Bank of Pennsylvania v. Wise

3 Watts 394
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 3 Watts 394 (Bank of Pennsylvania v. Wise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Pennsylvania v. Wise, 3 Watts 394 (Pa. 1834).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

The only question to be decided in this case is, whether the purchaser at sheriff’s sale of the lessor’s title and interest to and in a house and lot of ground, which had been regularly taken in execution, condemned and sold by the sheriff, be entitled to demand and receive from the lessee, the tenant in possession, the whole of 212 dollars 50 cents, being a half year’s rent which became payable fourteen days after the purchasers had paid the purchase money to the sheriff and received from him his deed, duly executed and acknowledged, consummating the sale.

In this case the sheriff, on the 1st day of January 1831, sold the house and lot to Thomas Elder and Jacob M. Haldeman, two of the defendants, for 9750 dollars; and after having received from them the purchase money on the 18th day of the same month, executed and delivered to them, in due form, a deed of conveyance for the same; of which immediate notice was given by the purchasers to the President, Directors and Company of the Bank of Pennsylvania, who were in possession of the house and lot under a lease from George Fisher, the defendant in the judgment and execution under which the sale had been made. The lease was for a term of five years, commencing with the 1st day of August 1828, at a rent of 425 dollars per annum, payable half yearly. On the 1st of February following the delivery of the deed by the sheriff to the purchasers, 212 dollars 50 cents, a half year’s rent, fell due; and on the 4th of March ensuing, they, by their bailiff John Wise, the other defendant, distrained for it; upon which the writ of replevin commencing this action was sued out by the plaintiffs, and the property distrained on was replevied.

[397]*397For the fourteen days, that is, the time which elapsed from the delivery of the sheriff’s deed to the purchasers, until the 1st day of February 1831, when the first half year’s rent became payable after the sale, the plaintiffs were willing to pay the purchasers such proportion of the rent as that time bore to one hundred and eighty-four days, which is the whole number of days in the half year, but for the residue they say that they are bound to account to the defendant in the execution, as he continued to be their landlord and the owner of the reversion to the 18th of January 1831.

The idea of apportioning the rent that becomes payable after the purchaser of a reversionary interest in fee at a sheriff’s sale, has paid the purchase money and received his deed of conveyance for it, between him and the defendant in the execution as whose estate it was sold, is unknown to the law, and cannot be reconciled with any of its analogous and fixed principles.

It is said our act of assembly of the 6th of April 1802, entitled “an act to enable purchasers at sheriff’s and coroner’s sales to obtain possession,” has a direct and important bearing upon this question, and it may be, therefore, well enough to examine and see what the law was, in regard to it, before the passage of that act.

We will suppose that the owner in fee of a house and lot of ground had leased it for a term of twenty years, at a rent of 200 dollars per annum, payable half yearly, under which the lessee took possession, and shortly afterwards a creditor of the lessor obtained a judgment against him, upon which he proceeded by execution and sold all the right, interest and estate of the lessor in the house and lot. Three months before the day at which a half year’s rent became payable, according to the terms of the lease, the sheriff executed and delivered a deed to the purchaser, who thereupon gave notice immediately to the lessee of his having become the purchaser of the leased premises, and of his having received from the sheriff a deed of conveyance duly executed and acknowledged. At the time of the sale and delivery of the deed by the sheriff, no rent was due and payable agreeably to the terms of the lease, and I therefore presume that it will be admitted that the lessee could not have been called on at that time by the defendant in the execution, nor yet by any body else, to pay a rent of three months, part of the half year which had elapsed, because such a demand would be contrary to his agreement, which was, to pay the rent half yearly, and not quarterly. So, after the half year has run, I presume that it will be admitted that the defendant in the execution can have no colour of claim to the rent for the last three months of it. To this part of the half year’s rent it is given up by all that the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale has an indisputable claim. But then to say that the lessee, even at the expiration of the half year, shall be bound to pay the rent for the last three months thereof to the purchaser, and for the first three to the defendant in the execution, would be to split'up a demand into two, which by the terms of the contract giving rise to it, was one and entire, and would [398]*398subject the lessee to two actions instead one, contrary to his agreement, and contrary to a well known rule of the common law. As the lessee, however, has had the full enjoyment of the leased premises, there can be no good reason for his not paying the whole of the half year’s rent as soon as it shall become payable by his lease to the party entitled to receive it. Then seeing the purchaser has succeeded to the rights of the landlord, why shall he not receive the whole rent 1 The only reason, of the least plausibility, that can be alleged for apportioning the rent according to time between the defendant in the execution and the purchaser at sheriff’s sale, by giving one half of it, on account of the first three months of the half year, to the defendant in the execution, and the other half, for the last three months, to the purchaser at sheriff’s sale, would be to say that it did not properly and truly form any part of the subject matter or estate sold by the sheriff; that the defendant in the execution had received no consideration, and the purchaser had paid none for it. But by inquiring into, and ascertaining what was really sold and bought at the sheriff’s sale, it will be seen that there is no grouud whatever for such a suggestion, and that it is a great misapprehension of the matter to suppose it; for we shall find that the purchaser at sheriff’s sale not only purchased, but must be considered as having paid for, and as being invested with, a right to demand and receive all the rents which shall become payable, according to the terms of the lease, after the time that his title to his purchase became perfect, by his payment of the purchase money, and receipt of the sheriff’s deed. A right to demand and receive all such rents formed the very heart and essence of his purchase, seeing it was merely a reversionary interest.

It will appear that there is no proposition better established in the law, than, that without an express reservation, an assignment or transfer of the reversion, where rent is becoming payable at certain periods to the reversioner, carries with it the right to demand and receive the rent which shall become payable afterwards.

Littleton, in section two hundred and twenty-eight, says, that by a grant of the reversion the rent passeth: and my Lord Coke, in his commentary upon it, tells us, that “ the reason thereof is because the rent is incident to the reversion, and passeth away by the grant of the reversion, as with the superior, without saying cum pertinentiis.” 1 Inst. 151 b; Shep. Touch. 89. And in Co. Litt. 215 b, it is laid down that “ both assignees in deed, and assignees in law, shall have the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Watts 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-pennsylvania-v-wise-pa-1834.