Damainville v. . Mann

32 N.Y. 197
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 32 N.Y. 197 (Damainville v. . Mann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Damainville v. . Mann, 32 N.Y. 197 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The liability of the assignee, however remote, of an unexpired term, for years or for life, to pay the lessor and his assignees and representatives the rent of the demised premises does not seem to be open to dispute, although the principle upon which the liability rests is involved in some obscurity. When we learn that the common law relations between the assignees of the lessee and the lessor and his assignees is not privily of contract, but privity of estate, we make but little progress. For, notwithstanding some conflict-amongst the earlier cases, we shall find that this relation alone, unless it also implies possession of the demised premises by the assignee, is not enough to create the obligation to pay the rent. In Eaton v. Jaques (Doug., 454), the term had been assigned by way of mortgage, with a clause of redemption, and the action was by the lessor against the defendant, as assignee of one Denys, the original lessee. And it appeared the mortgage had become forfeited, *202 but the mortgagee had never been in possession of the demised premises. The court held that even after forfeiture the lessor could not recover against the mortgagee, because he had not taken the actual possession. Possession in fact, as well as in law, of the demised premises, were deemed neces sary conditions to maintain the action. I shall have occasion to refer to this ease hereafter. The next year the case of Walker v. Reeves, reported in the same book (page 461), came up for consideration. The question arose upon a demurrer to the plaintiff’s replication, and the court, Lord Ma2tseield giving the opinion, said: “By the assignment the title and the possessory right passed, and the assignee becanie possessed in law. As to actual possession, that must depend upon the nature of the property whether it can take place. It might be waste or unprofitable ground, as seemed to have been the case. The case was by no means like Eaton v. Jaques, for the assignment there being a mortgage, from the nature of the transaction, it was not an assignment to this purpose. It was a mere security. Until the mortgagee called for his money the mortgagor was to remain in possession and pay the interest, and it was not understood by either party that the mortgagee should pay the rent.” This reasoning I submit is anything but satisfactory. The question was upon the legal effect of the deed of assignment, whether it per.se imposed the obligation to pay rent or • not. The nature of the demised premises, whether they were waste or profitable, or unprofitable, or what the parties intended touching the payment of the rent, had, I submit, nothing to do with the determination of the question of the effect of the deed. Whenever default was made in the payment of the money secured by the mortgage, the legal estate, by the English law, became vested absolutely in the mortgagee, and he was, in every respect, the assignee of the term, and if he was not liable for the payment of the rent it was not because the lands were waste and unprofitable, or for any parol understanding between him and his assignor, but simply because he had not the actual possession of the subject out of which the rent was *203 to issue. This is the principle of the decision in Walker v. Reeves, disguise it as we may by a multitude of words. Assignees in bankruptcy are also vested with the possession, in law, of the bankrupt’s estate as lessee of an unexpired term. Tet it has been determined that they were not liable for the payment of the rent when they had not taken the actual possession, though they had advertised the demised premises for sale, stating themselves to be the owners thereof. (Turner v. Richardson, 7 East, 335.) Some .of the judges assign, as reasons for their judgment, that the assignees did not assent to the assignment to them, which was necessary to bind them. This seems illogical and unsound, for if the advertising the property for sale, claiming to be the owner, with the right to convey the title, is not signifying their assent to the assignment to them, it is difficult to.say what act would signify their assent. The true ground of the decision was stated by Mr. Justice Grose. It should have been left, he said, to the jury to say whether the defendants were in fact possessed of the premises, and as it is plain from the evidence, that finding they were of no value, they never did enter into possession, and in the true sense of the issue the defendants were not assenting to the assignment of these premises to them.

Stevenson v. Lombard (2 East, 575), was an action of covenant by the lessor against the assignee of the lessee for non-payment of a year’s rent. Plea as to rent for half a year, claimed eviction during that time of a moiety of the premises by title paramount. To this there was a demurrer. The court decided that the assignee being chargeable on the privity of estate, and in respect of the land, his rent is, upon principle, apportionable, as the rent of the lessee is. And there was judgment for the plaintiff upon the demurrer, with leave to the defendant to amend and plead the eviction from a moiety of the premises by title paramount to one moiety of the rent. The plea, it will be observed, was adjudged bad, because it was offered as a defense to the entire claim, while the recovery and the eviction alleged was only of a moiety. It was not a mere recovery, but a recovery fol *204 lowed by an eviction on an actual dispossession of the defendant from a moiety of the demised premises. The case of Mercerou v. Dawson (5 Barn. & Cress., 479), as a question of pleading, followed that just referred to, Littledale, Justice, saying: “ If the defendant meant to discharge himself from all liability beyond one-sixth or one-third, he should have confined his plea to so much of the action. There may be difficulty in saying the defendant should have pleaded in abatement, for he might not know the tenants in common with him.” There are a variety of cases referred to in Woodfall’s Landlord & Tenant, 350, to show that where the assignee who assigns over the term, is liable in covenant for rent during his enjoyment, and if covenant be brought, he may plead that before any rent was due, he granted all his term to I. S., who, by virtue thereof, entered and was possessed, and this will be a good discharge, without alleging notice of the assignment. In one of the cases, it was suggested by Bulleb, Justice, that the replication of fraud in. the deed of assignment, would be effectual only when the assignor continued in the possession. In Astor v. Miller (2 Paige, 68), the chancellor, in the opinion, says: “ Where a covenant which runs with the land is divisible in its nature, if the entire interest in different parts or parcels of the land passes by assignment to separate and distinct individuals, the covenant will attach upon each parcel pro tamto. In such case, the assignee of each part would be answerable for his proportion of any charge upon the land, which is a common burden, and would be exclusively liable for the breach of any covenant which related to that part alone. He quotes Shepherd’s Touchstone, 199, and Co. Litt., 385 a.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/damainville-v-mann-ny-1865.