102 Ky. 410 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion op the court.
Mrs. Taylor leased to C. E. Wood her farm for the year-ending March 1, 1890, for $1,300, and the tenant, with three others as sureties, executed a note for that amount, due-
The objection to the distress warrant was upon the ground that it was issued both against the' tenant and 'the subtenants, directing the levy to be made upon their property found in the county, whereas only the property of the subtenants found on the leased premises was subject to the-
•The other objection is that the relation of landlord and tenant did not exist between the Deposit Bank and the Hut-.sells. This presents a question now, we believe, for the first time presented for decision, whether the remedy by distress •or landlord’s attachment under sections 2301. and 2302, Kentucky Statutes, is available in favor of the assignee of a note given for rent, who is not the assignee of the reversion.' It is noticeable that this summary, and frequently oppressive, remedy by distress is, by the terms of the statute, given to the landlord, the language used being: “The landlord may, before a justice of the peace, . . . by himself or agent, file an affidavit,” etc. The language in the other section providing for an attachment for rent, while not quite so explicit, in our opinion means the same thing, the language being: “The person to whom the rent is owing, or his agent or attorney, ma.y file an affidavit. . .
At common law the right to, rent was incident to the reversion, and the remedy by distress for arrears of rent was lost by assignment of the reversion, either absolutely or by way of mortgage. 1 Woodfall’s Landlord and Tenant, vol. l,p. ■421. 1 American edition). It became a mere chose in action. And so not until the statute of 32d Henry VIII. could executors or administrators distrain for arrears of rent incurred in the lifetime of the owner. (Ibid., page 427.)
By the same statute (32d Henry VIII.) was given the power of distress upon the lands out of which the rent is reserved, so long as they continue in the hands of him to
It would seem, therefore, that in this State the remedy-might be held to follow the reversion, after notice to the tenant of the alienation, and would .undoubtedly do so after an attornment, as that would establish the relationship of landlord and tenant. This question, however, is not before-the court.
In Lawson’s Bights, Remedies and Practice, volume 6, section 2819, it is said: “The requisites of a valid distress are, that there shall have been an actual demise or letting of +Be premises, and the relation of landlord and tenant exist between the parties; that there shall be a reversion in the landlord; that the rent be certain or capable of being made certain; and that the rent shall be due; and that there shall .be-a reservation of a certain rent.”
And in Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant (section 568), referring to the New York statute, in substance the same as the-statute of 32d Henry VIII., it is said: “But in order to con
We think it clear from the authorities that the right of distress does not pass to the assignee of a rent note in the .absence of statutory provision therefor.
It is claimed that this.statutory authority is contained in . section. 2304 of .the Kentucky Statutes: “If the owner or holder alien or assign his estate or term, or the rent thereafter.to, fall due thereon, his alienee or assignee may recover •such rent;” it being argued that the right given to alienee .or assignee to recover the rent carries with it the right to the mode of recovery .to which the assignor or alienor would have been entitled. I;t is .to. be observed that, in several instances, the statute upon this .subject explicitly authorizes .the remedy by distress; in section 2305, against the assignee ■ or under-tenant of the lessee.; .in section 2318, against the tenant for life; in section 2319, to a person entitled to rents ■ depending upon the life of another, after the death of the latter; in.section 2321, to a personal representative, and in section 2324, to enforce the. lien given under contracts by which the landlord is to receive a part of the crop. These • express provisions indicate that, .whatever might have been the legislative intent in the adoption of the statute embodied in., section .23.04,,...it was n,ot thereby intended to grant to the .assignee of. a mere chose.in action.this.extraordinary and frequently, -oppressive. remedy. Moreover, section 2312 al.lows double dgjnages,for wrongful distress against the land
For. the reasons .given the judgment is reversed and the case-remanded, with directions to set aside the judgment sustaining.the demurrer to appellant’s answer, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.