Berry v. Executors of Van Winkle

2 N.J. Eq. 390
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 15, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 2 N.J. Eq. 390 (Berry v. Executors of Van Winkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry v. Executors of Van Winkle, 2 N.J. Eq. 390 (N.J. Ct. App. 1841).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

When this cause was heard on the pleadings and proofs, the relief sought by the complainant in this court was denied, except compensation for improvements placed on the property during the lease. A reference was directed to a master, to ascertain the value of such improvements as were made within the scope and meaning of the covenants in the lease, and also the amount of rent due the defendants. The master has made his report on these subjects, to which exceptions have been filed by both parties, and I am now to settle those exceptions. ■

There are two important, questions on which the parties differ widely, and they run through the whole case. If these are satisfactorily settled, it will be seen that much of the difficulty in-the cause will be at an end.

The first of these relates to the time at which the valuation of the improvements should be made. Upon this subject 1 am-confirmed in the opinion heretofore expressed, that they must be’ valued as they were at the time the lease expired. This was ss point on which the counsel for the defendants desired an opporiu* [392]*392nity to be further heard; and I remember well to have assented that he might have the order so drawn as to require the master to report the state of the improvements, as well at the date of the order, as at the expiration of the lease; and on the final hearing I would adopt the one or the other, as might seem to be proper. Through inadvertence the order was not so modified,-but followed the opinion as delivered. I have, nevertheless, thought it my duty to review that question, and, as I still think I can estimate the improvements only as they were at the end of the lease, there exists no necessity for any change in the order as it stands.The lease expired on the 7th of March,-1835, and this bill was filed on the 23d of the same month, a few days afterwards. The relief sought,- was for compensation for certain improvements placed by the tenant on the premises, which the landlord covenanted to pay for. Had not the com'plainant been entitled to such compensation at the time of filing his bill, he must have failed in his suit altogether; but the court decided otherwise, and there is no propriety in referring the time for fixing this valuation to any later period. The lease contemplates a settlement of this whole question at its expiration: then it is that the buildings are to be examined, and a final adjustment made. Every thing looks to that time. The subsequent controversies between the parties, or any suits they may have brought, cannot vary their legal or equitable rights under the lease. Nor can it be said that the order made by a former chancellor, staying proceedings in an ejectment brought by the landlord, kept him out of possession after the lease expired. That ejectment was brought to recover the possession before the lease expired, for non-payment of rent, under a clause in the lease ; but he was at liberty after it expired, if any real difficulty existed about the possession, to bring a new action. He never did so, and it would seem quite as probable, from the case, that neither party at that time wanted the possession. However that may be, no new suit was brought. The remedies, in case the tenant unlawfully holds over, are ample, and some of them penal in their character. In every view, then, it appears to me that we must value the im[393]*393provements as they were when the lease expired, and interest upon the amount must be carried forward to the date of the master’s report.

Another and a still more impoitant consideration, is, to ascertain and settle what are the improvements the defendants are bound to pay for under the lease.- The true construction of the writing in this respect is now for the first time presented, though it may be considered the most important question in the cause. It was not. made a point on the hearing for instructions to the master in settling the reference, and if, is probable at that time the difficulties which have since arisen as to its true meaning were not anticipated. 1 confess there are difficulties in its construction, and it is no way strange that the master should have felt himself under some embarrassment. The lessor, Mr. Van "Winkle, (a farmer, 1 think,) was the owner of a water power with lands adjoining, and leased them for the term of twenty-one years. At the time, there was an o!d saw-mill on the premises. The rent reserved was only forty dollars a year. In the lease he makes this covenant: That the lessee and his assigns might, at any time during the demise, at his or their own proper cost, erect “ a carding and falling mill or any other machinery ;” and that, at the expiration of the demise, all improvements made upon tiie lot should be the property of the lessor, he paying for the same. The tenant went into possession, erected buildings, put machinery into them, and among the rest built a saw-mill with its appendages. It is clear that the landlord, although he agrees to pay for all improvements placed upon the lot, had refer, ence only to such as he had previously authorized to be made. The tenaul had no power to place (here what he pleased, and then ask compensation for them. This could never have been the intention of the parties, or they would not have previously specified the buildings the tenant might erect. The words “all improvements,” which the landlord agreed to pay for, has reference to all such only as by the previous parts of the lease it had been agreed might be placed on the lot. That license extended only to “ a carding and fulling mill or any other machinery/ [394]*394As- to the buildings, there is no great difficulty. They consist of little else- than one carding and fulling mill with their appendages, and the saw-mill. This saw-mill was originally built as a cover to the wheel, and afterwards machinery was placed in it for sawing lumber.- The machinery creates the great difficulty. The complainant insists that the lessor was bound to pay for all the machinery there, whether part and parcel of the building or loose and separated from it. And there is some evidence of a portion of the machinery having been carried away, and just' before the expiration of the lease brought back and piled upr and this is claimed under the lease. I cannot place such a construction on this instrument: The machinery contemplated could have been nothing beyond such as-is permanent and essential to the building itself as a earding or fulling mill, with liberty to change it if it became necessary. It was no doubt seen, that it might be desirable te change the course of business, and if sor they had a right to adapt it accordingly, and then the landlord-was to pay for the machinery thus substituted. The buildings as erected, may therefore be properly valued, with their permanent fixtures, but nothing that'is moveable.- T know it is difficult to arrive at certainty as to the right limit in ascertaining what is permanent and what not, but that arises from the character- of the covenants. It was- at best a hard bargain on the' part of- the landlord,- but-to declare him liable for any thing and-every thing- which may be termed machinery, might bring on-him utter ruin.- T know but one method, and that is,-to consider the different items in the master’s report, and from the evidence in the cause and the agreement, make such allowance as shall seem to be most agreeable to justice; and I am fully aware that' in so doing we cannot arrive at as much certainty as we could desire.

The first item in Schedule A.-No. 1, is for the wood work of the buildings, five hundred dollars. This item l shall not disturb.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.J. Eq. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-executors-of-van-winkle-njch-1841.