Lydick v. B. & O. R. R.

17 W. Va. 427, 1880 W. Va. LEXIS 15
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 17 W. Va. 427 (Lydick v. B. & O. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lydick v. B. & O. R. R., 17 W. Va. 427, 1880 W. Va. LEXIS 15 (W. Va. 1880).

Opinion

Green, PRESIDENT,

announced the opinion of the Court:

The only question presented by the record in this case is: Was the declaration in this case fatally defective on general demurrer? In considering this question we must determine, what was the character of the contract made by Edward Hogan with the defendant, that in consideration of his granting it a right of way through his farm it would construct and maintain forever for the use and benefit of a mill on his farm and for its present and future owners a railroad switch connecting its road with the door of themill. We will first consider what would have been the character of this contract, had it been instead of a verbal a written contract under seal. • Would it have been a real covenant or merely a personal covenant; that is, would it have been a covenant [running with the lánd, that is, one which enured to the benefit of all subsequent owners of the mill, and for the breach of which any subsequent owner might bring an action of covenant against the defendant, or was it a mere personal covenant, for the breach of which no one could ever sue except Edward Hogan ? If this contract was personal and did not enure to the benefit either in law or equity of any grantee of this mill, it is obvious, that the case stated in the declaration is one on which the plaintiff can base no suit.

The counsel for the defendant in error insist, that it . . , ’ is necessary to the creation and existence of a real covenant, that there should be a privity of estate between the parties. 4 Kent Com. 11th ed. pp. 472, 473. This view _of Chancellor Kent is by no means undisputed. Highly respectable authorities hold, that a stranger may covenant with a, land-owner in such a manner as to at-[437]*437taeh the benefit of the covenant to the land and have it run with it in favor of any one who may become the owner thereof. This can only be done however according to these authorities, when the covenant is to do some act for the benefit of the estate and upon the land itself. 'Washburne in his treatise on real property, book 2, p_ 15, vol. 2, p. 262 of 3d ed. says, that these views are advocated by the editor of the American edition of Smith’s Leading Cases, 1 Smith’s Lead. Cas. 5th Am. ed. 124, 140 et seq; that they are favored by the English commissioners upon real property; 3d Rep. of Eng. Com. 52, and is assumed to be law, per Jewett, Judge, in Allen v. Calver, 3 Denio 284, 301, and by Judge Moncure in Dickinson v. Hoomes’s adm’r et al., 8 Gratt. 353, 403. To sustain these views reference is also made to Pakenham’s Case, year book 42 Edward III, 3 pt. 14, fully stated in 2 Sug. Vend. (6th Am. from 10 Eng. ed.) 473, which case is commonly known as the Prior and Convent Case, and also to Coke’s opinion, Co. Lit. 384 b. See also Rawle Cov. 335, and Keppell v. Bailey, 2 Myl. & K. 517, 539. But Washburn himself agrees with Chancellor Kent, that it requires a privity of estate to give one man a right to sue another, where there is no privity of contract between them.

It is not necessary in this case to determine, which of the views is sound. For in the ease before us the requisite privity of estate, exists according to the views of Washburn, who holds such privity to be necessary. He says: - (Wash, oh Real ProperLy, vol. 2, pp. 262, 263, 3d ed.) “ Where one, who makes a covenant with another in respect to land, neither parts with nor receives any title or interest in the land at the same time with and as a part of making the covenant, it is at best a mere personal one, which neither binds his assignee, nor enures to the benefit of the assignee of the covenantee, so as to enable the latter to maintain an action in his own name. It is not easy to define in a few words what is meant in all cases, by the expression 'privity of estate.’ But it is [438]*438apprehended, that in the matter of a covenant running with land the language of Wilde, Judge, in Hurd v. Curtis, furnishes a sufficient clue. There the respective parties owning independent estates entered into certain covenants with each other as to kinds of wheels they should respectively use in their several mills. The grantee of one of these estates ivas sued by the cove-nantee, who had retained his estate, for breaking tbe covenant in the use of wheels in the granted estate. Wilde, Judge, said: ‘We are of opinion, that this action cannot be maintained, as there was no privity of estate between the contracting parties. Their estates were several, and there was no grant of any interest in the real estate of either party, to which the covenant could be annexed/ (19 Pick. 459, 464). So where one of two adjacent owners of land covenanted with the other, that if he would erect a par ty-wall between their estates, the former would pay the latter for one half of it whenever he should use it, it was held to be a personal covenant, and not to run with the land, so as to bind the purchaser of the covenantor’s land who should erect a building against the party-wall. (Block v. Isham, 16 Am. Law Reg. 8; Weld v. Nichols, 17 Pick. 543.) But it is not necessary to create the relation of feudal tenure between the covenantor and covenantee, in order that a covenant should run with the land (Van Renssalaer v. Read, 26 N. Y. 578). And a covenant may run with a rent, as with the land itself. Where one granted land to a railroad company for the purposes of their road, and covenanted for himself and his assigns to fence it and to keep it fenced, it was held to be a covenant which ran with the land and bound his grantee. Demarest v. Willard, 8 Cow. 206; Willard v. Tillman, 2 Hill 274.

* * * * * j>uf jf one simply covenants with a stranger to build a house or repair a mill-dam, it is not easy to see how it can be other than a personal covenant, or howr it can make any difference in its character in [439]*439that respect, whether the act is to be clone upon the cov-enantee’s land or that of a stranger.”

syllabus 5.

It is unnecessary for us to determine, whether this would in the case put by Washburn make a difference, as some eminent lawyers insist; for in the case before us the defendant was not a stranger, but as apart of the contract claimed to run with the land and by this contract received an interest in the laud, a right of way over it for its road, which obviously according to the views of Mr. Washburn made a privity of estate.

Mr. Washburn on page 263, vol. II of this work says: “ It is conceived in accordance with this idea that such covenants and such only, run with land as concern the land itself, in whosesoever hands i^may be, and become united with and form part of, the consideration for which the land or some interest in it is parted with, between the covenantor and covenantee.”

This I apprehend is true, when the covenant is on the part of the grantor; but if the covenant is on the of the grantee of an interest in the land or a right of way over it, or an incorporeal hereditament issuing out of it and the covenant concerns the land in whosesoever hands it may be, and becomes united with it, so that whenever sold it must enter into the consideration and enhance the price, such covenant is real and runs with the land. In such case there is privity of estate between the parties. Thus it was held in Savage v. Mason, 3 Cush.

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Bluebook (online)
17 W. Va. 427, 1880 W. Va. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lydick-v-b-o-r-r-wva-1880.