The lease provided that “ in case the premises, or any part thereof, shall be taken for any street or other public use, or by the action of the city or other authorities, . . . then this lease and the term demised shall terminate at the election of the lessors or those having their estate in the premises.”
We are of opinion that the judgment appealed from was right. Of course any valid taking of the whole premises would put an end to the lease, (O'Brien v. Ball, 119 Mass. 28,) and therefore the provision quoted must not be construed too liter
Without inquiring too curiously whether the taking affected the respondent’s title otherwise than by taking the lease and ending any possible unknown outstanding claims, we have no doubt that it was a taking within both the letter and the spirit of the proviso in the lease.
It is suggested that, however it might have been if the land had been taken by a third person, when the taking is by the landlord, the landlord is bound by the covenant for quiet enjoyment. But the sovereign power to take by eminent domain is not an encumbrance, and the exercise of the power is not a breach of any of the ordinary covenants. Ellis v. Welch, 6 Mass. 246, 250, 252. Parks v. Boston, 15 Pick. 198, 205. These cases, especially the earlier, advert, it is true, to the remedy of the tenant for such a taking; but the construction of the covenants is the same when by another term of the lease the tenant may be deprived of a remedy, as is implied clearly enough by Chief Justice Parsons and Chief Justice Shaw in the cases cited, and as has been stated often elsewhere. The construction is based upon the notion that such covenants go only to the lessor’s title, and do not warrant against those fundamental liabilities to action on the part of the sovereign power which lie behind all private titles. Frost v. Earnest, 4 Whart. 86, 90. Dobbins v. Brown, 12 Penn. St. 75, 80. Legal Tender Cases, 12 Wall. 457, 549. Rawle, Covenants for Title, (5th ed.) §§ 129, 153. It follows that it cannot matter that the person who sets the delegated sovereign power in motion is the landlord. The exercise of that power has not been covenanted against. See Kip v. New York & Harlem Railroad,
It is not disputed that the respondent succeeded to the original lessor’s right to terminate the lease.
Judgment for the respondent affirmed.