7 Wend. 463 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1831
And at a previous day the following opinion was delivered:
By
Barringer’s judgment, under which the relator claims the right to redeem, if a lien at all, is so only upon the estate of Payn in the three leases reserved out of the grant to Hull. Under the law of 1820, sess. 43, p, 167, a judgment creditor could not redeem beyond the extent of the lien of his judgment. 19 Johns. R. 379. The Revised^Statute$, vol. 2d, p. 372, § 53, have altered the law in this respect, and a judgment creditor is now allowed to redeem the entire lot, tract or parcel, if his judgment is a lien on a specific por
But it is contended that the judgment of Barringer was not a lien on any specific portion of the premises sold, and this raises the important question in the case. At common law a judgment, or recognizance in the nature of a judgment, did not bind the lands of the defendant, nor did the execution disturb his possession, as it went only against his goods and chattels and the present profits of the land, or as Lord Coke expresses it, “ the corn and like present profits which shall grow upon the land. ” 2 Bacon’s Abr. tit. Execution, 685, 6. 3 Black. Comm. 418. 3 Coke, 12. The statute, 13th Edw. 1, for the benefit of merchants in the case of a statute merchant, which was a bond of record duly acknowledged, and in the nature of a judgment, subjected to execution, not only the goods and person, but the lands of the debtor into whose hands soever they came after the acknowledgment. Under this statute, the lands are considered bound from the time of the acknowledgment of the bond or recognizance. During the same parliament, 13th. Edw. 1, the first act also passed, which subjected the lands of debtors to execution on a judgment recovered, and gave to the plaintiffhis election of two writs, viz. a fieri facias, which he had at common law, or a writ on which the sheriff delivered all the goods and chattels of the debtor at an appraised value, and if not sufficient, then a moity of his lands, until the debt was levied out of the use of them. This writ is called an elegit, from the choice of two given to the party. The construction given to this statute by the courts in analogy to the statute merchant is, that the moity of the lands of the debtor, at the rendition of the judgment, are bound by the same. See the cases above cited, and Lillington’s case, 7 Coke, 131. The freehold lands and tenements of the debtor only were bound by these judgments. Harwood’s case, 8 Coke, •340 ; 2 Tidd, 850 ; 1 Johns. Cas. 223 ; and any less estate "was bound only, by issuing the execution. A freehold rent charge, it seems, is also bound by the judgment or recognizance. In Lillington’s case, the grantee of a rent charge, ( which was for life) after the acknowledgment of the statute, released to the tenant, by which the rent became extinguish
In this case the leases are not before us, and we therefore know nothing of their contents, except from the affidavits, and from them it does not appear that they contain a clause of distress. If they do not, the rent is but rent seek, and not liable to judgment or execution. The 4th Geo. 2, ch. 28, which gave the remedy by distress in case of rent seek, and in effect turned it into a rent charge, has never been enacted in this state. In the papers of the relator it is stated that a clause of re-entry in the usual form is embraced in the leases, but this fact is unimportant so far as this question is concerned, unless re-entry had been made, Shep, Touch. 153, 1 Bacon, 658, for until then the interest of Payn .would be unchanged. If the rent reserved in the leases had been a rent charge, it would have been bound by the judgments against Payn, for the reason given, that the term land includes it, but whether the rent would be deemed in the language of the revised statutes, vol. 2, p. 372, § 53, u a specific portion of the lot, tract or parcel (of land) sold,” is a question that does not arise upon the facts in the case, and therefore will not be examined.
As the case stands, the motion must be denied, on the ground that the judgment of Barringer is not a lien upon the leased premises, the rent reserved upon them for aught appearing being rent seek. We cannot presume any special provision in the lease for the purpose of turning it into a rent charge.
Motion for mandamus denied.
The relator, on leave obtained, now renewed his motion, and shewed that in the sub-leases was contained a clause of distress, and he further shewed that the sheriff had executed a deed to
The following opinion was delivered.
By Mr. Justice Sutherland. The opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Nelson states the material question in the case. It establishes, 1. That the provision of the revised statutes, 2 R. S. 372, sect. 53, by which a creditor whose judgment is a lien only on a specific portion of the premises sold may redeem the whole, is applicable to sales made before those statutes went into operation, and of consequence to this case ; 2. That a rent charge, that is, a rent reserved upon a lease in fee, with right of re-entry and distress, is an interest in land which is bound by a judgment, and may be sold on execution as real estate. It did not appear upon the motion before Judge Nelson that the leases in this case contained a clause of distress, and as that was indispensable, in order to constitute the rent a rent charge, upon which a judgment could he a lien, the motion was denied upon that ground. It is now shewn that the leases do contain a clause of distress.
If rent of this description is an interest in land upon which a judgment is a lien, and which may be sold upon execution, it is in my opinion a specific portion of the premises sold in this case, within the meaning of the 53d section of the R. S. 372, already referred to; and it was properly sold as the land, or Payn’s interest therein. Such is believed to have been the uniform practice in this state, and 1 perceive no substantial objection to it.
So much of the motion, therefore, as asks for a rule commanding the sheriff of the county of Rensselaer to execute a deed to the relator, of the premises mentioned in the certificate of sale, must be granted. The residue of the motion, that the deed given by the sheriff to Huntington, and also the deed given by Huntington to the Howlands, be vacated and set aside, must be denied; we never order a deed to be cancelled,