McMillan v. Solomon

42 Ala. 356
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 42 Ala. 356 (McMillan v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMillan v. Solomon, 42 Ala. 356 (Ala. 1868).

Opinion

A. J. WALKER, C. J.-

After the commencement of a lease for one year, of certain rooms and cellars of a storehouse in a town, for the purpose of trade, the building was [357]*357destroyed by fire, not attributed to the fault of any person. Before tbe expiration of tbe term, tbe lessor entered upon the premises without tbe consent of tbe lessee, and commenced the erection of a new building upon tbe locality of that which bad been consumed, and retained possession to tbe end of tbe term. In a charge to the jury in a suit on tbe note given for tbe rent, the court below asserted tbe proposition, that this entry was an eviction of tbe lessee, and tbe plaintiff could not recover.

In this charge, we think, there is error. Tbe plaintiff bad a right to recover tbe rent up to the time of tbe fire, under an application of tbe doctrine of apportionment of rent. Tbe propositions which, in their consecutive order, leads to this conclusion, may be numerically stated as follows, to-wit: 1. By tbe lease of the apartments in tbe building in a town for tbe purpose of trade, tbe less ee took only such interest in tbe subjacent land as was dependent upon tbe enjoyment of tbe apartments rented, and necessary thereto, and that such interest ceased with tbe total destruction of tbe apartments, by fire. 2. That tbe relation of landlord and tenant was dissolved by tbe fire, and thenceforward tbe lessee bad no interest in, or right to tbe land of which an eviction can be predicated. 3. That with tbe destruction of the entire subject of tbe lease, tbe accruing of rent ceased, and tbe landlord has only a right to recover a part of tbe rent proportionate to the period of the term antecedent to tbe fire.

1. Our first proposition is, that by tbe lease of apartments in a bouse in a town, for tbe purpose of trade, tbe lessee takes no interest in tbe land independent of, and distinguishable from tbe apartments rented, and only such interest as is involved in tbe enjoyment of tbe rooms upon it rented. In tbe statement of our proposition, we embrace tbe elements of location in a town and of use for tbe purposes of trade. "We do this, not because we are sure they are indispensable, but because they are clearly presented in the case, and some of tbe authorities seem to attach some importance to them, and we do not wish, in this case, where we can find no precedent in our own juris[358]*358prudence, to give our positions a greater latitude than is necessary.

We must distinguish between the lease of apartments in a house, as in this case, and the lease of a house. The authorities are very strong to the point, that a lease of a house will pass at least the subjacent land. In Sheppard’s Touchstone (m. p. 90,) it is said, “by the grant of a house, the ground whereon it doth stand, doth pass.” Lord Ooke, in his Commentary upon Littleton, (Coke upon Lit. 55,) says that by the grant of a messuage or house, the orchard, garden and curtilage do pass ; though in Neil way, 57, a difference is taken between messuage and house. In Chard & Tucks’ case, 1 Leonard, 214, (S. C. Cr. Bliz. 89,) the word messuage was held to include the curtilage and garden. In Smith v. Martin, 2 Saunders, 401, the plaintiff alleging himself seized in fee of a house, whereof a garden-house and garden were parcel, and declared for an injury to the garden-house and wall. Objections being made to the pleadings, it was decided, that a garden may be said to be a parcel of a house, and by that name will pass in a conveyance. In Doe, ex dem. v. Collins, 2 Term R. 499, the distinction between messuage and house is denied, and the largest latitude of import is allowed the latter. Other English authorities upon the subject, will be found collated in note two to Smith v. Martin, supra.

Without involving ourselves with any question of controversy in English law we may admit that, house, ex vi termini, at least embraces the land upon which the building is erected. This does not, however, effect the precise question in hand. A house and apartments within it, are not the same. House may include the subjacent land, but apartments within it may not. It often occurs that each apartment of a house of several stories, is leased to a different person. Upon reason and justice, each lessee has an interest in the land in so far as it supports the building, and therefore conveyances or leases of the apartments may be within the statute of frauds. — Inman v. Stamp, 1 Starkie’s R., 12 ; Stockwell v. Hunter, 11 Met. 448. Taylor on Landlord and Tenant, § 30. No such interest as would protect the lease of the several tenants could exist, if with the [359]*359lease of the lowest apartments, or any one or more of the other apartments, a right to the soil independently of, and separately from the enjoyment of the apartments vested. The lease of the rooms of a house by the force and meaning of the word, do not carry any distinguishable interest in the land, and there is no principle, and certainly not a preponderance of decisions, giving to it that effect.

In Doe, ex dem. v. Burt, 1 Term, 701, the facts were, that there was a lease of certain premises, including a yard in Westminster, and that beneath the yard there was a cellar with wine vaults used independently of the premises. There was an unanimous rejection of the proposition, that a lease of the yard included the cellar and wine vaults beneath, which was pressed, upon the maxim, “ayus esl sohim, efus est, usque ad codum el ad inferos.” The decision is obviously put upon the ground, that the lease split up the freehold, and by the term yard, conveyed only that which was used as a yard, and by way of illustration, the cases are put of a lease of a room on the ground floor, where there was a cellar beneath separately used, and of a lease of a house in the Adelphi, under which there were warehouses, in the former of which, the cellar, and in the latter the warehouses, would not pass. In the case of The Proprietors, &c. v. City of Lowell, 1 Met. 538, an incorporated church owned the land and a building thereupon erected, which consisted of a cellar and two stories. The cellar and upper story were used for the purposes of the church, while the lower or basement story was cut up into store-rooms, and rented for secular purposes. It was decided that a statute exempting houses of religious worship from taxation, did not apply to the basement rooms; the court remarking, that there may be several distinct tenements under the same roof, and tenements are as essentially distinct, when one is under the other, as when one is by the side of the other. There are two cases settling questions rather outside of the line of our argument, to which we nevertheless refer as illustrating the distinct interests which may exist in the several apartments of a house separately from any separate interest in the land. — Loring v. Bacon, 4 Mass. R. 575; Chelsborough v. Green, 10 Con. 318. This [360]*360proposition is sustained by the text of Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, § 520, where it is said that when the subject matter of the demise is destroyed, the lease perishes with it. See, also, to same effect, Smith’s L. and T., note a.

2. The remaining two propositions — first, that the tenancy was dissolved by the destruction of the building; and secondly, that no recovery of rent after such destruction, can be had, must be treated together, as most of the authorities relate to both subjects.

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