79 Ala. 452 | Ala. | 1885

CLOPTOI^

j __qq{|^defendant requested the following instruction : • g^(^dd find for the plaintiff, and should believe fr-*' 1 ^ evidence! that |he defendant King was not guilty ofom ,. j 01, wrongful conduct in the matter, then you ^forthe plaintiff\he amount he paid for the lease, with ir1 nnu , • time ” Vhen referred to the evidence, mterest to this tune. v ’ *458the proposition of this charge is, that in an action by the lessee, for phe breach of an express term in the contract to put the lessee in possession, the ineasnre of damages, in the absence of fraud or wrongful conduct, is the consideration paid for the lease. with interest.

The general common-law i~ulc, as to the measure of damages for the breach of a contract, is one of indemnity; intended to give compensation for the loss snstained, and to put the party, as nearly as practicable, in the same condition in which he would have been had the contract been pe~forrned. In an action against a vendor, for a failure or refusal to perform a contract for the sale of peisonal property, the measure of damages is the difference between the contract and market prices at the time of the breach. An exception to the general rule, in favor of a vendor of real property, who, from inability to make title, fails -to perform his contract of sale and conveyance made in good faith, was first admitted in Flurean v. Thornhill, 2 W. Bla. 1078; where it was held, that in such case the vendee could recover only the amount of payments made, with interest and costs. The doctrine of this case has been followed in many subsequent cases, and may he regarded as the settled rule in England. It has been adopted in this and many other States. In Bibb v. Freeman, 59 Ala. 612, the purchase-money, with interest, was held to be the measure of damagea, in a recovery based on a broken contract of seizin ; and in Kingsbury v. Milner, 69 Ala. 504, the same measure of damages was applied in a broken contract of warranty.

The rule in F1urean v. Thornhill is an admitted exception to the general effect being to put the purchaser in the condition he would have been had no eon &ae~ been made. It has not generally been satisfactory to the courts, and has been repudiated by many; and individual members of courts which have followed it, while yielding to the weight of authority, have expressed dissatisfaction. Frequent attempts have been made to restrict its application, or to relax or modify it in ticular cases. If the vendor is guilty of wrongful conduct, he is generally regarded as without the benefit of the rule, and liable for compensatory damages; though it has been times said, that in such case the action should be founded on the tort. The rule may now be regarded "confined to cases contract, of a previously unsuspected defect~ the vendor's of inability to perform, arising from a discovery after the contract of a previously unsuspected defect in the vendor's title."-Pumpelly v. Phelps, 40 N. J. 60; Drake v. Baker 34 N. J. L. 358; Stevenson v. Harrison 3 Litt. 170; 2 Suth. on Dam. 207.

Counsel for appellant strenu~fis1y insist that the tween vendor and vendee ough t to be aDnhip *459and lessee. The contention is founded on analogy, based on the doctrine that a lease for a defined term is, in its nature, a sale of an interest in the land pro tanto. And our attention has been called to the decisions in New York, in which the rule was applied to cases of eviction of the tenant; and it was held that the rents reserved, when no other consideration is paid, are regarded as a just equivalent for the use of the demised premises. These decisions rest the rule on the assumption, that the parties agree on the rent reserved as the value of the lease; and as the rent ceases on eviction, “the lessee is relieved from a burden which must be deemed equal to the benefit which he would have derived from the continued enjoyment of the property.”—Kelly v. Dutch Church, 2 Hill, 105; Noyes v. Anderson, 1 Duer, 342. This court is urged to follow the New York decisions.

When this case was before us on a former appeal (67 Ala. 229), there was no proof that the defendant expressly bound himself to put the plaintiff in possession. On the record as then presented, it was said: “ The prime motive of the contract is, that the lessee shall have possession ; as much so, as if a chattel were the subject of the purchase. Delivery is one of the elements of every executed contract.” On the last trial, there was evidence tending .to show that one of the express terms of the contract was, that defendant should put plaintiff in possession. If this evidence be believed, until the plaintiff was put in possession, the contract remained unexecuted; it was an executory lease of the premises. Being executory, if we follow analogy, the damages must be assessed on the same principle as in cases of executory contracts for the sale and conveyance of land.

Courts, which have followed the doctrine in Flurean v. Thornhill, have applied the general, instead of the exceptional rule, in actions founded on executory contracts. In Taylor v. Barnes. 69 N. Y. 430, Allen, J., alluding to the rule which limits the recovery to the consideration, says: “But it is not applied in cases of executory contracts, where the vendor has sold lands to which he has not a perfect title, where he undertakes to complete and perfect it. In this case, there is an express agreement for indemnity; and a recovery, which does not give the vendee the benefit of his bargain, and the value of his purchase, does not indemnify him against loss. The true rule of damages, as a measure -of indemnity in such case, is the value of the land at the time of the eviction, or other' breach of the contract, with interest from that time.” And this court has held, that in actions on executory contracts for the sale of lands, the measure of damages is the value of the laud at the time of the breach.—Whitesides v. Jennings, *46019 Ala. 784; Pinkston v. Huie, 9 Ala. 252; Lewis v. Lee, 15 Ind. 499.

Where the exceptional rule between vendor and purchaser is not extended, the general rule as to the measure of damages in an action against the landlord, where possession has never been delivered, or the tenant has been evicted by a paramount title, is the difference between the rent reserved and the value of the land for the term.—Adair v. Bogle, 20 Iowa, 238; Dexter v. Manley, 4 Cush. 14; Dobbins v. Duquid, 65 Ill. 464; Newbourough v. Walker, 8 Gratt. 16. In England, courts which followed the exceptional rule, have refused to apply it between lessor and lessee. The exceptional rule has been repudiated except as between vendor and vqndee, and the general rule applied in actions on broken covenants in contracts of lease. In Locke v. Furze, 19 C. B. N. S. 96, Byles, J., in respect to the rule says: “That is an anomalous rule, confined, for the sake of convenience, to the case of vendor and purchaser. In all other cases of breach of contract, the measure of damages is the loss the plaintiff has proximately sustained by reason of the breach of the defendant’s contract.” This case was, on appeal, affirmed in the Exchequer Chamber, L. R. 1 O P.441. Martin, B. says: “It is clearly an exception ; it is contrary to the rule of the common law; it had not the unqualified approval of Lord Tentbrden ; and I see no reason why it should be extended.” And Oi-iannell, B. observes: The testator expressly bargained for that which he could not perform ; and therefore, I think, the proper principle, upon which the damages should be assessed, is a full compensation to the plaintiff for that which he has lost, not limited to the amount actually paid by him.” Where the lessor had given a covenant for quiet enjoyment, and the lessee was evicted, it was also held in Williams v. Burrell, 50 E. C. L. 401, that he was entitled to recover the value of the term. And in Trull v. Granger, 8 N. Y. 115, it was held, that the tenant may maintain an action for damages upon the implied agreement of the lessor to yield him possession, or in tort for the violation of the duty arising from the relation of landlord and tenant; and that the measure of damages, in either case, is the difference between the rent reserved, and the value of the premises for the term. It is true that, in this case, the lessors denied the right of possession.

The record exculpates the lessor from any fraud, or wrongful conduct. ‘ It appears that he was not only willing, but made efforts to perform his contract. We have already said, that a distinction has been recognized, where the vendor is innocent, and where he is guilty of wrongful conduct. Without discussing the sufficiency of the grounds on which this difference *461rests, we can perceive no substantial reason for its extension to contracts between lessor and lessee. Whether the lessor acted from a bad motive, or in good faith, the actual pecuniary damage to the lessee is the same in either ease.—Dohorty v. Dolan, 68 Me. 87; Walker v. Moore, 10 B. & C. 416. The defendant bargained for that which he was unable to perform — to put the plaintiff in possession — and on principle, he is bound to make compensation to the plaintiff for the loss he has sustained.

The grounds on which the rule as between vendor and vendee is founded, have been, as assigned by one of the justices in the leading case, an implied condition that the vendor has good title ; and also, as stated by subsequent justices, the uncertainty, arising from the complications of the law, that the vendor can effectively make a good title, and the vendee taking the property with that knowledge. It has also been said, that the rule finds its defense “in considerations of public policy, since the amount of damages, necessary to compensate the vendee, might in some cases ruin an innocent vendor.” Neither of the grounds exists, nor do the considerations of public policy apply, in the matter of a lease. Though a lease for a defined term may be, in its nature; a sale of a partial, limited interest in the land, it is not a freehold, but a chattel — the right to possess and use for the specified term. It seems, on reason, that the general rule, which governs in actions on contracts for the sale of specified chattels, is more appropriate, and more largely meets the measure of compensation, than an exceptional rule admitted on grounds and considerations confessedly peculiar to vendor and vendee. There can be no difference in principle, whether the contract be for the sale of personal property, or for the possession and use of real property for a year or term of years.—Hopkins v. Lee, 6 Wheat, 109.

We do not wish to be' understood as expressing or intimating a desire or purpose to disturb the rule as between vendor and vendee, which, from its long existence, may be regarded as a rule of property. What we have said in respect to it has been as bearing on the question of its extension to cases other than those in which it was first admitted. Though there is no intent to interfere with the rule as now confined, we can see no sufficient reason to extend it to cases other than vendor and purchaser. Such extension would be the extension of an exceptional, and, it may be said, arbitrary rule — engrafting exceptions on a general rule, which are not founded on pressing reasons, or a necessity to promote the ends of justice. Such extension would transgress the purpose of courts to carry out contracts as made by the parties, and not to make contracts for them, by implying conditions not expressed, and not justified by any authorized legal interpretation. Especially are wre un*462willing to admit it in a recovery based on the breach of an express term of a contract of lease to put the tenant in possession. If the lessor chose to absolutely agree to deliver possession, he must be held responsible for his failure, though he may have acted in ignorance of an adverse occupancy, or, if aware of it, relied on his ability to remove the obstruction. In such case, the general rule must govern. Anything less will not compensate the lessee for the loss of his bargainT~7

The plaintiff was allowed to prove, against the defendant’s objection, that the leased premises would probably yield, with ordinary and average seasons, four crops of hay annually; and also the probable quantity and market value of such crop. We do not understand that the evidence was offered or admitted as a basis for the recovery of profits, as suoh, but as facts from which the jury might draw a conclusion as to the value of the lease. The competency of such evidence, when offered for this purpose, should, on reason, be governed by the same principle as the admissibility of proof of profits, when their loss constitutes the measure of damages. While profits, when contingent or speculative, or when their loss is not the natural and proximate result of the breach of a contract, are not recoverable, they are allowed when they form a constituent element of the contract, and the amount can be estimated with reasonable certainty from established data.—Brigham v. Carlisle, 78 Ala. 243. So, in order that profits may constitute the basis of a legitimate inference as to the value of the use of leased land, they must have been an element of the con tract, and there must be established data from which the amount can be ascertained with reasonable certainty.

The land was a meadow of about thirty acres, sown in what is commonly known as “Johnson grass.” At the time of the leasing, there was a crop ready to be mowed. The condition of the land, and of the crop of grass growing thereon, and the kind, nature, and usual productive capacity of the grass, established Nato, from which the quantity of annual yield can be ascertained with reasonable certainty. It is different where land is leased for general and undefined agricultural purposes. That the land was sown in grass, one crop of which was matured, and the probable amount of production, were elements of the value of the lease. A party is not confined to proof of value by the opinion of witnesses; it may be proved by facts and circumstances. The state of the land, the kind of grass in which it was sown, the annual yield in the usual course of nature, and the market value, were facts proper to be considered by the jury in estimating the value of the use of the land for the term^ — -the value of the lease.—Dexter v. Manley, 4 Cush., supra.

*463The bill of exceptions does not show for what special purpose the evidence was offered, nor what instructions were given as to the measure of the damages. We must, therefore, pre-sume that the evidence, was received for an admissible purpose, if admissible for any object, and that the instructions were in accordance with law.

If it be conceded, that the charge requested, as to the effect of an interference by a stranger after the renting, asserts a correct legal proposition, on the hypothesis, that there was an implied covenant that the premises shall be open to entry, it ignored material facts, which the evidence tended to-show, and which rendered an explanation or qualification of the charge necessary to prevent misleading. If the possession is open and unobstructed at the time of renting, and-there is only an implied covenant that the premises shall be open to entry, a trespass thereafter by a stranger is a wrong against the lessee.—67 Ala. 229. But, if there be an express term of the contract, that the lessor shall put the tenaut in possession, a trespass by a stranger, before the tenant is put into possession, is a wrong against the lessor. The charge is restricted to an interference after the rentmg, without respect to the fact or time of putting the tenant into possession. As the legal effect of such interference is met and avoided by other facts, which there is evidence tending to show, the charge was properly refused.—McLemore v. Nuckolls, 37 Ala. 662.

There was no proof that Bowley was a co-partner, or joint adventurer with plaintiff. The evidence shows that he furnished half of the money, with which the plaintiff made the cash payment, and that he was to become a partner if the plaintiff obtained possession. But the plaintiff never obtained possession ; and if the only evidence on the question be believed, there was no co-partnership. The charges asked, that plaintiff could not maintain the action without joining Bowley as co-plaintiff, based on the hypothesis that lie furnished apart of the money, were abstract, and properly refused.—Thrash v. Burnett, 57 Ala. 156; Beasly v. State, 59 Ala. 20; Bain v. State, 61 Ala. 75.

Affirmed.

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