Anderson v. Susquehanna Power Co.

160 A. 286, 162 Md. 501, 1932 Md. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 29, 1932
Docket[No. 27, January Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished

This text of 160 A. 286 (Anderson v. Susquehanna Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Susquehanna Power Co., 160 A. 286, 162 Md. 501, 1932 Md. LEXIS 142 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Cecil County, overruling a demurrer to a bill filed by the appellee, the Susquehanna Power Company, against the appellants, O. Allen Anderson and others.

The facts alleged in the bill are substantially these: On the 29th day of May, 1929, the appellee became entitled to *503 and possessed of the leasehold interest of a lot or parcel of land in the town of Port Deposit, known as the Sash Factory Wharf property. The leasehold interest in this land, now held by the appellee, came to it through and by virtue of a sublease from Ebenezer D. McClenahan to Wesley Wiley, William Thompson, and Rorrean W. Roland, dated December 12th, 1854, and subsequent mesne conveyances. At the time of the filing of the bill, the holders of the reversionary interest in said land were, as therein alleged, Anderson and others, the appellants. This interest, as claimed by them, was acquired through and by virtue of a deed from Ebenezer D. McClenahan to C. Allen Anderson, dated the 4th of April, 1859, and by subsequent mesne conveyances, wills, and intestacies.

The land in question is- composed of two lots, which are designated on the plat found in the appellee’s brief as X and Y. The fee simple interest in these lots was originally held by Rebecca E. Creswell. The northern lot, or lot X, is the western portion of the lot that was demised or leased by Rebecca E. Creswell unto Thomas J. Quigley, on the 4th of April, 1833, for the term of ninety-nine years, renewable forever, at an annual rental of sixty dollars. The southern lot, or lot Y, is the western portion of the lot leased or demised by Rebecca E. Creswell on February 15th, 1847, to one John Moore, for the term of ninety-nine years, renewable forever, at an annual rent of forty-five dollars.

In the lease from McClenahan, these lots were demised or leased to Wiley, Thompson, and Roland, “their executors, administrators and assigns, as tenants in common, from the day next before the day of the date of these presents,, for all the rest and residue, save one year of the terms for years yet to come and unexpired in said premises; yielding and paying therefor during the term thereby granted, to the said Ebenezer D. McClenahan, his executors, administrators and assigns, the yearly rent or sum of one hundred and twenty dollars, * * * accounting from the first day of July, eighteen hundred and fifty-four and payable in half yearly *504 payments of sixty dollars each thereafter on the first day of January and July, in each, and every year.”

The lease contains a provision that, in case of default in payment of the rent, it should be lawful for the lessor, his executors; administrators, and assigns, to make distress therefor. It is also provided therein “that the said Ebenezer D. McOlenahan, his executors, administrators or assigns, shall at any time during the continuance of this demise at the request and cost of the said parties hereto of the second part, their executors, administrators or assigns, and upon their paying or tendering in payment the sum of ten dollars, lawful money as a fine therefor to the said party of the first part hereto, his executors, administrators, or assigns, make, execute and deliver or cause and procure to be made, executed, and delivered to the said parties of the second part hereto, their executors, administrators, or assigns, a good and sufficient lease of the above demised premises, reserving to himself, or themselves a reversion of one day therein which lease shall contain all and singular the covenants, conditions and agreements herein contained, and in particular a covenant for perpetual renewment, so that the estate and interest hereby created shall be renewable from time to time forever.”

There is in the lease a subsequent provision that “the said Ebenezer D. McOlenahan, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, shall and will at any time hereafter, at the request and cost of the said parties hereto of the second part (Wiley and others), their executors, administrators, or assigns, and on their paying or tendering in payment to. the said Ebenezer D. McOlenahan, his executors, administrators, or assigns, the sum of two thousand dollars, lawful money, with all arrearages of rent, then due, with a pro rata portion of the accruing year’s rent, make, execute, acknowledge and deliver to the said parties hereto of the second part, their executors, administrators or assigns, a deed of assignment of the lot of ground and premises herein described, subject to one cent ground rent' and free clear and discharged of the rent herein reserved and all encumbrances.”

*505 Ebenezer D. McClenahan, by the aforementioned deed of April 4th, 1859, conveyed unto Allen Anderson the reversionary interest in the land subleased by him to Wiley, Thompson and Noland, “subject to the legal operation” of that lease. In his deed to Allen Anderson, McClenahan “covenanted that he has the right to convey the said lot of ground.”

It is alleged in the bill that the rent of the western portion of the lot, leased unto John Moore by Eebecca E. Creswell, or lot Y, was. discharged from the ground rent reserved by the redemption and extinguishment of the rent of the eastern portion of the Moore lot by the owner of the reversionary interest therein, against which it seems the owner of such reversionary interest had elected to charge and collect the-annual ground rent of forty-five dollars.

It is also charged in the bill, as affecting lot X, that, “at least for the last consecutive forty (40) years there has been no demand or payment of the said specific original or paramount rent of sixty dollars ($60) reserved out of the lot described in the aforesaid lease from Eebecca E. Creswell to Thomas J. Quigley, whereof a part of the said Sash Factory Wharf lot is a part, and that the said original rent is conclusively presumed to have been extinguished by operation of law, and that the said named defendant owners and the said unknown heirs of other owners of the said original rent are barred from setting up any claim to said rent or to the said original reversion in that part of said lot and lands, described in the said deed of assignment from William B. Steel” to the plaintiff, “and known as the Sash Factory Wharf property, nor have the said owners or the said unknown heirs of owners any right to institute any suit, action or proceeding whatsoever to recover the said original rent or' the said lot or land.”

The allegation is also made in the bill that the one cent rent mentioned in the sublease from McClenahan to Wiley and others was a part of the rent reserved, and ran with that lease.

McClenahan died “long years ago, leaving two sons and one daughter and the children of a daughter who predeceased *506

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 286, 162 Md. 501, 1932 Md. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-susquehanna-power-co-md-1932.