Sharp v. Cheatham

88 Mo. 498
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 88 Mo. 498 (Sharp v. Cheatham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. Cheatham, 88 Mo. 498 (Mo. 1885).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

Plaintiff instituted this proceeding-in equity on the following contract:

“Article of agreement, made and entered into this seventh day of July, 1868, by and between Roach & Stitt and Austin Elliott, all of the town of Warrensburg,. county of Johnson and state of Missouri. Witnesseth : That the said Austin Elliott, party of the second part, hereby agrees that the said Roach & Stitt, party of the first part, shall place the walls of their building, now in process of erection, six [6] inches on the lot now owned by the party of the second part; and the said party of the second-part further agrees that when he shall join' said walls he will pay to the party of the first part, one-half the cost of so much of said walls as he may join to.

“In witness whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and affixed our-, this day and date above named.

“Roacii & Stitt, [l. s.]

“ Austin Elliott, [l. s.] .

“Attest: M. M. G-laddisii.”

The substance of the petition is that Roach <&; Stitt and Elliott, the owners respectively of adjoining .lots in, [501]*501Holden’s second addition to the town of Warrensburg, made the agreement aforesaid ; that subsequently Roach & Stitt, in compliance with said agreement, proceeded to •erect and did erect a wall along the line between the two lots, and six inches on the land of Elliott, for ninety feet in length, etc. ; that afterwards Elliott erected a building -on his lot, sixty feet in length ; that Roach & Stitt after-, wards conveyed their lot to plaintiff, in March, 1881; that Elliott in the next month thereafter, conveyed by quitclaim deed, his lot to defendant, ivho afterwards erected ■on it a brick extension of the building previously erected by Elliott, and joined and connected the same with the line and party wall theretofore erected by Roach & Stitt, rising thereby said wall to the extent said building was joined thereto, some thirty feet in length and sixteen feet in height;'that defendant when he purchased his lot had notice of the agreement entered into as aforesaid by Elliott and by Roach & Stitt; that the cost of the wall to whicíi defendant joined his building -was two hundred dollars; that defendant was equitably bound to pay plaintiff one-half of that sum, but refuses to do so, ■and, therefore, plaintiff asks that defendant be decreed ■to pay plaintiff one-half the cost of said wall, etc.

The agreed statement of facts was filed, which, together with the deposition of Elliott, was all the evidence in the cause. The fact of notice to defendant of the agreement aforesaid, was not established; the substance of the other allegation of the petition, was, however, made out. Whereupon the circuit court made a special finding, whereby it-was held that defendant had no actual notice of the agreement, yet that having purchased under a quit-claim deed, had constructive notice of the agreement, and, therefore, rendered judgment against him, and decreed that the amount of such judgment should be a lien on his property described in the petition.

The only question presented then by the defendant’s appeal is the correctness of the ruling just mentioned. [502]*502This question will be discussed from two points of view : (1) In respect of the general powers of a court of equity to enter such a decree as has been entered in the present instance. (2) Whether conceding the exis-, tence of such powers, it was proper to exercise them in. the case at bar, owing to the fact, found by the trial court, that defendant had no actual notice of the agreement at the time he received his deed.

I. Were this an action at law there would be little- or no doubt that plaintiff could not successfully maintain., her action. An author of eminence touching this subject says : “ With a very few exceptions, the uniform current of authorities, from the time of Webb v. Russell, 3 T. R. 393, to the present, day, requites a primly of estate to-give one man a light to sue another upon a covenant where there is no privity of contract between them ; consequently that 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 for a breach thereof.” 2 Wash. [4 Ed.] top p. 285. And the learned author then quotes with approval, the remarks of Erie, J., in Cole v. Hughes, 54 N. Y. 444, where he says : “There is a wide difference between the transfer of the burden, of a covenant running with the land and the benefit of the covenant, or, in other words, of the liability to fulfill the covenant and the-right to exact the fulfillment. The benefit will pass with, the land to which it is incident; but the burden or liability will be confined to the original covenantor, unless the relation of privity of estate or tenure exists or is created between covenantor and covenantee at the time-when the covenant is made.” As no "such privity of estate or tenure existing between the contracting parties-.. [503]*503when the agreement heretofore set forth was made, it is quite clear from the authorities cited, that plaintiffs.* action, if one' of law, must fail.

This, however, being a proceeding in equity, the rules prevailing in actions at law, as to the necessity of the covenant running with the land; as to the necessity of there being a contemporaneous privity of tenure or estate, in order to make the covenant something more than a mere personal one, in order to fasten it upon the land mentioned in the covenant, does not prevail here, as in contemplation of a court of equity no such privity is essential, nor that the covenant should run with the land. In order to successfully invoke equitable interposition in cases of this sort, all that is necessary is a valid agreement or covenant, and notice thereof to the pur-, chaser. When these things are shown, a court of equity,disregarding the technical rules of law, and looking alone to the substance and justice of the agreement, such as the one now before us, will enforce it as well against the purchaser with notice as against the original party. Cases are quite frequent which illustrate and fortify this position. Some of them do so in direct terms of adjudication ; others of them by necessary-analogy and irresistible inference.

Thus, in the early case of Campbell v. Mesier, 4 Johns. Ch. 334, two parties living in the city of New York, on adjacent lots and having on the common line of their buildings a ruinous party wall unfit to stand, and one of the persons thus situated being desirous of rebuilding, proposed to the other co-terminous proprietor to unite with him in rebuilding the party wall, but this request was refused. Whereupon, Campbell, the proposer, proceeded to tear down his own house as well as the party wall, and rebuilt both. Thereafter, Mesier, who had refused to assist in rebuilding the party wall, devised his property to his son, who thereafter sold the lot to Dunstan, and in the deed expressly conveyed to the. [504]*504latter the use of the party wall for building, etc., and covenanted to indemnify him for so using it. Dunstan then pulled his house down and erected a new one, and in so-doing made use of the new party wall; but' refused to pay his proportionate share of that wall.

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88 Mo. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-cheatham-mo-1885.