Van Rensselaer v. Smith

27 Barb. 104, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 71
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 27 Barb. 104 (Van Rensselaer v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Rensselaer v. Smith, 27 Barb. 104, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 71 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

Gould, J.

Although two of the cases above entitled are for the recovery of the rent arrears, and the other two are in ejectment, for the recovery of the lands, yet so many of the grounds taken for the defense are common to the two classes of suits, that it is perhaps as well to embrace all the points of the different defendants in one opinion; and thereafter, give the decision in each case, severally, by applying to it so much of the opinion as is appropriate thereto. And as we know by the great number of such suits upon our calendars, the real importance of a decision in any one; and are by the grounds assumed in the various arguments, fully informed that a discovery has been made in the law of this state; and that a simple reference to the older English authorities, (though under a law that will be found to be radically different from ours, and based on reasons which here either never existed or have ceased to exist,) will suffice to overturn the- unadvised decisions of our own courts; there seems to be a necessity for, certainly a propriety in, going more at length into the discussion of those reasons, and of some, at least, of those authorities than accords with either my wishes or my practice.

To comm&ce with a definition. We are told in argument, that a rent charge cannot exist-upon a term for life, or years, or any other limited term, (citing Littleton, § 217;) but in Littleton’s next section (§ 218) we find him saying “if a man grant a yearly rent, to be issuing out of his land, to another in fee, or in fee-tail, or for term of life &c., with a clause of distress, &c., then this is a rent charge.” The truth is, that Littleton defines two hinds of rent charge; and as the confusion, arising from a failure to note this, (in the earliest cases,) seems to have influenced, or may have influenced, some of the English authorities which are cited to prove that a rent-charge does not run with the land; it is likely to be essential to keep both kinds in view, in attempting to attain a just appreciation of the reasons for such decisions; in order to judge how far those reasons should control us.

Now before the statute, known (from the first words of its [138]*138preamble) as the statute “ quia emptores terrarum,” almost any rent or service could be reserved, as well upon a grant in fee, as on one in tail, for life or years, and so reserved it was called a rent-service; and the right to distrain for such rent, (or service if reserved, or both,) was by the common law, (or under statutes of so long standing as to be called common law,) incident to the reservation, or grant, without any words giving distress, &c. (Litt. § 216.) But “ by force of the statute of quia emptores terrarum, it behoved any man, who would reserve to himself a rent service, that the reversion be in himself ; for if he would make a feoffment in fee, without deed, reserving to him a certain rent, this reservation is void,” (Litt. § 215,) because the donor having no reversion, the tenant holds immediately of the lord (chief lord.) I would here) however, call attention to what, (so -far as either English or American cases have been cited,) I do not find noted: Coke, in his note to this § 215, says, “ and it is to be understood, that in case of the gift in tail, lease for life, or years, the fealty is- an incident inseparable to the reversion, so as the donor cannot grant the reversion over, and save to himself the fealty, or such like service; but the rent he may except;* because the rent, although it be incident to the reversion.” (i. e. go with it if not separated,) “yet it is not inseparably incident.” Coke cannot mean that a rent, reserved in a grant in fee-tail, so excepted, would be void; though what the defendants call the possibility of reverter has been separated from the rent. Tet it would seem that the English courts have, in substance, so decided, taking no note of this rule of Coke’s.

To return, however to Littleton. Having (in §§ 215, 216,) thus said what, by force of said statute, was the effect of a feoffment in fee without deed; he proceeds, in § 217, to give the effect—under that statute—of a feoffment by deed. “ But if a man, by deed indented, at this day, make, &c. a feoffment in fee, and by the same indenture he reserves to him and to his heirs, a certain rent, and that if the rent be behind, that ■it'shall be lawful for him and'7ms heirs to distrain, &c., such [139]*139a rent is a rent charge, because such lands are charged with such distress by force of the writing only, and not of common right.” And if it be without such a clause it is a rent-seck, “for that he cannot come to have the rent, if it be denied, by way of distress.” And upon this section Coke notes that “ it is a maxim in law, that the rent must be reserved to him from whom the estate in the land moveth, and not to a stranger.” This point also requires to be remembered, in considering the English cases. (See also Doctor and Student, 126, 127.) Further see" Littleton, § 346, and its note by Coke, for the express rule that, on a feoffment in fee, a reservation of a rent to the feoffor and his heirs is good.

So far, certainly, both Littleton and Coke would seem to say that the grantor and his heirs—such rent of course inheritable—could, upon a grant in fee if made by deed providing therefor, hold a rent which they could enforce by distress upon the land charged; and this, notwithstanding the statute, quia emptores. And they certainly express no limitation of time, (or number of successive grantees of the land,) as releasing the land from its liability to this distress, but say the grantor and his heirs—words universally known to mean, when not limited, heirs for ever.

As all the citations thus far, speak of reservations of rent, this seems the more appropriate place for commenting on the position of the defendants, that words of reservation, as yielding and paying,” never attach a condition to a fee. The case they cite, (Tallman v. Coffin, 4 Comst. 138,) does say so; but it was not necessary to the decision to say so; as the same hard result would have been attained, by merely holding that the lessee having failed to protect himself against the legal effect of the ending of his term, (which was that the lessor, by law, was entitled, thereupon, to immediate possession,) by not inserting in his lease provisions for the appraisal of, and payment for, his improvements, at or before the ending of his term, must abide the consequences of his neglect; and that, granting that, paying for the improvements” were a [140]*140condition^ still even a condition could not lengthen the term of letting. Yet I cannot but think that the result of that case would have appeared more just, and would have been more satisfactory even to the court, had a point been strained to bring the case within the authorities cited in support of the decision. For" those, all, hold that precisely such words do make a condition, where, without such a construction,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 Barb. 104, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-rensselaer-v-smith-nysupct-1858.