Comer v. Sheehan

74 Ala. 452
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 74 Ala. 452 (Comer v. Sheehan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comer v. Sheehan, 74 Ala. 452 (Ala. 1883).

Opinion

SOMEB,TILLE, J.

— The suit'is one brought by the plaintiff against the defendant, claiming the sum of four hundred dollars, alleged to be due “ for the rent of a warehouse in the city of Eufaula,” for the last quarter of the year 1883. No relation of landlord and tenant is averred to exist between the parties, nor is there any statement in the complaint of any promise, express or implied, by the defendant, to pay the amount claimed to the plaintiff, nor of facts from which such a promise may be inferred.

It is disclosed by evidence, that the plaintiff’s claim was based upon the fact of being mortgagee in a mortgage conveyance of the warehouse premises, and also of being a purchaser at his own sale, made under a power contained in the mortgage. The premises were owned by one Hart, who mortgaged them to the plaintiff, in February, 1881, with power of sale op default. After the execution of this mortgage, ITart leased the premises to the defendant, Sheehan, for about the sum of two thousand dollars; the rental year commencing August the first, 1883, and ending August the first, 1884. The entire amount due for rent was settled by the following arrangement made between the plaintiff, the defendant, and the Eufaula National Bank: Hart owed the bank, and the latter agreed to take Sheehan’s notes for an amount equal to the rent, and discharge Hart,j;TO tanto, on his indebtedness. '] hese notes were given in the form of commercial paper, payable to Hart, or bearer, and were delivered immediately to the bank, being secured by a mortgage executed to the latter by Sheehan. Hart received a corresponding credit on his indebtedness. One of these notes, for four hundred dollars, fell due on December 1st, 1883, — the only one necessary to be particularly considered, as the claim made in this action is predicated upon it.

The mortgaged property whs advertised by Comer/the mortgagee, and sola under the power of sale conferred by it; the proceedings being in all respects regular, and he becoming the purchaser at his own sale, on November 15, 1883. On the twenty-seventh of the same month, and prior to the fii st of December, 1883, the plaintiff, as purchaser, gave notice to the defendant, as'tenant in possession, of the fact of his purchase, and that the property had not been- redeemed, — all in full accordance with the requirements of the statute. — Code, 1876, § 2878.

The court below charged the jury, under this state of facts, that the plaintiff was not entitled to a recovery of the rent sued [456]*456for, and that they must find for the defendant, if they believed the evidence.

It is a material consideration, of primary importance, that the arrangement made between Sheehan, Hart and the bank, which was tripartite in its nature, created a new contract, which operated as a payment of the rent-debt, on a principle analogous to that of novation and substitution. The principle is, that where several persons are mutually indebted to each other, they may, by agreement amongst themselves, vary their respective liabilities, and substitute one debt in the place of another. “ By a mutual contract and arrangement,” says Mr. Addison, “ between all the parties interested — creditor, debtor, and payee —the original debts are extinguished, and the annihilation of those debts is' a sufficient consideration for the promise to pay the new debt.” — 1 Add. Contr. (Amer. Ed.) § 373, p. 528. The term novation has been defined to be, “a transaction whereby a debtor is discharged from his liability to his original creditor, by contracting a new obligation in favor of a new creditor, by order of his original creditor.” — 1 Parsons Contr. 217*; Pothier’s Oblig. 546-549.

The legal effect of the present transaction, in our judgment, was, by mutual agreement of all the contracting parties, an assumption by Sheehan of a portion of Hart’s debt to the bank, equal in amount to his own debt due to Hart, which was for the rent. It was distinctly agreed, that Hart’s debt should be discharged, pro tanto; and the law operated to discharge Sheehan’s debt, by the intervention of a new creditor, who -was substituted, by consent, for the old one, thus liberating him from all obligation to pay Hart any thing. The essential nature of the transaction can not be varied by the fact, that the notes of Sheehan were made payable to “Hart, or bearer,” as they were delivered immediately to the bank, and do not appear to have even passed through the hands of the nominal payee, the use of whose name was conventional merely, or else for the purpose of super-adding his conditional liability as indorser. The transaction was not a mere transfer of the rent-notes of Sheehan to the bank, but rather tiie assumption by Sheehan of a portion of Hart’s debt to the bank, equal in amount to the rent debt, and based upon it as a legal consideration.

The case must, therefore, be regarded as one of a lease made by a mortgagor, subject to the rights of the mortgagee, where the tenant has undertaken to pay the entire rent for the year in advance.

The plaintiff bases his right of recovery, as we have said, both upon the fact of being mortgagee, and purchaser, at his own sale, of the equity of redemption. The defense of the tenant is based on the theory, that the plaintiff is not entitled [457]*457to the rents as mortgagee, because he has never demanded them; nor as purchaser, because there is no privity of contract between them as landlord and tenant, and, if liable at all, that he is liable only for mesne profits, or use and occupation from the time of notice given, which was on the twenty-seventh day of November, 1883.

The rights of the mortgagor in the mortgaged premises are well settled. lie is regarded as owner of the property, as against all persons except the mortgagee and those claiming under him. — Allen v. Kellam, 69 Ala. 442. lie has the power of conveying or leasing the premises, subject to the incumbrance, and is entitled to the rents and profits, until they are intercepted by some active assertion of claim to them by the mortgagee, made after law-day of the mortgage, either by giving notice to the tenants in possession, or by filing his bill in a ■court of equity for the purpose of foreclosure. — Johnston v. Riddle, 70 Ala. 219; Scott v. Ware, 64 Ala. 174; 1 Jones Mortg. § 670; Taylor’s Land. & Ten., §§ 118-119.

There is no evidence of any demand -being made by the plaintiff for the rents, and it can not be contended that there can be any recovery from the tenant by.the plaintiff, in rthe capacity of mortgagee, without- such demand.

It is contended, however, with more plausibility, that the plaintiff can recover as purchaser.

There is a manifest distinction between the rights of a mortgagee, as against a tenant, where the mortgage is prior in point of time to the lease, and where it is subsequent to it. "We speak now of the rule at common law, apart from any influence of statutory changes. Where a lease is first made' for a term of jears, reserving rent, there is nothing besides reserved to the lessor, apart from the benefit of certain covenants, but the reversion. A mortgage, or other conveyance, afterwards made by the lessor, is, -therefore, a mortgage of the reversion, and ■carries with it the rent, which is not yet due. as a mere incident. In other words, the mortgagee, as assignee of the reversion, has no higher rights than the mortgagor.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Ala. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comer-v-sheehan-ala-1883.