46 Mo. App. 631 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
On the first day of July, 1881, the plaintiff leased to the defendant for the period of ten years three vacant lots fronting seventy feet on Cass avenue. The lease stipulated for the payment of an annual rental of $150, payable in equal quarterly installments. As a further consideration for such letting the defendant covenanted to pay all taxes, whether general or special, assessed against the lots during the term. The record shows, and the plaintiff admits, that her title to the demised premises Tvas, in November, 1881, divested by a sale under an execution issued upon a judgment against her in the United States circuit court for this district. The Metropolitan National Bank, of New York, purchased the property at the sale, and it received a deed therefor from the marshal of the court. After the purchase there was a verbal agreement between the bank and the plaintiff, that the plaintiff should receive the rents due under the lease during the continuation of certain litigation for • the enforcement of certain mortgages on this and other property belonging to the plaintiff. Under this agreement, the plaintiff collected the rents from the defendant until October, 1888. There was no evidence in the case that the defendant knew of, or assented to, this agreement, but, on the contrary, he testified that he knew nothing of the sale, or the ownership of the property by the bank, until 1888. In August, 1888, after the defendant learned that the bank owned the property, he served a written notice on the plaintiff’s agents that he would abandon the premises at the end of that quarter, which he did after tendering the possession to the plaintiff’s agents. After the receipt of this notice the local agents of the bank notified defendant that the bank recognized the validity of the lease and that the plaintiff had authority to collect and receive the rents during the remainder of the term, and to enforce compliance with all covenants and agreements contained in the lease.
The defendant asked the court to instruct that, under the pleadings and evidence, the plaintiff could not recover. This instruction was refused, and this action of the court presents the only question for review ■on this appeal.
If the lease in question was a valid contract of renting as to the Metropolitan National Bank as purchaser, then the defense here made is not available.
We understand the rule to be that, if the lease or ■contract antedates any right, interest or title acquired by the purchaser by means of his conveyance, then the purchase is in subordination to the lease. This is true, whether the conveyance be voluntary or in invitum. In other words the extinguishment of the lessor’s title will not avoid the lease either as to the tenant or purchaser. The sale merely operates as a transfer of the lessor’s title and of his rights under the lease to the purchaser. The purchaser may exhibit to the tenant his deed, and demand of him that he attorn and pay to him the subsequently accrued rents. If the tenant refuses, the purchaser may oust him by proper proceedings. Gunn v. Sinclair, 52 Mo. 327; May v. Luckett, 54 Mo. 437; Clampitt v. Kelley, 62 Mo. 571;
But the defendant’s counsel argue that a different rule of law is applicable in this case. It is asserted as a proposition of law that, when a lease or contract of renting is subsequent to a judgment against the lessor, which judgment is a lien on the demised premises, a purchaser under an execution to enforce such a judgment would occupy a very different relation to the tenant under such a lease. This position is supported by the argument, that such a sale would annihilate the lease, and would leave no privity either of contract or estate between the tenant and the purchaser, and that it would necessarily follow that the tenant would be at liberty to abandon the premises if he saw proper. There is a great deal of force in the argument, and very respectable authorities support it. But it is useless to discuss the question, because the record does not disclose the fact that the judgment was a lien on the demised premises at the date of the lease. The defendant’s answer contained the single averment that, in November, 1881, the property was sold under an execution issued upon a judgment rendered against the plaintiff in the United States circuit court for this district. But we find nothing tending to show the date of the judgment. If it were permissible for us to draw the inference, that the judgment must necessarily have antedated the lease, by reason of the sale at the next term of the court after the date of the lease, then, before we could decide that the judgment was a lien, we would
With the concurrence of the other judges, the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed. It will be so ordered.