Harris Bros. v. Dammann

14 D.C. 90
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1884
DocketNo. 24,176
StatusPublished

This text of 14 D.C. 90 (Harris Bros. v. Dammann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris Bros. v. Dammann, 14 D.C. 90 (D.C. 1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cox

delivered the opinion of the court.

Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff below, and execution levied upon goods in the defendant’s store. The la ndlord of the pref uses, Meyer Silver, made application to the court below, by motion, to direct the marshal to apply $100 of the proceed! of the'sale of the goods to the payment of rent for the month of March, 1883. An order was made as prayed, and'an appeal taken from that order by the execution creditor.

The circumstances that are material to the question are as follows: As far back as the 6th of February, 1883, Michael Holtzman, who had a judgment against the same defendant, caused an execution to be issued, and that was levied on that day upon the same goods. The goods were not removed from the premises, but the marshal continued in possession of the goods there until the 1st of March, 1883, when Silver, the landlord, caused an attachment to be issued for the rent due for January and February, and levied on the same goods. The marshal continued in the possession of the goods on the premises until the 15th of March. Meanwhile, on the 8th of March, the plaintiffs in this suit caused an execution to be issued on their judgment, and [91]*91levied on the goods. On the 15th of March tbe marshal removed the goods and sold them, and paid to the landlord the rent for the months of January and February out of the proceeds of the sale, and applied part of the proceeds to the first execution. Then he applied all the balance of the proceeds in his hands to the second execution — that of Harris Bros. — except $100, which he retained, upon notice from the landlord, Silver, to meet the claim of the landlord for the rent tor the month of March. The question now is, whether the landlord is entitled to the rent for the month of March, because the marshal remained there until the 15th of that month.

We should observe, that the petition of Silver states that the marshal made sale of these goods under the two executions issued on the judgments of Holtzman and Harris Bros., and from that petition we have to assume that both these writs were levied upon the same goods. There is some question.made about that, but, for the present, we assume that to be the fact.

In the first place, what was the condition of the law on this subject, before the passage of our landlord and tenant act ?

At common law, as we all know, the landlord had simply a right to distrain his tenant’s goods, on the premises, for his rent, after it was due; and if in the meanwhile, and before the rent was due, a judgment creditor issued an ex-' ecution and levied upon the same goods, the landlord had no priority over him. The statute of 8 Anne, chap. 45, provided that wherever execution was levied upon the goods of the tenant on the premises, the judgment creditor should be bound to pay to the landlord the rent due at the time of the levy to the extent of one year’s rent, and the sheriff might include this in his levy against the tenant. When such a levy was made, after a periodical instalment of rent had begun to accrue, the question arose whether the landlord would be entitled to be paid, out of the proceeds of the sale, the amount of the rent for the whole period. The authorities seem to settle it, pretty conclusively, that that can[92]*92not be done;, that tbe landlord had no relief under the "act of Anne to that extent. So far as American cases are concerned, it was first-settled in the case of Trappan vs. Morie, 18 Johns., 1, that the landlord could only apply to have the rent actually due to him and in arrears at the time the levy was made. The same point was settled in Maryland in the case of Washington vs. Williamson, 23 Md., 244, where the sheriff levied in the month of July, and the court allowed payment to be made up to the 1st of July for the rent accrued up to that time, and overruled the order of the court below allowing rent to be paid for the month of July. It must, therefore, be held to be settled law that where, at the time of the levy, a periodical instalment of rent has not accrued, but is accruing, the landlord is not entitled to that instalment under the statute of Anne. I should observe that the application in this case was made for relief under this very statute, because it is in force in Maryland and in the District of Columbia.

Another thing se,ems to have been settled, and that is, that if the sheriff, after making this levy upon personal property, continues in possession on the premises for a certain time, the landlord is not entitled to relief, under this act of Anne,: for rent accruing during the period while the sheriff is on the premises. That, no doubt, is on the. theory that the sheriff is there simply as an officer of the law, is not the tenant of the landlord, but the goods áre in the custody of the law; that the sheriff, in fact, is-only making use of the premises as his pound; that, in contemplation of the statute of 8 Anne, the goods are not in his possession as tenant, or in the possession of the tenant.- The law on that subject is stated in Alexander’s Statutes, p. 685, as follows: [93]*93he fakes corn in the blade and sells it be fore any rent is due, to account tó the defendant’s landlord for rent accruing subsequently to the levy and sale, though notice had been given, and the corn not removed until long afterwards when rent has accrued. Gwilliam vs. Barker, 1 Price, 274. But the dictum of Thomson, O. B., there, that the landlord’s remedy in such a case was by distress, was overruled int Peacock vs. Purvis, 2 Brod. & Bing., 362, and Wharton vs. Naylor, 12 Q. B., 673, denying like dicta in Smallman vs. Pollard, 6 Man. & G., 1001; goods so taken being, until removal, in custodia legis, and equally so whether in the hands of the sheriif or his vendee, and the removal without payment of the rent, though wrongful, and subjecting the sheriff to an’ action, not invalidating the execution.”

[92]*92“But he [the landlord] cannot claim except for rent in arrear at the time.of issuing the execution, and is not entitled to what accrues during the sheriff’s possesion; if the-latter injure him by remaining too long in possession, the' landlord may have his remedy by an action on the case. Hoskins vs. Knight, 1 M. & S., 245; Washington vs. Williamson, 23 Md., 244. The sheriff, too, is not liable where

[93]*93We may, then, assume that where a levy was made, as in •the present case, in the midst of a month or quarter, the rent can only be recovered under the-statute of Anne, up to the expiration of the preceding month or quarter, and no rent accrues for the purpose of being satisfied out of the proceeds of sale, for the time during which the sheriff was rightfully or wrongfully on the premises.

• The next question is, how far this condition of the law is changed by our landlord and' tenant act. That provides that the landlord shall have á tacit lien upon such personal chattels on the premises as are subject to execution, to commence with the tenancy, &c.

' Where the tenancy is from month to month, and one month has commenced, we may assume that the landlord’s lien for the rent of that month commences with the month. It commences before the rent is due, and will have priority over a lien acquired by execution issued during the' month. We have gone tó the extent of holding that under the statute of Anne, as modified by our statute,

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Related

Trappan v. Morie
18 Johns. 1 (New York Supreme Court, 1820)
Washington v. Williamson
23 Md. 244 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1865)

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Bluebook (online)
14 D.C. 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-bros-v-dammann-dc-1884.