Becker v. Walworth

45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169 (Becker v. Walworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. Walworth, 45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169 (Ohio 1887).

Opinion

Speak, J.

That a leasehold interest in a term for years passes, upon the death of the lessee, to the personal representative and not to the heir, and that such representative thereby [172]*172becomes an assignee of tbe lease by operation of law, is elementary. He may dispose of the unexpired term by sale, as of other assets, and by assignment, and thus avoid personal liability for rents coming due, though the estate would remain liable to the lessor upon the covenants in the lease. But if the representative enters into possession of the leased premises, he thereby incurs liability, in his personal character, to the extent of profits actually received. If the rent be of less value than the profits of the land, as the law prima fade supposes, so much of the profits as suffice to make up the rent belongs equitably to the lessor, and cannot lawfully be otherwise applied ; hence the personal liability to the extent stated. It may be charged against the representative who refuses to so pay over that he owes and unlawfully detains. So that, while his personal liability does not exceed what the property yields, nevertheless the rents received by him, being treated not so much as assets as profits of the land, the law specifically appropriates them to the benefit of the landlord to an amount equal to the rents reserved in the lease. The representativé takes the lease as assignee by virtue of his office, as he takes other chattel interests of the deceased. The term is assets in his hands, and he is none the less an assignee because the liability incurred is not in all respects as onerous as that of an assignee in fact. The rule is not a hard one. It but enjoins good faith, and a proper discharge of duty. Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, sections 434, 461; 3 Williams on Executors, 1854; Sutliff v. Atwood, 15 Ohio St. 186; Jevens v. Harridge, 1 Saunders, 1; Tremeere v. Morison, 1 Bingham, 89; 1 Chitty on Pleadings, 383; Howard v. Heinerschit, 16 Hun. 177.

It is manifest that the defendant in this case could avoid personal liability for rents coming due between the entry and the time of yielding possession only by showing an express contract to look to him as executor only, or such conduct on the part of the lessor as in effect precluded her from enforcing ' personal liability. No such express contract is shown; indeed, it appears affirmatively that none was made. But the claim is, that by the giving of certain receipts for rent to him as exeecutor, and by the commencing of an action against him in his [173]*173representative capacity, the plaintiff elected to hold him liable in that capacity only. Some twenty-eight receipts for rent, embracing divers sums, were given by the lessor’s agent while the defendant remained in possession, eight of which acknowledge ‘receipt of money from " M. Becker, executor.” These were given in this form at the request of the defendant for the purpose of filing them as vouchers with his account in the probate court. The insolvency of the estate was not known at the time of the giving of these receipts, or any of them.

It may be said, as a deduction from the authorities on the subject, that an election is the making of a choice between two or more benefits or rights which estops the party from afterward denying that an election has been made, and from demanding some benefit or right other than the one chosen. Except in cases where his conduct has been such as to mislead another party to his prejudice, the party having a right to elect must have proceeded upon the idea that he was bound to elect; he must have had knowledge of his obligation to elect as matter of law; there must have been a purpose to elect, and an actual election. And where the election is as to one of two or more remedies, in order to make a selection of one a bar to a pursuit of the other, it must appear that they are inconsistent, and that the one last sought is not merely cumulative. As applied to a claimed election under a will, Wood, J., in Melick v. Darling, 11 Ohio, 343, gives this definition : "To create a case of election, there must be a plurality of gifts or rights, with an intention, express or implied, of the party who has a right to control one or both, that one should be a substitute for the other.” Having these rules in mind, it is difficult to see that the doctrine of election can be held to apply to the giving of the receipts in question. The defendant’s position was that of one having in his possession moneys, profits received out of the land, which could not lawfully be applied to any purpose until the rent due the lessor had been paid; so that, in paying over to the lessor of such money upon the rent due her he was but doing what the law made it his duty to do, and an assent to that performance of duty by the lessor could not be treated as any abandonment of a right to resort to other remedies which [174]*174tbe law gave ber in case of failure to perform tbat duty by tbe executor in tbe future. She bad the right in such event, to look to the estate, or to the executor personally, and these remedies were not inconsistent. There would be no taking of one thing and rejecting another. The former remedy was primary, and the latter, in a sense, cumulative. The executor stood in two relations, but that did not make the plaintiff’s claim inconsistent. Moreover, there was no obligation to elect, nor does it appear that either party at the time understood that an election was being made, and there certainly is not shown to have been a purpose on the part of the lessor to make an election. She might, indeed, recognize the possession of the defendant as the possession of the estate, and even treat him as her debtor as the representative of the estate without impairing her right to hold him as personally liable, because such possession in such representative capacity is the ground of his personal liability, and the estate was liable to her as the primary debtor. It was not essential to personal liability that he should have entered for his personal benefit, nor as a wrongdoer. Nor does it appear that the doctrine of estoppel applies. The conduct of tbe plaintiff in no way induced the defendant to change his position to his prejudice. Her position, as to the profits of the leased premises, was not, in principle, different from tbat of a creditor of a solvent estate whose claim has been duly allowed, but which, after lapse of full statutory time, the executor, though possessed of abundant means, refuses to pay. In such case the executor has received moneys which it is his duty to pay over to the creditor, and the latter has the right to proceed against him personally. This right does not interfere with his equal right to compel payment from the assets of the estate.

The filing of the first petition in the case is claimed to constitute an election. In the caption to that pleading the defendant was described as “Michael Becker, executor of the estate of Abram Rafenstein, deceased,” and in the body the allegations purported to charge him as executor. Before answer, on leave, the petition was amended so as to charge him personally. This leave was granted without prejudice to de[175]*175fendant’s right to insist that plaintiff had elected to make her claim against him as executor, and not personally.

Our practice encourages great liberality in pleading, and the code enjoins the duty of allowing amendments at all stages of a case in furtherance of justice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-walworth-ohio-1887.