Lloyd v. Hough

42 U.S. 153, 11 L. Ed. 83, 1 How. 153, 1843 U.S. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 14, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 42 U.S. 153 (Lloyd v. Hough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lloyd v. Hough, 42 U.S. 153, 11 L. Ed. 83, 1 How. 153, 1843 U.S. LEXIS 293 (1843).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause is brought before this court upon a writ-of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Columbia. The questions for consideration here, arise upon the following statement! The pláintiff in error instituted in the Circuit Court for the -District of Columbia, an action of. assumpsit against the .defendant for. the use and occupation- of a bouse in the town of Alexandria. The declaration contains two counts;-the first declaring upon án express agreement between the parties for the occupation and rent, and the second counting upon-an occupation by the defendant by the permission-of the plaintiff, and upon a promise in consideration thereof. The account filed with the declaration claims an annual rent of @175, from the 1st of January, 1826, to the 1st of January, 1S39, inclusive, with interest after the expiration of each year. Upon the aboye declaration; there was a judgment by default, and a jury being empannelled upon á -writ of inquiry assessed damages against the defendant to the *155 full amount of the plaintiff’s demand for rent and interest. This verdict the court on motion of the defendant set aside; annexing to its order the condition, that the defendant should not plead the statute of limitations ; and issue being joined between the par-, ties on the plea of non-assumpsit, a jury sworn to try that issue on the 10th of May, 1841, returned á verdict for the defendant; and thereupon the court gave judgment against-the plaintiff with costs.

At the trial instructions to the jury were prayed on behalf both of plaintiff and defendant, and exceptions taken to the rulings of the court in reference to those instructions.

The first bill of exceptions states that the defendant, having' offered to prove by competent and credible witnesses that during the entire period of his occupation of the premises, he had remaining thereon property sufficient to answer the rent, had the plaintiff chosen to distrain or sue for the same; he thereupon prayed the court to instruct the jury, should they believe from the evidence, that there had' always been upon the premisés, while occupied by the defendant, property and effects of his sufficient to have satisfied the rent, then that the plaintiff- failing or neglecting to sue or distrain for those rents, was not entitled in this action to recover interest on the rent in arrear whatever it might be, from a period earlier than the date of the writ sued out iri this cause. But the court refused' the instructions so prayed for, to which refusal the defendant excepted.

In the second bill of exceptions it is stated that the defendant, by cross-examination of Isaac Robbins, the plaintiff’s witness, proved that in the spring of -1820, defendant entered the premises as tenant, from year to year, under a parol demise from said Robbins as trustee of John Swayne, an insolvent debtor, and at the annual rent of #175, and continued to occupy the premises under said demise, paying the rent as it became due to Robbins, as trustee of Swayne, till the spring of 1824. That Robbins, in character of trustee of Swayne, paid a portion of the rents collected of the defendant to A. C. Cazehove, and a part of' them to the plaintiff, but without-the knowledge, of-the defendant: that since the spring of 1824, the defendant had paid no rent to Robbins, assigning ás a reason for refusing to pay, that the collector of the port of Alexandria, had forbidden such payment: that the *156 defendant was still the occupant of the premises of- which the plaintiff in this cause had never, to' his knowledge, taken actual possession: that Robbins'resided in Alexandria and had sore-sided for the last thirty-seven years: that the defendant also read . in evidence a deed from Jonathan Scholfield and wife, to A. C. Cazenove, bearing date on the 13th. óf June, 1814, and duly recorded in Alexandria county, which deed (riíade a part of the. exceptions) conveyed the premises occupied by the defendant. That upon these proofs the defendant prayed the court to instruct the jury, should they believe that the defendant originally entered, and used and occupied the premises by a .parol demise ■ thereof from Robbins, as trustee of Swayne, in 1820,-and, as tenant of Robbins, paid'-him the rent until .1824, after which period Robbins ceased to .collect the rent for the reason above stated, although the defendant continued to use and occupy the premises from 1824, and still occupied them; and that the defendant did not hold' and occupy the premises either under a written or parol demise from the plaintiff prior or subsequently to. his - holding under .Robbins, or prior to the institution of this suit, but that the defendant held and occupied the premises exclusively under the original parol demise from Robbins as trustee as aforesaid, and that the defendant had no notice, of any title in the plaintiff to the premises beyond what might be presumed from the fact then shown in evidence, that a deed had been made for the.premises from Robert I. Taylor to the plaintiff and had been admitted to record, that then the jury must find for the defendant, which instruction the court accordingly gave, and the plaintiff excepted.

By the third bill of exceptions it is recited in substance that the plaintiff having offered in evidence a deed to him for the premises, dated March the 10th, 181-7, from Robert I. Taylor, trustee in a deed from Jonathan Scholfield- and wife, conveying the same property "to said .Taylor on the 26th of June, 1814, (both which deeds are parts of this exception,) and having farther proved by. Isaac Robbins that from the year 1820 to'the year 1S24, the defendant used and occupied the premises in .the declaration mentioned under a verbal rerfting from Robbins, claiming aá trustee of S'wayne under . the insolvent law, and- that said-renting by Robbins was without the knowledge or consent of .the plaintiff, *157 (no title having been shown by the defendant in Swayne-or in Robbins claiming as his trustee under the insolvent law,) and that Robbins collected the rent of the premises from 1820 to 1824' inclusive, claiming as lessor of the defendant, and as trustee of Swayne; that he had paid over a portion of the rent thus collected to A. C. Cazenove, and a portion of it to the plaintiff, who was the owner of the fee simple under the deed from Taylor, of March the 10th, 1817; the witness not knowing whether .the defendant knew of the disposition so.made of the rent collected of him, and that he¿ Robbias,'.had not claimed rent for the premises from the . defehdaiit'since April-, 1824, having been informed that defendant had been forbidden by the collector of the customs of the port of Alexandria, to pay -rent to any one, other than the United States, and not having shown that the defendant had, at any time, paid rent either to the collector or the United States.

Whereupon, the plaintiff prayed the court to‘instruct the jury, should they believe the evidence aforesaid, that then the plaintifT hád made out such a case as entitled him to recover on the second count, for the use and occupation of the premises, for such time as the plaintiff should prove that the defendant had used and occupied the'same, after the 15th day of April, 1824, by permis- • sionpf the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 U.S. 153, 11 L. Ed. 83, 1 How. 153, 1843 U.S. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lloyd-v-hough-scotus-1843.