72 Md. 536 | Md. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the Court.
William H. Keener in September, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, leased to John Outtoun for ninety-nine years, renewable forever, a piece or parcel of ground lying in the City of Baltimore. The ground leased was described by metes and bounds. By virtue of this lease and claiming only under it, the lessee entered upon a lot of ground, and enclosed it, and has remained in possession from the date of the lease until the present time. He paid the rent reserved hy the lease up to November the first, 1886; the rent by the terms of the lease being payable in May and November. Since November, 1886, the lessee lias paid no rent. The lessor’s title passed in May, 1880, by will and devise to Caroline S. Dulin, and in April, 1889, she conveyed it in consideration of natural love and affection to her daughter, the appellee. By an instrument, which will hereinafter be more particularly noticed, Mrs. Dulin also assigned to the appellee all rent due to her under the lease. The appellee brought suit against the appellant for the unpaid rent and recovered judgment.
At the trial the defendant contended that he was not liable to pay the rent reserved in the lease. We will examine the merits of this defence before considering the other questions in the case. The evidence tended to show that the lot upon which the lessee entered, and of which he is still possessed, does not exactly coincide by metes and bounds with the description in the lease; that the easternmost side of the lot, as actually occupied, is
The plaintiff at the trial offered in evidence an instrument under the hand and seal of Caroline S. Dulin, purporting to assign to her all the rents due to the assignor under a lease from William H. Keener to John Outtoun, mentioning the date of the lease, and the book and folio of the land records of Baltimore City where it was recorded. As originally written this instrument stated the lease to be from Christian Keener; but after it was delivered, and after the institution of the suit, Mrs. Keener, the assignor, erased the name “ Christian ” and interlined the name “William H.” The defendant objected to the admission of the paper in evidence, but the Court admitted it. The interlineation was made by the maker of the instrument, and it was done by the consent of the assignee; moreover, it was in correction of a manifest mistake in the description of the lease, which without this correction was clearly identified by a reference to the book and folio of the land record where it was recorded. There was no error in this ruling.
It is maintained that the declaration is insufficient. The plaintiff demurred to a plea of the defendant; and
There was some discussion at the Bar about the structure of the declaration, and especially whether it should be regarded as drawn in debt or covenant. As we think that the plaintiff had a right to proceed in either form of action, perhaps a consideration of this question may be of but little practical use. The declaration counts on a demand for certain yearly rents of forty one dollars and two cents each, which the defendant, by an indenture of lease sealed with his seal, had covenanted and agreed to pay to the lessor, and alleges as a breach that, although often requested, “he has not paid, but has wholly refused, and does still refuse, to pay to the plaintiff any part of the said rent that hás accrued since the first day of November, in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-six; and the plaintiff claims therefor the sum of two hundred dollars.” This is the usual conclusion in an action of
Judgment affirmed.