Gilmer v. Mobile & Montgomery Railway Co.

79 Ala. 569
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 79 Ala. 569 (Gilmer v. Mobile & Montgomery Railway Co.) 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
Gilmer v. Mobile & Montgomery Railway Co., 79 Ala. 569 (Ala. 1885).

Opinion

SOMERYILLE, J.

-The action is one at law for the breach of certain covenants entered into with the plaintiff by the Alabama & Florida Railroad Company, a body corporate, from which the defendant derived title, as assignee, to a strip of land, including the right of way, through the farm of the plaintiff, situated in the county of Lowndes. In March, 1868, the appellant, who was plaintiff in the court below, conveyed to the said assignor of defendant this right of way and land, extending fifty feet on each side of the center line of the raidroad track. In consideration of this grant, the said Alabama & Florida Railroad Company agreed in substance, by a separate instrument, to establish what we may briefly denominate a flag-station on said land, at a convenient point adjacent to the plaintiff’s house, where both passenger and freight trains wonld 9top, upon the giving of proper and usual signals, for the transportation of passengers and certain kinds of produce. The plaintiff was to have the right to cultivate so much of this right of way as may not be needed for use by the railroad, and so long as such cultivation did not interfere with its wants and requirements. It was further stipulated that, in the event of a depot being erected on the premises,' the sale of ardent spirits would be strictly prohibited.

It is averred that the defendant corporation derived title by succession from the original vendee and covenantor, with full knowledge of the obligations growing out of the contract.

The Circuit Court sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and dismissed the action, on plaintiff’s refusal to amend.

There is an agreement of counsel waiving so much of the [572]*572demurrer as raises any question touching the plaintiff’s right to bring the action in his name, if it would lie at all upon the facts stated. The consideration of this point we, therefore, pretermit, assuming that the action was properly brought in the name of the plaintiff as husband, for the use of the wife.

The question for decision is, whether the covenants in question, or either of them, so run with the land, as to be of binding obligation at law upon the defendant, as the assignee of the covenantor.

A covenant is said “to run with land” when 'the liability to perform it, on the one hand, or the right to enforce it, on the other, passes to the vendee, or other assignee of the land. Such covenant must relate to, or, as is more commonly said, “touch and concern the land,” and not as merely collateral to it, in order that the assignee of the land may be charged with their benefit or burden.—Spencer’s Case, Smith Lead. Cas. 27. They are often called real contracts, because they are annexed or inhere to the realty as part and parcelof it, and “pass from hand to hand with the interest in the realty they are annexed to.” 1 Addison Contr. § 430. And no doubt seems to exist as to the rule, that covenants may'run with incorporeal, as well as with corporeal hereditaments, as in the case of tithes and rent-charges, which savor of the realty, because they are carved out of and charged on it. — 2 Sugden Vend. 482. It is impossible to lay down any fixed rule by which to distinguish in all cases real covenants, which run with land, and are binding as such on heirs, devisees, and assignees, from those which are merely personal, and are binding only on the covenantor and his personal representative. The subject is one full of intricate learning, and the decisions of the courts touching it are greatly conflicting, and far from satisfactory. Among those, however, which have been decided to follow the realty into the hands of an assignee, are covenants of warranty and for quiet enjoyment, covenants by tenants to pay rent, to repair, maintain fences, reside on the premises, or cultivate the demised lands in a particular manner; not to carry on a particular trade on the/ premises leased or purchased; not to build on adjacent premises,! and many others of an analogous character. Among those ad-' judged to be personal, and not therefore to touch or concern the land, are covenants made by owners of land between whom and the covenantee there is no privity or title or estate; a covenant not to hire persons of a certain description to work in a mill; or a covenant with a stranger not to permit a grist-mill to be erected on the owner’s premises; a covenant by the vendor of lands not to permit maxi to be sold from adjoining lands ; by a lessee of a house to pay so much for every tun of wine sold in the house; or to buy all beer used by him from his [573]*573lessors or from his successors in trade. — Law Beal Property (Boone), § 317; 1 Addison Oontr. §436 ; 2 G-reenl. Ev., § 240; 1 Parsons’ Oontr. 231-233.

¥e cite two familiar cases only to illustrate the want of harmony in the decisions. In Taylor v. Owens, 2 Blackf. (Ind.) s. c., 20 Amer. Dec. 115, the owner of a town-site made a lease in which he covenanted that the lessee should have the exclusive right to sell merchandise in the town for ten years. It was held that the covenant did not run with the land, so as to be binding on subsequent purchasers of other town lots from the lessor. In Norman v. Wells, 17 Wend. 137, the defendant leased a null-site to one from whom the plaintiff took by assignment, covenanting not to erect a rival mill on the same stream passing through his, the lessor’s land. This was held to be a covenant running with the land, although it was to do something off the land demised, because it affected its value. It is observed by Mr. Washburn, that “such covenants, and such only run with the land, as concern the land itself, in whosoever hands it may be, and become united with and form a part of the consideration for which the land, or some interest in it, is parted with between the covenantor and covenantee.”—2 Wash. Real Prop. (4th Ed.) 286 (16). And this is, perhaps, a correct principle.

As the class of covenants under consideration are annexed to the realty, and pass with it to the assignee as incident to it, the rule prevails, that there must be some privity of estate or of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, before a covenant relating to land can be of binding force on the assignee of the covenantor, and that usually the covenantee must have some interest in the land, to which the covenantor’s promise may be annexed; otherwise there would be nothing with which the covenant could run, or to which it could adhere as an incident. A distinction is sought to be made, between the burdens and the benefits of such covenants ; the assertion being made in the notes to Spencer's case, supra, that, at common law, the burden of covenants never run with land, save where there was a privity of estate between the covenantee and the covenantor— in other words, where there was a conveyance from one to the other — while the benefit might, in all cases, run without such privity or conveyance.—1 Smith’s Leading Cases, 127, note. The soundness of this rule may be questioned, and there are numerous cases holding to the contrary; for, as said by Selden, J., in Van Rennsalaer v. Read, 26 N. Y. 558, 574, “it has often been held, that covenants, both in their benefits and their burdens, run with the land where no tenure, in its strict sense, exists between the parties.” But the necessities of the case in hand do not require ns to discuss this particular branch of the [574]*574subject.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Ala. 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmer-v-mobile-montgomery-railway-co-ala-1885.