Dorsey v. St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute R. R.

58 Ill. 65
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 58 Ill. 65 (Dorsey v. St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorsey v. St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute R. R., 58 Ill. 65 (Ill. 1871).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Plaintiff in error brought an action of covenant in the Madison circuit court, against defendant in error, on this instrument:

Whereas, Benjamin L. Dorsey, of the county of Madison and State of Illinois, has this day sold and conveyed to the Terre Haute and Alton Bailroad Company, by deed bearing even date herewith, a. strip of land one hundred feet in width, being fifty feet in width on each side of the centre line of the said railroad, as the same has been surveyed and located upon and over the said lands of the said Dorsey, in the county aforesaid ; and, also, a certain piece of land described in said deed by metes and bounds for a depot ground: How, therefore, in consideration of the conveyance of the land aforesaid, the said Terre Haute & Alton Bailroad Company hereby agrees to construct and maintain a good and suitable fence upon each side of the said railroad, on the line and bounds of the aforesaid land, with proper cattle guards, and, also, two crossings and gates on the said land, at such places, northwardly of the said depot grounds, as the said Dorsey may designate; and, also, to construct a depot on the lands so as aforesaid conveyed by said Dorsey for that purpose, said Dorsey to have the right to join his fences to the fences which are to be built by said company.

InWitnessWhereof, The Terre Haute & Alton Eailroad Company, has hereunto affixed its corporate seal, and caused these presents to be signed by Simeon Eyder, [seal] its President, and attested by Levi Davis, its Secretary, at its office in the city of Alton, this 25th day of April, A. D. 1854.

Simeon Eyder,

President of the Terre Haute & Alton Eailroad Co.

Attest: Levi Davis, Secretary.

Appellee demurred to the declaration, and the court held that it failed to disclose a cause of action. It is averred, and the demurrer admits it, that the Terre Haute & Alton Eailroad Company, after the execution of this deed, conveyed the road, franchises and appurtenances, to the St. Louis, Alton A Terre Haute Eailroad Company, the defendant in error. The breaches assigned, are, that the Terre Haute & Alton Eailroad Company had failed and refused to construct and maintain the fences, &c., according to their covenant, and that defendant in error, since receiving the conveyance, has not performed and fulfilled the covenants contained in the deed, as grantee of the Terre Haute & Alton Eailroad Company. It is also averred that defendant in error had notice of the covenants at the time it received the conveyance. Plaintiff in error contends that the covenants are real and run with the land, while defendant in error insists that the covenants are collateral and personal, and do not run with the land. This is the question presented for our consideration by this record.

A covenant is said to run with the land when either the lia- Í bility for its performance or the right to enforce it, passes to ’ the assignee of the land itself. A covenant is said to run with the reversion when the liability to perform it or the right to " enforce it, passes to the assignee of the reversion. These are the definitions usually given of covenants that inhere to the land and the reversion; and covenants contained in leases, by landlord and tenant, and their assignees, afford the greater part of the legal discussion on this question. But, inasmuch as at the common law such remedies, if they existed as to leases, were imperfect, in the 32d year of Henry the VIII, chap, 34, a law was adopted by the British Parliament to give, or at least to enlarge, the remedy. That act recites, “ that by the common law, no stranger to any covenant could take advantage thereof, but only such as were parties or privies thereunto,” and proceeded to enact, “ that all lessees and grantees of lands, or other hereditaments, for a term of years, life or lives, their executors, administrators or assigns,, shall have like action and remedy against all persons and bodies politic, their heirs, successors and assigns, having any gift or grant of the King, or other person, of the reversion of said lands and hereditaments so letten, or any parcel thereof, for any condition or covenant expressed in the indentures of their leases, as the same lessees might have had against said lessors and grantors, their heirs and successors.”

Thus it will be seen that much of the discussion of covenants contained in leases, has grown-out of the provisions of this enactment, and hence decisions on that subject, under that statute, are not, by analogy, authority in other and different covenants real. The covenant of warranty seems to have had its origin in the common law from the feudal system. It originated from the fact that as that system imposed on the grantee the duties of tenure, it also bound the lord to the reciprocal obligation, either to protect his tenant in his fief, or to give him another, and this liability descended to the heir as long as he' had lands of his ancestor to answer it. The warranty seems, in its origin, to have been without any express covenant, but arose, from implication ; but subsequently, when a deed accompanied the gift, the word of feoffment, dedl, implied a warranty. From, this liability of the lord to make good the gift to his vassal, and the liability descending to the heir who inherited his lands, the whole doctrine of covenants running xvith the land has grown up as a common law or statutory production. The idea of cox’enants xvhich inhere to and pass xvith the land, seems to have had its origin in the feudal constitution, although, simple as it was, the subsequent growth of the doctrine became, in time, intricate and highly abstruse, but in our country it' has been dixmsted of most of its technicalities, and in modern times it has been greatly simplified in Groat Britain.

After the adoption of this statute, in the court of King’s Bench, in Spencer’s case, (Coke’s Reports, part 5, page 15,) xvhere a lessee covenanted by indenture for himself, his executors and administrators, that he, his executors or assigns, xvould build a brick xvall upon a part of the premises demised, and the lessee afterwards assigned the term, it xvas resolx*ed, among other things, that as the covenant did not in terms bind the assignee, but only the lessee, his executors and administrators, and as it related to a thing not in being when the demise was made, the assignee was not liable, as the laxv will not annex the covenant to a thing not in being. But in case the lessee had covenanted for himself and his assigns, that they xvould make a nexv xvall upon some part of the land demised, that, as it is to be done upon the land demised, it shall bind the assignee. And the reason assigned, is, that it is to be done on the premises, and the assignee is to take the benefit of the improvement, and he is bound by express words. On the other hand, if a xvarranty be made to one, his heirs and assigns, by express words, the assignee shall have the benefit of the covenant, and shall have warrantia ohart,a. But if the thing to be done is merely collateral to the land, and does not touch or concern the premises demised, in any manner, the assignee shall not be charged, as, if the lessee covenant for himself and his assigns to build a house on other land of the lessor, not a part of the demised premises, the assignee is not bound, as the covenant is collateral to the demised premises, and therefore the assignee is no more bound than any other stranger.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cnty. of Cook v. Kellogg Co.
374 F. Supp. 3d 744 (E.D. Illinois, 2019)
C-B Realty & Trading Corp. v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co.
556 N.E.2d 634 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1990)
Dugosh v. State
34 Ill. Ct. Cl. 117 (Court of Claims of Illinois, 1981)
Com'rs of Hwys. of Towns of Annawan v. United States
466 F. Supp. 745 (N.D. Illinois, 1979)
Keogh v. Peck
259 Ill. App. 503 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1931)
Atwood v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.
229 Ill. App. 71 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1923)
Scheller v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co.
184 P. 344 (Washington Supreme Court, 1919)
City of Birmingham v. Graham
79 So. 574 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Purvis v. Shuman
273 Ill. 286 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1916)
Harper v. Virginian Railway Co.
86 S.E. 919 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1915)
Barry v. Chicago, Indianapolis & St. Louis Short Line Railway Co.
156 Ill. App. 9 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1910)
Hadley v. Bernero
71 S.W. 451 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1902)
Doty v. Railroad
48 L.R.A. 160 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1899)
Hartung v. Witte
18 N.W. 175 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1884)
Coppinger v. Armstrong
5 Ill. App. 637 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Ill. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorsey-v-st-louis-alton-terre-haute-r-r-ill-1871.