Dix v. Jaquay

94 A.D. 554, 88 N.Y.S. 228
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 94 A.D. 554 (Dix v. Jaquay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dix v. Jaquay, 94 A.D. 554, 88 N.Y.S. 228 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Smith, J.:

A single question is presented by this appeal: Can a life tenant recover of á sub-tenant, who has committed'waste upon the premises, full indemnity for the injury to the premises, including not only his own loss, but the loss to the remainderman ? The plaintiff is a life tenant of the premises upon which the waste was committed. It does not appear to whom the property goes after his death. The defendant committed waste which has been held by the referee to-have been no injury to the estate of the life tenant, but to have injured the estate of the remainderman to the extent of seventy-five" dollars. For this damage, however, the referee has held the defendant liable to the remainderman and not liable to the plaintiff. Of this holding the plaintiff complains, contending that by the wrongful; ¡ act of the defendant he has been made absolutely liable to then/ remainderman for the damage caused by the defendant’s waste. To, the extent of this liability, the plaintiff insists that he may recover, both for his own protection and as trustee for the „ remainderman. • -

That a life tenant is liable to a remainderman for a waste committed by a stranger is not questioned by the counsel for the defendant. The rule st ems to be clearly stated in Cook v. Champlain Transportation Co. (1 Den. 104). The opinion in part reads: “ I pass by the first ground stated,, for the last seems decisive of the question. The plaintiffs claim that the mill was destroyed by the [556]*556wrongful act of the defendants, and, if so, it was waste for which the plaintiffs, being tenants for years, were responsible, ‘ It is common learning,’ said Heath, J., in Attersoll v. Stevens (1 Taunt. 198), ‘ that every lessee of land, whether for life or y(ars,-is liable in an action of waste to his lessor for all waste done on the land in léase, by whomsoever it may be committed.’ Chambre, J., in the same case (p.. 196), said ^ ‘ The situation of -the tenant is-extremely analogous to that of a common carrier; to prevent collusion (and not on the presumption of actual collusion), both are charged with the protection of the property entrusted to them against all, but the acts of God and the king’s enemies; and as the tenant, in the one casé, is charged with the actual commission of the waste done by others^ so, in the other case, the carrier is' charged with actual default and negligence, though he loses the goods by a force that was irresistible, or by fraud, against which no ordinary degree of care and caution could have protected him.’ Lord Coke' is not less explicit, for he says: ‘ Tenant by the curtesy, tenant in dower, tenant for life, years, &c., shall answer for the waste done by a stranger, and shall take their remedy over.’ (1 Inst. 54a. See, also, 2 id. 145, 303; 1 Chit. Gen. Pr. 388; 4 Kent’s Com. 77; 2 R. S. 334, § 1; 1 Inst. 57a, note 377; 2 Roll. Abr. 821; 3 Black. Com. 228; Comyn’s Land. and Ten. 188.)’’ In Baker v. Hart (123 N. Y. 473) Judge Finch, writing for the court, says : “ But it is sought to be sustained. on another theory. The doctrine is invoked that tenant for life, or years is bound to answer to the owner for any waste committed, even though it be the act of a stranger. Such is undoubtedly the. rule. (Cook v. Champlain Transportation Co., 1 Den. 91, 104.)”

The learned referee, however, admitting the liability of the life tenant, declines to recognize his right of action upon the ground that he has not been damaged until called upon by the remainder-man to satisfy that liability. This ruling he liases mainly upon the authority of Wood v. Griffin (46 N. H. 230). The saitie doctrine is .also held by one of the circuit judges of the United States in California Dry Dock Co. v. Armstrong (17 Fed. Rep. 216), which decision follows the New Hampshire authority.

With this holding of the referee we are not inclined to agree. There are strong reasons for giving this right of action to the life [557]*557tenant. With this absolute liability to make good to the remainder- * man waste committed even by a stranger, the remainderman may trust to his liability and reserve his action until at any time within the Statute of Limitations. The remainder may be to an infant, and even to one not in being at the time of the commission of the waste. The remainder may be a contingent one, so that it may not be known who will have the ultimate estate. By . section 1665 of the Code of Civil Procedure, “a person seized of an estate in remainder or reversion may maintain an action founded upon an injury done to the inheritance, notwithstanding any intervening estate for life or for years.” A contingent remainderman can_/ hardly be said to be seized of an estate in remainder. In such case to whom would the wrongdoer respond ? He is either liable to the life tenant for the waste committed or he is liable to no one, and the life tenant, with a certain ultimate liability to the remainderman whosoever he shall prove to be, is absolutely without recourse or indemnity for the liability imposed upon Mm by the wrongful act of the defendant. If the life tenant must wait for an action by j the remainderman to determine his liability, his recourse against the wrongdoer must in many cases become ineffective by the delay.

Nor can he perfect his right of action by satisfying the damages' to the inheritance and then suing. The damages are unliquidated. Any amount which he pays in satisfaction must be paid at his peril, with his chance of establishing such amount as the damage done in an action against the wrongdoer. If the remainder is contingent, to whom shall he make satisfaction of the liability ? In such case I am unable to conceive of any satisfaction of that liability which would be binding if perchance another became entitled to the remainder upon the happening or not of the contingency named, /it will thus be seen that if the judgment below be well rendered a life tenant at the best is subjected to a dangerous hazard in being compelled to make satisfaction of an unliquidated claim to a remainderman upon his chance of being able to establish that claim in full as damage in his action against the wrongdoer. At the worst the wrongdoer has burdened the life tenant with an absolute liability to one who upon the happening of a contingency shall thereafter become the remainderman^without liability to the life tenant, and only with a remote liability to the person who shall upon the contingency thereafter [558]*558" become seized with the remainder. If these premises be sound, the \ conclusion is irresistible that the wrongdoer must answer to the life ) tenant for the full damage done both to his life estate and to the inheritance, and the damage to the inheritance recovered by the life (tenant is held by him as trustee for the remainderman.

Other grounds might be urged upon whicli could be rested the liability of the wrongdoer to the life tenant for the injury to the inheritance. If perchance a building be burned by the negligence or wrong of a stranger, the life tenant is entitled to the moneys with which to rebuild that building that he may have the life use thereof. Even if a recovery for such an injury should be had by the remainderman, it is not clear that the court would not require the remainderman to rebuild the building with the proceeds of such recovery that the life use given by the deed be not restricted. 'Again, one who has wrongfully imposed a liability upon a life tenant to make good to a remainderman, should rightfully be required to provide him with the means whereby that liability could be satisfied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A.D. 554, 88 N.Y.S. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dix-v-jaquay-nyappdiv-1904.