Plaintiff, William H. Loveless, claims that he is the owner of about 43 acres of land in this county; that under a grant made by Edward Moore, the then owner of this land, The Erie Railroad Company entered upon his land, erected a dam thereon and is using water therefrom, the railroad company agreeing to pay therefor $100 per annum. Plaintiff claims this money by reason of the devise of this land to him by will of Edward Moore.
The plaintiff brought this action to recover from the railroad company the amount due under this contract after the property vested in him. He made Samuel Q. Marsh, executor of the will of Edward Moore, a party defendant with the railroad company.
The defendant railroad company by its answer alleges that it had paid the money claimed by plaintiff to its codefendant prior to the beginning of this action. A
Samuel Q. Marsh, as executor of Edward Moore,
Frances Gleason answered that she was the residuary legatee under the will of Edward Moore and claimed the money by reason thereof.
Such proceedings were had that the money in the hands of Samuel Q. Marsh, executor, was paid into court, and the railroad company and Marsh were dismissed from the further proceedings in this case, leaving the plaintiff and Frances Gleason to contest the right to the money.
In 1903 Edward Moore was the owner of this 43 acres of land, and prior to that time there had been a coal mine on adjoining lands. The water from this mine, discharging through the entry, was collected at the mouth of the entry by the railroad company and piped to its water tank.
After the railroad company had used this water for some time, a new opening near the lands of Moore was made into this mine, which changed the course of the water and caused it to flow through this new opening onto the 43-acre tract owned by Edward Moore.
The railroad company, about 1903, then entered into a verbal contract with Edward Moore by which he granted to the railroad company the right to build a dam on his land to force the water back through this new opening and cause it to flow through the old opening, and for this right the railroad company agreed to pay Edward Moore $100 per year.
The amount of money that accrued after the death of Edward Moore is claimed by both the plaintiff and Frances Gleason in this action, under the provisions of the will of Edward Moore. Edward Moore died in March, 1909, leaving a will, which was probated. By the third clause of this will he devised this 43 acres of land to the plaintiff. Frances Gleason is the residuary legatee under the will of Edward Moore, and all the debts and special legacies of his estate have been paid.
The plaintiff claims that the money paid by the railroad company for the right to occupy the premises devised to him by the will of Edward Moore, which accrued after the death of Moore, should go to him b}r reason of this devise, while Frances Gleason claims that the money paid by reason of this grant, whether it accrued after or before the death of Edward Moore, is part of his personal estate and should be collected by his legal representative and distributed to her as residuary legatee.
Rent may be defined to be the consideration agreed to be paid by one party for the use and occupancy of the real estate of another. Clarke v. Cobb,
The right to receive rent by one from another arises by privity of estate rather than by contract. A contract fixes the amount of land, the terms of payment and the manner of the use of the estate, but the right to recover the rent depends upon the ownership of the reversion. West Shore Mills Co. v. Edwards,
A transfer of the reversion, during the term of the lease, carries with it the right to the unearned rent, and the transferee can prosecute an action for its recovery unless it is specifically reserved. Watson v. Penn. Guard.,
Rent accruing after the death of the testator under a’ lease made by him belongs to the devisee unless specifically excepted by the terms of the will. 1 Woerner Am. Law of Admin. (2 ed.), Section 300; Liqhtner’s Exrx. v. Speck, 28 S. E. Rep., 326,
In the case of Van Wagner v. Van Nostrand,
Rent collected by an administrator or an executor which accrued after the death of the testator is held by him in trust for the heirs of the estate or the devisee, and they can recover from him. 1 Washburn on Real Property (6 ed.), Section 699; 2 Woerner Am. Law of Admin. (2 ed.), Section 513.
This grant by Edward Moore was not executed with the formalities required by the statute and did not provide the time for which it was to run. For these reasons Mrs. Gleason claims that the grant made by Edward Moore to the railroad company was a mere license to the railroad to go upon his land for the purpose of securing this water, and so long as he permitted it to use the land for this purpose he should be paid $100 per year.
The railroad company took possession of the land under this grant and all its terms were fully carried out and complied with by both the grantor
But we need not further consider the rights of the devisee and the railroad company, after the vesting of the reversion in these premises in the devisee, for the reason that no change in their relations could inure to the benefit of the estate of Edward Moore.
The devisee would have a right to all the rents which accrued after the death of Edward Moore whether they arose from the grant made by Moore to the railroad or from the new relations created after his death between the devisee and railroad company.
An order may be made directing the clerk to turn over the money now in the court to the plaintiff and a judgment entered against the defendant, Frances Gleason, for the costs.
Judgment for plaintiff.
