Jacobs v. Davis

34 Md. 204, 1871 Md. LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 24, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 Md. 204 (Jacobs v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. Davis, 34 Md. 204, 1871 Md. LEXIS 51 (Md. 1871).

Opinion

Grason, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of covenant instituted by the appellee against the appellant, and the agreement between the parties thereto was set out in the narr. A demurrer was filed to the narr. and three causes of demurrer were assigned in the argument; first, that the covenant was joint, second, that the breach was not sufficiently assigned in the second count, and third that the covenant not to allow the owner of Gum’s, land to drain that land through the ditches mentioned in the agreement, is against public policy. It appears on the record that the appellant had obtained, from the proper Court in the State of Delaware, a commission to open, what is termed a tax ditch to drain his lands, through the lands of the appellee and Thomas Holloway, and they, in consideration that the appellant would abandon his proposed tax ditch and not again [210]*210apply for one, entered into an agreement with the appellant, under seal and dated the 37th day of September, 1864, by which they covenanted to grant to the appellant the privilege of a water course through their lands, to begin for the head of said water-course on the East side of the High Bridge road, where the appellant’s and Davis’ lands join, and to run by and with said road on the lands of the appellee and Holloway, until it reached the divisional line between the States of Delaware and Maryland. The appellee and Holloway further agreed to permit the appellant to cut and keep open forever, a ditch on the line aforesaid, of sufficient width and depth for his purposes, reserving to themselves the wood and timber removed in cutting the same. The appellant on his part covenanted to abandon all proceedings in the State of Delaware, to procure a water-course through the lands of the appellee and Holloway, or either of them and not to commence any other; that he would not allow Menaan Gum or auy one, who might thereafter own the land of the said Gum, to cut ditches into his, the appellant’s land, so as to drain through the ditches by the agreement granted. He also further agreed to cut the ditch first above named and granted, by beginning at the point where it intersects the divisional line between Delaware and Maryland, and not to cut it above, so as to throw the water down, until it could be taken off by the ditch below, and for the faithful performance of the agreement the three parties above named, bound themselves each to the other in the penal sum of $ 1,000.

The first question to be determined is, whether the covenant made with the appellee and Holloway is joint or several. We have carefully examined the authorities, cited in argument by the counsel of the respective parties, and they all recognize the rule as uniform and well established, that, where the interests of the covenantees are several the covenant is several. Wright vs. Post, 3 Conn., 145; Anderson vs. Martindale, 1 East., 501; 1 Chitt. Plead., 10; Eccleston vs. Clepsham, 1 Saund., 153, note 1, and Slater vs. Magraw, 12 G & J. [211]*211270. In the note in 1 Saund., 153, it is said “ though a roan covenant with two or more jointly, yet if the interest and cause of action of the covenantees be several, and not joint, the covenant shall be taken to be several, and each of the covenantees may bring an action for his peculiar damage, notwithstanding the words of the covenant are joint.” And in Platt on Covenants, 123, the doctrine is laid down “that covenants shall not be construed to be joint or several, from the particular language in which they may be conceived, but shall be measured and moulded according to the interests of the covenantees,” and this rule is cited and recognized by the Court of Appeals in the case of Lahy & Counselman vs. Holland, 8 Gill, 451. In the case now before us, the appellee and Holloway respectively, owned the lands through which the ditch was to be cut, and which were to be affected by it, and neither claimed nor was entitled to any interest in the land of the other. Their interests being several the appellant’s covenant with them must therefore be regarded as several, even if the words of the covenant left it doubtful whether the covenant is joint or several. But we think, from the language of the covenant itself, as well as from the several interests of the covenantees in the lands, that this is a several and not a joint covenant, and that the parties to it so intended it to be. The agreement between the parties grants the privilege of a water-course “ through their respective lands;” that is, through the lands of the appellee and the lands of Holloway, and not through lands which they own jointly or in common. They also reserve to themselves the wood and timber which may be removed in cutting the ditch; and it would scarcely be contended that either of them, under the agreement, would have any interest in or claim to the wood and timber which might be cut from the land of the other. But •we think that the closing paragraph of the agreement furnishes unmistakable evidence of the intention of the parties that the covenant should be several and not joint, for in prescribing the penalty for the faithful performance of the covenants the [212]*212parties do not bind themselves, the appellant as one party and the appellee and Holloway as the other party thereto, but they bind themselves for the “faithful performance of all the agreements made by us respectively, each to the other, in the sum of $1,000.” The language employed so plainly indicates the intentions of the parties to enter into several, and not joint, covenants, that no argument or illustration could render it more clear. The appellant covenanted that he would cut the ditch so granted by beginning “ at the point where it intersects the divisional line between the States of Delaware and Maryland, and not to cut it above, so as to throw the water down, until it can be taken off by the ditch below.” The appellant having entered upon the land and undertaken to cut the ditch, he was guilty of a breach of his covenant if he did not begin to cut, where it intersects the divisional line between the States of Delaware and Maryland. When he availed himself of the grant, he was bound to begin to cut at that point, and to continue from that point towards his own land, so as to avoid “throwing the water down until it could be taken off by the ditch below.” An allegation in the narr. that the appellant did cut the said ditch so as to throw the water down before it could be taken off by the ditch below, was a sufficient assignment of the breach of his covenant in this respect. The appellants covenant not to allow the owner of Gum’s land to drain through the ditch described in the agreement, was made for the benefit of the appellee and Holloway with regard to the land of each of them, and whether the appellant allowed the owner of that land to cut ditches so as to drain into the ditches granted as aforesaid, or cut them himself, it was a palpable breach of the covenant, and an averment in the narr. that he allowed “the owner of the said lands of said Menaan Gum to cut a ditch into the lands of said Curtís W. Jacobs, so as to drain through the ditches by the said articles of agreement granted and permitted to bo cut,” is sufficient, without naming the party who, at the time of so cutting, was the owner of said land. But it was ob[213]*213jected to the validity and binding force of this covenant that it was against public policy.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Md. 204, 1871 Md. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-davis-md-1871.