Greider's Appeal

5 Pa. 422, 1846 Pa. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 25, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 Pa. 422 (Greider's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greider's Appeal, 5 Pa. 422, 1846 Pa. LEXIS 289 (Pa. 1846).

Opinion

Bell, J.,

(after stating the case.) — This case, as stated, calls for the consideration and decision of two questions: 1. Was there such a surrender by Sellers, the tenant, to the landlord, of the term demised, as merged or extinguished the lesser estate ? and if so, then, 2. What is the legal effect of such a surrender upon the claim here set up by the late landlord to be paid a proportionable part of the year’s rent ?

To constitute an express surrender, no set form of words is necessary, nor is it required there should be a formal re-delivery or cancellation of the deed or other instrument which created the estate to be surrendered. All that is requisite is the agreement and assent of the proper parties manifesting such an intent, followed by a yielding up of the possession to him who hath the greater estate, for a surrender is nothing more than a delivery up of lands, tenements or hereditaments, and the estate a man hath therein, unto him who hath the greater or equal estate in immediate reversion or remainder; Co. Litt. 337 b, Shep. Touch. 301. Nor is it "essential that in all cases since the enactment of the statute of frauds, the express rescission of a lease of lands should be by writing, for, notwithstanding the generality of the language of that part of our statute which speaks of assigning and surrendering estates and interests in lands, it is settled, in Pennsylvania, that an oral surrender of a lease for a term less than three years, whether the demise be by writing or not, will destroy the term by merger; McKinney v. [425]*425Reader, 7 Watts, 123. In the present instance, there was, as has been shown, an express verbal agreement between the landlord and tenant, made before the levy by the sheriff, for the yielding up of the demised premises by the latter to the former, which agreement was immediately executed by an actual delivery of the possession in accordance with it. By declarations and acts that admit not of doubt or question, Sellers voluntarily relinquished his character of tenant and assumed the humbler position of servant, in which relation he stood, to Moore, at the time of the levy. From the moment of this change of position, assented to by Moore, the relation of lessor and lessee ceased, and the estate of the tenant was determined.

But if a writing were necessary to the validity of this surrender, that ingredient is present here. It is true that, although dated before the levy, it was not executed until afterwards. But apart from the fact that it was intended to relate back to the date it bears on its face, being simply expressive of the agreement then made, and might, therefore, as against a party to it, be taken as operative from that day, it is sufficient, as will presently be seen, for the purposes of the execution creditors, to consider it as effective only from the date of its delivery to and acceptance by the landlord.

The fact of an actual surrender of the lesser estate being established, it remains to consider what effect, in law, this had upon the claim now set up by the surrenderee. The fruit of a surrender is to pass the estates of the surrenderor, and, thereupon, his estate is drowned and extinct in the estate of the surrenderee; Shep. Touch. 300, 301; and the result of this drowning and extinction is, that rent reserved and issuing out of the lesser estate, and not duo at the time of the surrender, is also extinguished; Gilbert on Rents, 149. A demise, such as the present, is an entire contract, and by an acceptance of a surrender, pending a current year, the landlord having destroyed his right to recover the entire rent of that year, according to the covenants of the lease, cannot recover any part of It, and is, therefore, not permitted to claim pro rata ; Hall v. Burgess, 5 Barn. & Cress. 332, (11 E. C. L. R. 246;) Grimman v. Legge, 8 Barn. & Cress. 324, (15 E. C. L. R. 229.) A strong illustration of this doctrine is to be found in the case of Bain v. Clarke, in the Supreme Court of New York, 10 Johns. 266. There the tenant surrendered his estate to the landlord by writing, endorsed on the lease, stipulating, nevertheless, for the payment of the rent reserved by the lease, and that the landlord might take all lawful means for the recovery thereof, according to the lease and the laws of the state. The landlord having distrained [426]*426for a year’s rent, the late tenant brought replevin, and, upon these facts, it was held by the court, that “ the relationship of landlord and tenant between the parties was completely gone, and though the lessee might continue bound for a year’s rent, by reason of the express agreement in the deed of surrender, yet that was a personal responsibility founded on the agreement, and could not arise from the continuance of the contract between them, as landlord and tenant.” It is added, “ the idea of a continuance of the rights and properties of the original contract is altogether inconsistent with the fact and pffeet of the surrender.”

I have thus considered the subject of merger by surrender and its effects upon accruing rent, more at length than I would have deemed necessary, were it not that the learned judges, who ruled the case below, seemed to think the right of the landlord to receive a portion of the year’s rent depends upon some equity in him, springing from the fact that his acceptance of the surrender was bona fide, and without any intention of wrong or fraud upon the rights and remedies of the general creditors of the tenant. ' But this is a mistake. There is no room here, for any inquiry into supposed conflicting equities. It is simply a question stricti juris, to be determined upon the legal condition of the parties before us, as this is ascertained by the acts of each.

The right of this landlord to demand the rent in question being thus destroyed by the operation of the general law, it remains briefly to inquire, whether there be any thing in the 83d and 84th sections of the act of 16th June, 1836, relating to executions, as these have been construed by our courts, which will restore him to a better position ? It cannot be doubted that the object of these provisions was to make the landlord amends for taking away his power of distress by a judicial sale of the tenant’s goods, liable thereto, and I think it is also clear the act contemplated an existing tenancy at the time of the sale, for if there be no tenancy, there can be no right to distrain, except in the single instance given, by the 14th section of the act of 21st March, 1772, which has no application here. The first of the sections above noticed, provides that goods taken in execution and liable to the distress of the landlord, shall be liable to the payment of rent due at the time of taking such goods in execution; and the next directs that, after the sale of such goods, by the officer, he shall pay out of the proceeds the rent so due; at the moment therefore when the officer can be legally called on to pay, it is clear he is without authority to make such payment. It is [427]*427true that in West v. Sink, 2 Yeates, 274, construing the act from which these provisions are borrowed, it was held the landlord is entitled to a proportional part of the year’s rent, under the statute, where a levy is made in the middle of a current year, upon the notion that it was dehitum in preesenti, though solvendum in futuro, and that the time of the levy ascertains the proportion the landlord may demand. But this determination, though since adhered' to upon the rule stare decisis, is, by subsequent cases, clearly shown to proceed upon illogical reasoning, (Lichtenthaler v.

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

Related

Karp v. Levine
6 Pa. D. & C.2d 355 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1955)
Globe Sol. v. Nouskhajian, (Et Al.)
25 A.2d 595 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Peterson v. McNeely
21 Pa. D. & C. 75 (Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, 1934)
National Cash Reg. Co. v. Sorto
161 A. 766 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
Willis Motor Car Co. v. Lasser
9 Pa. D. & C. 135 (Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, 1927)
Kuhn Co. v. Fell
225 F. 13 (Third Circuit, 1915)
Liquid Carbonic Co. v. Truby
40 Pa. Super. 634 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)
In re Duble
117 F. 794 (M.D. Pennsylvania, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. 422, 1846 Pa. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greiders-appeal-pa-1846.