Loudon v. Warfield

28 Ky. 196, 5 J.J. Marsh. 196, 1830 Ky. LEXIS 413
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 23, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 Ky. 196 (Loudon v. Warfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loudon v. Warfield, 28 Ky. 196, 5 J.J. Marsh. 196, 1830 Ky. LEXIS 413 (Ky. Ct. App. 1830).

Opinion

Judge Buckner,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was abill in chancery, bled on the 5th of February, 1828, by Warfield; against Loudon, in the Fayette circuit court, to restrain the commission of waste, in which he alleges - that David Todd and wife bad leased to Loudon, a tract of land, in that county, for one year, commencing on the 16th of February, 1827; that.Todd and wife had .conveyed the land to him, Warfield, by deed, bearing date on the. 12th of November, 1827, which was accepted, by him, ©n the-26th of January, 1828; and that Loudon was committing waste, by cutting good rail timber, into cord-wood, and had threatened to convert it to his use by sale, &c. An injunction was granted, restraining' the commission of further waste.

Loudon, in his answer, denies the commission of waste, insisting that by his contract with Todd, which he exhibits, he had a right to use the lying down timber. He admits that he had made rails and some posts out of a part of it, but says, that he had not violated his contract, and that Warfield’s hill contained no equity, &c.

Upon a hearing of the- cause, the circuit court perpetuated the injunction, with costs; and Loudon prosecutes this writ of error to reverse the decree»

We shall not attempt to enter into a general disquisition of the doctrine, upon the subject of waste, and of the remedies at common law, and by statute; because ^ ^together unnecessary to do so, in this case. It is sufficient, in general terms, to say, that a tenant is guilty of waste, when, without license or authority trom his landlord, he performs any act which does a lasting damage to the freehold. He may, in the language of the law writers, on the subject, take sufficient estovers of common right, for.plow-bote, fire.-bote, and other house-bote, unless restrained by particular covenants or exceptions. But he has no right, in virtue of fits tenancy, to sell timber to others-

[197]*197It is said in Coke on- Littleton, lib. I, 53, “the tenant cutteth down trees for reparations, and selleth them, and after, buyeth them again, and employs them about necessary reparations, yet it is waste, by the vendition ,• he cannot sell trees, and: with the money cover houses,” « &C.

The allegations of the bill, therefore, respecting .Loudon’s threats to sell timber, which he had cut on the land, independently of the statements, as to the actual commission of waste, were sufficient to authorize the granting of the injunction. Ini Maddock’s Chan-eery, 138, it is said, “injunctions to stay waste are fre-iquently applied for, in chancery; and have, in.practice, superseded the common law remedy, by writ of es-trepement; and the additional remedy, by means of th at writ, given by the statute of Gloucester. And a mere threat to commit waste, is sufficient to ground an injunction upon; it not being necessary for the party to wait till the waste is actually done; see, also, Gibson vs. Smith, II Atk., 183.

Wedo not, however, concur in opinión, with thecircuit court, as to the propriety of perpetuating the injunction, and subjecting-Loudon to the payment of costs; because there is an entire absence of proof to support the allegations of the bill, as to the sale of * the land and execution of the deed by Todd and wife, to the defendant in error. Loudon does not expressly deny, that the legal title to the land was vested in Warfield, nor that the deed referred to had been executed. But the execution of such a deed is not a matter presumed to bo within his knowledge, and cannot, therefore, be taken as a fact, unless it be established by proof. Warfield, in his bill, alleges that Todd and wife had filed a-bill against Loudon, and had obtained an injunction against him, restraining him from committing waste on the land, which bill and proceedings on it, are referred to, and the bill, with the injunction, is made apart of this record. But the answer of Lou-don, to Todd's bill, was not then filed, nor had any step in the suit been, at that time, taken, except the filing of the bill with the injunction; nor is-any other paper prayed, when filed, to be considered as an exhibit In this case.

No part of the record, in the suit of Todd, except his bill and the injunction, was read on the trial of this [198]*198case. It is clear, therefore, that Warfield failed to show that he was the owner of the land, or that Lou-don was his tenant.

In general, he only, who is entitled in remainder or reversion to the inheritance, can maintain an action for waste. He, who has no title to the land, is not entitled to an injunction to restrain •waste.

Waste is ofthe nature of trespass; and although cases may be found, in the books, on the subject, in which it is said, that an action for waste may be maintained, by a person, who has not the remainder or reversion of the inneritance, after the termination of the estate for life or years; as, for example, he who has a right of common, in ihe place wasted; yet, in most cases, he, onlj', to whom, in remainder or reversion, the inheritance up pertains in expectancy, has a right to the action of waste. He, thesefoie, who has no title to the-land, cannot be entitled to an injunction restraining waste; and Warfield does not show that he had any title, legal or equitable, unless the unsupported allegations of his bill be takenas true. Indeed, the proceeding, by bill in chancery, seems, according to the modem practice, not only to have superseded the writ of cs~ trepement, hut to supply, to a certain extent, the place of the action of waste, for it is said, that where a hill is filed, for an injunction to stay waste, and waste has been already committed, the court, to prevent multiplicity of suits, will not oblige the party to bring an action at law, but will decree an accountand satisfaction for what is passed; see the case of Jesus College vs. Bloom, III Atk., 262, and I Haddock’s Chan., 148. Whether the remark, in the case of Downing, Heydell, &c. vs. Palmateer, I Mon., 64, should be considered as conflicting with this doctrine, so far as it relates to a decree giving compensation for the waste committed, need not be here inquired into, because the decree, in this, was for costs only. We do not suppose however, that it was so intended by the court, in that case.

In II Haddock’s Chan., 281, it is said: “To obtain an injunction for waste, it must appear to bo a case of irreparable mischief, to a person, w!>o swears to iiis title ; information and belief, as to the title, will not do; there must be positive evidence of actual title. Nor is it sufficient to swear that you are credibly informed the defendant intends to commit waste; bnt it must be proved, either that he laid the axe at the root of the tree, or some other person must swear, that he threatened to do it.”

[199]*199In this case, we have already remarked, that the bill contains the necessary allegations as to title; hut they aieneitner acknowledged nor proved. The deed under which TVarñeld claims, ought ¡o have been exhibited on the trial; but it was not idled, nor was any such deed used.

But the pioof in the cause, in other respects, seems to have been insufficient to warrant a decree against the plaintiff in error, tty hether ! e had, at any time during the year for w.tich he had rented the land, committed waste, is not necessary to bo decided.

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

Related

Clift v. RDP Co.
200 F. Supp. 3d 660 (W.D. Kentucky, 2016)
Louisville Cooperage Co. v. Rudd
124 S.W.2d 1063 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Ky. 196, 5 J.J. Marsh. 196, 1830 Ky. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loudon-v-warfield-kyctapp-1830.