4 Mich. 575 | Mich. | 1857
By the Court,
The only question reserved necessary to be considered in deciding this case is, whether the defendant, having entered under the plaintiff) and held under him under this lease, is excused from paying rent to him by an eviction. That the entry and actual taking possession by Pierson under title conceded to be paramount, was equivalent to a complete ouster or eviction, there can be no doubt. The lessee was not bound to retain possession till actually expelled by legal process, nor subject himself to the trouble and expense of a
It is also well settled, that an eviction from the whole or any part of the premises leased, so as to interfere with the beneficial enjoyment of the premises, will exuse the payment of rent. (Taylor’s Land. & Ten., 36; Dyett vs. Pendleton, supra; Fitchburg Cotton Manu., Co. vs. Melvin, 15 Mass., 268 to 270, note.)
Eent is a sum stipulated to be paid for the actual use and enjoyment of another’s land, and' is supposed to come out of the profits of the estate. The actual enjoyment of the land is the consideration for the rent which is to be paid; and therefore, if the lessee is evicted before the rent becomes due, in whole or in part, it is a good answer to a claim for rent, by an action of debt, or contract, or distress. (1 Saund., 204, note.) From this it seems clear, that although there be a lease which may result in a claim for rent, which will constitute a debt, yet no debt occurs until such enjoyment has been had : “ because, ” says Lord Coke, “ in discussing the eifect of a release, a debt is merely a thing in action;” and therefore, if a man be bound to the payment of a debt at a future time, a release of all actions by the obligee is a perpetual bar; for “ albeit no action lyeth for the debt, because it is debitum in presenil quamvis sit solvendum in futuro, yet because the right of action is in time, the release of all actions is a discharge of the debt itself.” (Co. Lit., 292, b; Boardman vs. Osborn, 23 Pick., 295; Menough's Appeal, 5 Watts & Serg., 432.) The term “rent,” from renditus, embraces, in itself its true meanin'g, i. e., a return for-the thing enjoyed; and, if there is in this lease no specific
In other words, the full enjoyment for the full term, is a condition precedent to the payment of rent. By the terms of this lease, the lessee was to commence the repairs the spring after the date of the lease, and do the same in a reasonable time. But in case the lessee should neglect and refuse to make such repairs for one year thereafter, then the lessor reserved the right to re-enter, and in that case the lessee, the defendant, should become liable for the full value of the use of the premises. There was no such re-entry by the plaintiff, nor any evidence that the defendant had refused to make the repairs and improvements. On the contrary, it appears that the defendant, at the request of the plaintiff, did expend in grubbing, building and repairing fences, a sum equal to the entire profits derived by him from the entire premises, during the time he was actually in possession. And but for this eviction, the defendant might, for aught that appears, have made all the repairs he was required to make under the lease; and which it would undoubtedly have been competent for him to have done at any time during the term, in the absence of a re-entry by the plaintiff. Certainly no right of action had accrued to the plaintiff at the time of the eviction, and upon the principles of law we have considered, none could accrue subsequently. Let it therefore be certified to the Circuit Court for the County of Branch, as the opinion of this Court, that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, but that the defendant should have judgement for his costs in that Court.