Howcott v. Collins

23 Miss. 398
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 Miss. 398 (Howcott v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howcott v. Collins, 23 Miss. 398 (Mich. 1852).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was commenced in the superior court of chancery. The bill states that Thomas Collins, who died intestate, was seized and possessed of considerable real estate, which descended to complainants, as his heirs at law. It also states that the appellants, Howcott and wife, intruded upon and took possession of a certain part thereof, which is particularly described, and hold possession of the same, against the consent of complainants claiming title by virtue of a sale alleged to have been made by Joseph Collins. The bill further charges, that the land in question was sold by said Joseph Collins, as the administrator of the decedent, pursuant to an order of the probate court of Madison county, which had been fraudulently procured by him. That at the sale, the appellant, Joseph C. Richards, by the procurement of Collins, bid off the land, and received from him a conveyance therefor. That the purchase was made for Collins, who, in a short time afterwards, sold the land at private sale to Howcott and wife, for a price nearly double that which it brought at the administration sale; and that Richards, at the request of Collins, conveyed to Mrs. [402]*402Howcott. The bill further charges, that Collins retains the profit made by the sale to Mrs. Howcott, who, with her husband, was cognisant of these facts. Howcott and wife retained possession of the land. Rent was demanded of them, and is claimed in the bill against Collins, before the sale made to Mrs. Howcott, and of Howcott and wife after they went into possession.

Collins answered: He denied the fraud, but admitted that he bid off the land himself, and made the title to Richards, who, at his request, conveyed to Mrs. Howcott. He also admitted that he sold the land for double the amount which he bid for it at the sale; but avers that the sale was fairly made, and that he became a bidder for the land, to make it bring as high a price as possible.

Howcott and wife answer, and admit that the contract for the purchase of the land was made with Collins, and that Richards made the conveyance to Mrs. Howcott. They deny all knowledge of or participation in the fraud charged by the bill.

The defendant, Joseph Collins having died, the suit was revived against his executors, Henry Coulter and James Richards, who were made parties to the bill.

A final decree was rendered against all of the defendants, by which the deeds from Collins to Richards, and from Richards to Howcott and wife, were set aside, and by which they were ordered to pay to complainants the value of the rents of said land, with interest upon the amounts yearly due therefor, from the time at which Howcott and wife took possession of the same. From this decree an appeal was taken.

Several objections are urged to the validity of the decree. We shall notice them in the order in which they are presented. First, it is insisted that the decree is erroneous in this, that the defendants, Henry Coulter and James Richards, are personally charged with the payment of the rent, and not in their representative characters, as they should have been.

We do not perceive that the error complained of exists in point of fact. 'The decree directs that, “ Complainants recover, &c., from Henry Coulter and James Richards, executors [403]*403of the last -will and testament of the said Joseph Collins, deceased,” &c.

It is very manifest, that upon this decree no execution could legally issue, to be levied upon the individual effects of defendants; but only on those which they held as executors of the testator. They were before the court in no other capacity. In our view, this decree can only be regarded as having been rendered against them in their representative character. The case of Neeley v. Planters Bank, 4 S. & M. 113, is directly in point.

The next objection is, that interest upon the annual value or yearly rent of the premises, as reported by the commissioner, was allowed by the decree.

The decisions upon the question, Whether interest should be allowed upon rents due and unpaid, are not uniform. In the state of Kentucky, interest is not allowed on rent in arrear, unless the rent has been secured by a specialty. Breckenridge v. Brooks, 2 A. K. Mar. R. 341. In South Carolina, a similar rule has been adopted. In Pennsylvania, rent carries interest, unless, from the conduct of the landlord, it may be inferred that he meant not to insist upon it. Obermyer v. Nicholls, 6 Binney, 164. In the state of Maryland, interest on rent is recoverable in a suit in equity. 6 Harris & John. 529; Fonbl. Eq. B. 5, ch. 1, sec. 2, note.

In Virginia, the general rule appears to be, that interest on rents is not demandable as a matter of strict legal right. The principal reason assigned is, that the landlord has an efficacious and summary remedy by distress. Upon this ground chiefly, the decisions in Skipwith v. Clinch, 2 Call, R. 213, and Cooke v. Wise, 3 Hen. & Munf. 483, were predicated. In the former case, where the rents for twenty years appeared to be due, the court say, “ The complainants was not entitled to interest on the rents, because it was certain he might have distrained, and therefore should not have lain by and suffered the interest to accumulate.”

But while the courts in Virginia maintain, as a general rule, that interest on rent in arrear is not recoverable as a matter of course, it is conceded that circumstances may exist which will [404]*404take a case out of this rale, and entitle a party suing for rent and to recover interest. 3 Hen. & Munf. R. 499.

In the case of Graham v. Woodson, 2 Call, 209, which was a suit in equity for the recovery of rent, interest was allowed, and the judges say that “it was discretionary in the court to allow it or not.”

No regulation of the statute, in regard to the allowance of interest, applies directly to the subject under consideration. Nor are we aware of any decision by this court, by which it has been holden, that a party who sues for the recovery of .arrearages of rent is entitled, as a matter of course, to interest ■on the sum found to be due.

It is however understood to be the general practice, to allow interest upon open accounts, when by the usual course of -dealing, or by express agreement, a certain time is fixed for payment; and generally in all cases where there has been an unjust detention of the money of another against his will. In vthese cases, the interest allowed by the jury is regarded as a compensation for the damages sustained by the plaintiff in consequence of the breach of his contract by the defendant. But the allowance is not made as a matter of strict legal right, as in the cases éxpressly provided for by the statute.

We perceive no sufficient reason why a similar rule, in like cases, should not be adopted in equity, subject however to the discretion of the chancellor, to allow or disallow interest, as the circumstances of the case might require. This principle was expressly sanctioned- by the supreme court of Virginia, in the case of Deanes v. Scriba et al., 2 Call, R. 350.

Adopting this rule, we can perceive no objection to the decree on account of the interest allowed upon the annual value of the rents reported by the commissioner to be due. In our view, the circumstances of this case render it peculiarly proper that interest should be allowed.

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