Ford v. . Knapp

6 N.E. 283, 102 N.Y. 135, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 362, 57 Sickels 135, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 813
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 13, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 6 N.E. 283 (Ford v. . Knapp) 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
Ford v. . Knapp, 6 N.E. 283, 102 N.Y. 135, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 362, 57 Sickels 135, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 813 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The facts of this case develop a question not in all respects easy to answer. The defendants were tenants in common with one Whitaker of a mill property badly run down and out of repair. Their share was an undivided half. On a judgment against Whitaker his interest was sold, the defendants becoming purchasers; but subsequent judgment creditors redeemed and acquired the title of the debtor, and became by *138 relation and"through their redemption vested with the right of the debtor from the date of the sale, and thereby tenants in common with the defendants from that date by relation, or vested with the right of such a co-tenant. During the fifteen months between the sale and redemption, the defendants expended a large amount upon the mill. They effected changes of two kinds, distinct in purpose and character. The grist-mill was originally both a custom aud merchant mill and provided with machinery for both uses. During ten years immediately preceding defendants’ ownership the latter use had been abandoned, and the machinery appropriate to it, by neglect and disuse had become practically worthless, and further passed beyond the utility of repair by new inventions and appliances which made the old antiquated and ineffective for the demands and competition of business. The machinery necessary to the use of the mill for custom work had been steadily run, but become dilapidated and inefficient. In this emergency the defendants made both repairs and improvements. The referee who inquired into the situation reported upon the basis of that discrimination. The repair of the dam, the substitution of a new water wheel, the change in the machinery necessary to make the mill do good custom work he classed as repairs; while the addition to the buildings and the introduction of new machinery and appliances for a merchant mill he classed as improvements. These repairs and improvements largely increased the market value of the property. Before they were made a generous estimate of that value did not exceed $8,000, while on the sale in partition it brought about double that amount. The proceeds of that sale are now to be divided by a court of equity in an action brought by the tenant out of the actual occupation, and the manner and proportion of that division is the question to be determined.

The execution sale, and the attitude of the defendants as purchasers under it, appear to us immaterial to the inquiry, but in some manner to have confused and complicated it. Stress is put by the General Term upon the rights of the judgment creditors, and the provisions of the Code fixing the powers and *139 duty of the judgment debtor in "possession during the redemption period are cited as pertinent to the inquiry. (§§ 1441 and 1461.) They do not seem to us necessarily to affect it. • Section 1441 provides for the acts which the debtor in possession may do during the redemption period without being chargeable with committing waste.” The judgment debtor here was out of the actual possession, did no” acts of any ldnd, and there is no question of waste. The defendants occupied under their own title and not under the debtor’s which- they never acquired. Section 1461 provides that the sheriff, the purchaser, the judgment creditor, or a redeeming creditor, cannot by his agreement or other act in any manner impair or prejudice the right of any other person to redeem.” These plaintiffs redeemed. Ko act was done to prejudice their right of redemption. Kobody obstructed that right. They paid exactly what they would have paid if the defendants had never repaired the property, and not one farthing more on that account. So far from having been prejudiced in their right of redemption, that right has been granted to them in its fullest extent, and it stands conceded that they became vested with the full and entire title of Whitaker as of the date of "the sale. The question here proceeds on that assumption, but asks whether equities have not arisen against them by reason of their effectual and unobstructed redemption. They thereby became co-tenants of defendants as of the date of the sale by relation, or held the derivative right of a co-tenant, and it is the rights born of that relation which are the sole subjects of inquiry.

We may first approach the question on principle, and reason about it from the standpoint of justice between the parties. The courts below have denied to the defendants any allowance, either for repairs or improvements. Practically they held that the defendants were foolish and the plaintiffs entitled to a dividend out of that folly, and so that the money of the former must go into the pockets of the latter. If this be true, the situation of the defendants was a hard one, though , without their fault. They owned an undivided half of the *140 property and that certainly was no sin. The right of their co-tenant Whitaker had been sold and bid in by them. They could not be expected to bring partition until they know that it would be needed, and for fifteen months they must allow their o\fn property to remain out of repair and growing rapidly worse; its business and custom to drift off into other hands; and suffer a severe loss without fault of their own ; or else give one-half of their expenditure, as represented by increased value, to the representatives of the party who was unfortunate. To a share of that increased value neither the debtor nor his creditors have any equitable right. They never earned it nor paid for it. If the redeeming creditors get the full one-half of the value of the property as that valué exists, unincreased by the improvements, they get every dollar to which they have a just and equitable right. The rule which takes from one co-tenant the fruit of his thrift and enterprise and adds it to the unthrift and neglect of the other ; which loads upon industry and ability the losses and burdens of idleness or ill-fortune; which ties up property from improvement and looks contented upon rot and decay, is a rule which sometimes the rigid and inelastic jurisdiction of a court of law may adopt from necessity, but is without excuse in a court of equity in which this action is pending. (Hewlett v. Wood, 62 N. Y. 75.)

Those courts almost, if not quite, without exception, have recognized the rule that a co-tenant asking their aid for a partition against an owner who has made improvements upon the property is entitled .to relief only upon condition that any equities thereby arising shall be taken into account, and that in such case, where actual partition is made and it is possible so to do, the improving tenant will be awarded the portion of the land upon which the improvements have been made. (Town v. Needham, 3 Paige, 545 ; In re Heller, id. 199 ; St. Felix v. Rankin, 3 Edw. Ch. 323; Conklin v. Conklin, 3 Sandf. Ch. 64.) Tins relief is administered not upon the ground that the improving tenant who acts without the agreement or assent of the other owners gains a lien upon the property for his advances, but stands upon the proposition that one *141

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.E. 283, 102 N.Y. 135, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 362, 57 Sickels 135, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-knapp-ny-1886.