26 N.J.L. 236 | N.J. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the court.
Action on the case, brought by Peter M. Ryerson, who sues for the use of Ebenezer B. Woodruff and David Ryerson, against William H. Quackenbush, sheriff of the county of Passaic, for removal of goods off of demised premises before payment of rent, contrary to the provision of the statute. Nix. Dig. 418, § 4.
The declaration avers that, on the twelfth of February, 1855, Thomas Wallace and James H. Concklin, then and for the space of one year then last past, had occupied the ¡¡remises at Wynoque (on which stood the Freedom furnace, dwelling-houses, mills and other buildings) as tenants to the plaintiff; that on the said twelfth day of February, fioOOQ of rent for said premises for one year, ending on said day, became due and payable, and still remains due and unpaid ; that on the twentieth day of February, in the year aforesaid, the defendant, under pretext of a writ of execution against the said Wallace and Concklin, at the suit of Norton and Beame, took the goods and chattels of the said Wallace and Concklin, then being in and upon the said premises, to a large amount beyond the amount of rent then due; that after the taking of the said goods, and before the removal thereof, under pretext of the said execution, the plaintiff gave notice to the defendant of the rent being due and unpaid, and requested payment of the rent before the removal of the goods; yet the defendant wrongfully sold, removed and carried away the said goods from the said premises, and the said goods were, by virtue of said process, sold and removed from the said premises contrary to the statute, without paying the plaintiff the rent due as aforesaid, or any ¡¡art thereof, and the said rent still remains due and unpaid, by reason whereof the plaintiff has beeu deprived of the benefit of
The second count is similar, save that instead of charging •■a removal of the goods from the premises by the defendant, it. alleges that the defendant, in order to procure the removal of the goods from said premises, under color of the ■said writ of execution, took out of the possession of the said Wallace and Coneklin, and into the sole and exclusive possession of the defendant, the said goods and chattels, and ■refused to permit the plaintiff to lake the same as a distress for the rent so due as aforesaid, and thereby hindered the plaintiff from taking the same as a distress for the said rent; and the defendant sold the said goods and chattels at public auction, and delivered the same to certain purchasers thereof, who refused to pay and satisfy the plaintiff’s cent.
The demised premises for which rent is claimed lo be due to the plaintiff, and from which the goods of the tenants are charged to have been illegally removed by the defendant, as sheriff, under color of an execution against the tenants, were leased by the plaintiff to Wallace and Coneklin, for three years from the first day of June, 1853, at an annual rent of $3000, payable half-yearly to the plaintiff, the rent to be applied to the payment of the principal and interest of a certain decree in the Court of Chancery of this state, against the said Peter M. Ryerson and others, held by David Ryerson and Ebenexer B. Wood-ruff.
By an assignment in writing under the hand and seal of the said Peter M. Ryerson, the lessor, bearing date on the eighteenth of November, 1853, the equal half part (§1500) of the rent reserved upon the said lease is assigned to David Ryerson, to be applied by him to the purposes specified in the said lease, and the said David Ryerson is appointed the attorney of the lessor to collect the said rent j and by another instrument, also endorsed upon the lease, the lessees, by writing signed by Thomas Wallace,
On the trial, it appeared tliat the defendant, by virtue of sundry writs of execution in his bands, as sheriff of the county of Passaic, against Wallace and Concklin, being upon their personal property on the demised premises at Wynoque, and, on the twelfth of February, 1855, sold the said goods and chattels upon the demised premises, without having removed the same, to an amount exceeding $3000. Prior to the sale, notice of the existence of one year’s rent was given to the sheriff, and payment thereof demanded by the attorney of the plaintiff and of those claiming to be beneficially interested in the rent.
David Ryerson, the assignee of half the rent, having been subpoenaed by the defendant as a witness, produced a copy of the lease and assignment to him, upon which there was endorsed, in the handwriting of the said David Ryerson, a memorandum, as follows: “This lease, delivered to me the 9th February, 1855, present S. D. Morford, at Sussex Bank.” The court, on the trial, admitted this memorandum to go in evidence to the jury, though objected to by the defendant. A motion to non-suit the plaintiff was denied. The court [pro forma) instructed the jury that the action was properly brought; that there was in contemplation of law a removal of the goods front the demised premises by the defendant; that the defendant was entitled to no mitigation of damages on the ground of repairs made by the tenants to the demised premises with the assent of the lessor, and upon an agreement with him that the expense of such repairs should be deducted from the rent, if such repairs were made subject to notice of the assignment of the rent, and without the assent of the assignee. A verdict was taken for the plaintiff, and his damages assessed to the amount of one year’s rent with interest.
The first ground upon which it is sought to set aside the verdict is, that the action against the sheriff cannot be maintained, unless there be an actual removal of the goods from the demised premises by virtue of the execution. The provision on which the suit is founded was originally introduced into our law by the act of March 10th, 1795, § 4, (Paterson Laws 164.) That section is nearly a literal copy of the first section of the English statute of 8 Anne, eh. 14. Its language is as follows: “No goods or chattels whatsoever, lying or being, or which shall lie or be in or upon any messuage, lands, or tenements, which are or shall be leased for term of life or lives, year or years, at will or otherwise, shall be liable to be taken, by virtue of any execution, on any pretence whatever, unless the party at whose suit the execution is sued out shall, before the removal of such goods from of the said premises by virtue of such execution, pay to the landlord of the said premises, or his bailiff, all and every sum or sums of money as are or shall be due for rent for the said premises at the time of the taking snob goods or chattels by virtue of such execution, provided the said arrears of rent do not amount to more than one year’s rentand in case the said arrears shall exceed one year’s rent, then the said party at whose suit the said execution is sued out, paying the said landlord or his bailiff one year’s rent, may proceed to execute his judgment as he might have done before the making of this act; and the sheriff, or other officer, is hereby empowered and required to levy and
In the construction given by the English courts to the statute of Anne, it appears to be settled that no action will lie against the sheriff, except upon proof of a removal of the goods from the demised premises. The gravamen of the action is not the seizure or levy by virtue of the execution, but the removal of the goods, to the prejudice of the landlord’s remedy, after notice of his claim for rent. Palgrave v. Windham, Strange 212; 1 Lilly’s Ent. 47; Comyn’s Land, and Tenant 395; Archbold’s Landlord and Tenant 254.
There is an apparently conflicting authority in West v. Hedges, Barnes 211, where, according to the report, it was held that a bill of sale was a removal of goods taken by virtue of a writ oí fieri facias. But that was not an action against the sheriff, but an application to the court by the landlord, to be paid his rent out of the money levied by virtue of the execution. And the sheriff having, by virtue of the sale, made the money out of the goods upon the demised premises, the landlord, by the clear equity of the statute, would be entitled to the year’s rent out of money in the sheriff’s hands. Comyn’s Land, and Ten. 396.
It is further held, under the statute of Anne, that it is immaterial whether the goods seized and removed from demised premises be-the goods of the tenant or of a third person, provided they were goods upon which the landlord might have distrained. Forster v. Cookson, 1 Queen’s Bench 419; Archbold’s Land, and Ten. 256. Ana the reason assigned is, that as the landlord might have distrained the goods upon the demised premises, to whomsoever they belong, the sheriff, by removing the goods, has done to the landlord all the harm against which the statute meant to protect him.
It is insisted that the construction of the statute of Anne must be adopted as the true construction of our statute, upon the familiar principle that the legislature,
But such construction would totally defeat the policy of our statute, because, by the express terms of the act concerning distresses, the landlord is entitled to take, as & distress for rent, the goods and chattels of his tenant, and not of any other person found upon the demised premises. Nix. Dig. 200, § 8. The landlord’s right of distress, therefore, would be as effectually defeated by a levy and sale of the tenant’s goods upon the premises as by their actual removal. On the other hand, to hold that the sheriff is liable to the landlord, by reason of the sale of the goods of a stranger found upon the demised premises, would contravene the policy of’ the act, because the landlord has no right of distress against the goods of a stranger, and
It was insisted, upon the argument, that a subsequent change in the law affecting the landlord’s right of distress should not be held to vary the construction of a pre-existing statute. But, in point of fact, the two statutes in relation to distreses and to landlords and tenants were enacted by the same legislature at the same sitting. Both were under consideration at the same time. They are, therefore, strictly cotemporaneous . acts, and each may be safely construed in relation to the provisions of the other, as a part of the existing law. It is, perhaps, worthy of notice that the eighth section of the act concerning distresses, as originally drawn by Governor Paterson, was a copy of the 8th section of the 11th Geo. 2, ch. 19, retaining the provisions of the English law unchanged, .and that the fundamental change in the law, limiting -the landlord’s right of distress to the goods and chattels of his tenant, was introduced into the section in its passage through the legislature. The amendment was, in fact, made in council after the act concerning landlords and tenants had been ordered to a third reading, and the day before its final passage by that body. Both acts were subsequently passed by the house of assembly as they were received from council, without amendment. It is highly probable, therefore, that the retaining of the precise phraseology of the statute of Anne in the 4th section of
The second ground on which it is sought to set aside the verdict is, that (he plaintiff, who was the original lessor of the premises, had assigned the rent, before it became due, to third parties, and had thereby divested himself of the right of action. It is claimed, on the part of the defendant, in support of this objection, that it appears by the evidence, that Peter M. Ryerson, the lessor, assigned the rent reserved upon the lease, in equal portions in severalty, to David Ryerson and Ebenezer B. Wood-ruff before the rent became due. Assuming the fact to be as alleged, it is insisted that such assignment transferred no right of action to the assignees, and that the legal remedy was still with the original lessor, though for the benefit of his assignee: first, because rent cannot be severed from the reversion, and assigned to a stranger; and second, because the rent cannot be apportioned by the lessor to different owners, thus subjecting the tenant to different actions and different distresses. The jury, for the purposes of the trial, were instructed upon this point in favor of the plaintiff, without prejudice to the question of right, leaving the legal question open for the consideration of this court.
Rent, by the common law, is incident to the reversion, and cannot be reserved to a stranger. And though by the terms of the lease, the lessee covenant to pay rent, not to the lessor, but to a third party, the sum so covenanted to be paid is not properly a rent. It is not payable upon the laud as rent is, nor can it be recovered by action or distress, for there is neither privity of contract nor privity of estate between the parties. Littleton, §§ 345, 346; Co. Lit. 213 a, b, 143 b; Oates v. Frith, Hobart 130, a; 2 Bla. Com. 41 ; 3 Kent's Com. 463.
Bat though the rent must be originally reserved to the lessor or his heirs, and is incident to the reversion, it is not inseparable from it. Having been created, it may be
Thus, in Ards v. Watkin, Cro. Eliz. 637, 651, where, upon a lease for years rendering £34 per annum rent, the lessor devised £28, parcel of the rent, to his three sons, one-third to each- in severalty, and debt was brought by one of the sons for his part of-the rent, there was both a severance-of the rent from the reversion, and an apportionment of it among the different devisees. The court said there was no doubt that the rent was devisable and separable from the reversion, for it is not merely a thing in action, but quasi an inheritance. And Popham, J., said, that although a thing in action cannot be transferred over, nor be devised, yet a contract which ariseth from an interest in land, or which is an interest, may be well transferred over. Upon the question whether the lessor, by devise, could, without the consent of the lessee, apportion the rent, the court were originally divided in opinion, on the ground that the lessee, without his consent, would thereby be liable to two actions or two distresses. But upon a subsequent argument, a majority of the court sustained the action, and one of the grounds suggested upon the original argument for holding the apportionment valid was, that the devise is quasi an act of law, which shall enure without attornment, and shall- make a sufficient privity. And see Wotton v. Shirt, Cro. Eliz. 742.
In Robbins v. Coxe, 1 Levintz 22, T. Raym, 11, the Court of King’s Bench were divided upon the question whether an action-of debt for rent lay by the grantee of the rent without the reversion, the tenant having attorned, and the case was adjourned into the exchequer chamber. But according to the- note of the reporter in Levintz, the case of Ards v. Watkin having been subsequently published, the rent was paid before argument.
But whatever doubt may have- originally existed upon this point,, it is now: well settled-' that the assignee: of rent
Originally it was held that the attornment of the tenant was necessary to the validity of the assignment; but such attornment was rendered unnecessary by the statute 4 Anne, ch. 16, § 9, Nix. Dig. 123, § 15, which declares that every grant or conveyance of rent shall be good and effectual without attornment by the tenant.
In Farley v. Craig, 6 Halst. 273, the rale that a rent, charge may be apportioned by a grant of a part of the rent, was recognized and adopted by this court. It is true, as was ' suggested upon the argument, that Mr. Justice Ford, in the citation from Kent’s Commentaries of the rule, “ that, a rent charge may he apportioned whenever the reversioner or owner of the rent either releases part of the rent to the tenant or conveys part of the rent to a stranger,” has, in the last passage, substituted the word rent for land, materially altering its meaning. 3 Kent 376, 470. The authorities cited by Kent, however, fully sustain the doctrine as stated by Mr. Justice Ford. Thus, in Coke Lit. 148, a, it is said, that a rent charge, by the act of the party, may in some cases be apportioned, as if a man hath a rent charge of twenty shillings, he may release to the tenant of the land ten shillings more or less, and reserve part. So if the grantee of an annuity or rent charge of twenty pounds grant ten pounds, parcel of the said annuity or rent charge, and the tenant attorn, hereby the annuity or rent charge is divided. Kent, in the passage cited, states the undoubted right of the landlord, in certain specified methods, to apportion the rent without, the consent of the tenant. The passage, as found cited by Justice Ford, though inaccurate as a quotation, does not mis
The .law being that rent accrued may be severed from the reversion ; that it may be assigned by the landlord so as to vest in the assignee a right to máintain an action ; that it may be apportioned by act of law, or (with the tenant’s assent) by direct assignment of the rent by the landlord to one or more strangers, it remains to inquire whether, upon the facts of this case, the action can be sustained.
By the terms of the original lease made by Peter M. Ryerson to Wallace and Concklin, the rent was made payable to the lessor, Peter M. Ryerson, to be applied to the payment of a certain decree in the Court of Chancery held by David Ryerson'and Ebenezer B. Woodruff. It is clearly a good reservation of rent to the lessor, the special purpose to which the rent was to be applied in nowise affecting its character as rent or the legal rights of the parties in. regard to enforcing its payment.
But by an assignment in writing under seal, bearing date on the 18th of November, 1853, which was produced upon the trial, Peter M. Ryerson, the lessor, assigned to David Ryerson, the one equal half part, viz., $1500, of the yearly rent of $3000 reserved by the said lease, accruing half-yearly, from and after the first day of June then last past, for the residue of the term created by the lease. There was, also, evidence offered upon the trial strongly tending to show that an assignment of the other moiety of the rent reserved upon the lease was made to Ebenezer B. Woodruff. This assignment was not produced, and due notice to produce it not having been given, the judge properly excluded parol evidence of its contents. There was no proof of its actual date, nor any satisfactory proof of its execution before the rent, which forms the subject of the present controversy, or any part of it, fell due. The case therefore stands upon proof of the assignment to
The assignment to David Ryerson, which was offered in evidence, bears date before any part of the rent became due. The legal presumption is, that the instrument coming from the hands of the assignee was executed and delivered at the time it bears date.
The presumption is not repelled by the testimony of the subscribing witness, that the assignee was not present when it was executed, and that the witness had no knowledge of its delivery. That all may be, and yet the instrument have been delivered upon the day and within the hour of its execution. The evidence should have gone further, and shown that, in point of fact, it was not delivered till after the rent fell due. This was attempted, on the part of the plaintiff, first, by offering the testimony of David Ryerson, which was overruled. There was an endorsement on the back of the leaso and assignment, admitted to have been in the handwriting of the assignee, in these words : “ This lease delivered to me the 9th of February, 1855, present, S. D. Morford, at Sussex Bank.” This memorandum, though objected to by the defendant, was admitted as evidence to the jury. It does not appear for what purpose the memorandum was admitted. It was clearly not competent to prove the time of the actual delivery of the leaso, nor could it rebut the presumption of the time of delivery resulting from the date of the assignment. It appears, then, by the evidence, that one-half of the rent for which the recovery was had was assigned by the plaintiff to David Ryerson before the rent fell due, and that the plaintiff was divested of all right of action for that portion of the rent.
The plaintiff having recovered a larger amount of damages than by law he is entitled to, the verdict must be set aside, and a new trial granted.