Vechte v. Brownell

8 Paige Ch. 212, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 494, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 112
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 7, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 Paige Ch. 212 (Vechte v. Brownell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vechte v. Brownell, 8 Paige Ch. 212, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 494, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 112 (N.Y. 1840).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

As I have not been furnished with the reasons of the decree of the court below, it is difficult for me to conjecture upon what grounds the decision of the vice chancellor was based. The effect of the decree, as admitted by the counsel of both parties upon the argument, although I have not been furnished with a copy so as to enable me to judge of its particular terms, is to restrain the appellant from even proceeding upon his mortgage to recover any part of the arrears of rent which he paid to Thompson in September, 1830. I presume, therefore, the vice chancellor must have concurred with the complainant’s counsel in his first point, that the defendant had not been compelled, and could not have been compelled by Thompson, to pay any part of the arrears of rent which had accrued previous to the conveyance to him in September, 1827. In the peculiar situation of this title there certainly might be seme difficulty in proceeding at law to collect the arrears of rent which became due, while the premises were occupied by another tenant than the one against whom the proceedings were instituted, in case no distress could be found upon the premises. For the grant to A. Thompson, and his heirs, appears to have been an interest in the nature of a rent seek, without any provision for a re-entry for non-payment of rent. The object and intent of the commissioners of forfeitures undoubtedly was to sell all the interest of the state, which had accrued by the attainder of Johnson, subject to the incumbrance of such a lease as Vechte was in equity entitled to receive. And indeed such was their duty under the statute. In case of any [217]*217real difficulty at law, therefore, in enforcing the payment of the rent, it probably would be the duty of this court to put the present owners of the land, and of the rent, in the same situation, as if a lease had been actually given by Sir William Johnson to the complainant’s father, instead of a mere agreement for a lease. And if necessary, after such a lapse of time, the execution of an actual lease from the elder Thompson to Vechte, reserving, rent, might be presumed ; so as to give the landlord the usual remedy, by distress for the recovery of such rent, or the summary remedy by an application to a judge, if no sufficient distress could be found upon the premises. (See Collet v. Jaques, 1 Chancery Cases, 120.) I think, however, that it was not necessary in this case that the heir of the grantee of this rent should even have resorted to a court of equity for a remedy, to compel the defendant to pay all the arrears of rent which were actually due and unpaid. (Blake v. De Lesseline, 4 M’Cord’s Rep. 496.) By the 18th section of the title of the revised statutes relative to the rights and duties of landlords and tenants, &c. (1 R. S. 747,) it is expressly provided, that when any certain services or certain rent, reserved out of any lands or tenements, shall not be paid or tendered when due, the person entitled thereto may distrain for the same. And the note of the revisers, to this section, shows that it was intended by this provision to extend the remedy by distress to every kind of rent which was fixed and certain as it was extended in England by the 5th section of the act, 4 Geo. 2d. ch. 28, which had not before been adopted here. (See 4 Evans’ Stat. 168. 3 Kent’s Com. 461. 3 R. S. 2d ed. p. 600.) The owner of the rent therefore having a perfect right to distrain for the same under this statutory provision, the defendant was not bound to wait until the property was distrained and sold to pay these arrears of rent. Neither was it his duty to relinquish the use of the farm, in order to prevent the property he might put thereon from being placed within the reach of a distress warrant. It is then perfectly immaterial whether at the time of the settlement he had any [218]*218property on the land, or not, which could then have been distrained.

It was admitted by both parties that the elder Thompson was dead, and that the person who received the rent after his death, was his son ; nor was there any evidence that he had any other children or descendents living at the time of his death. And it did not lie upon the defendant to prove negatively that the original grantee of the rent did not make a will, devising the rent to a stranger to his blood. This, in the absence of all proof that any other person .had any interest in this rent, was sufficient to show that it had been paid to the right person. Indeed, the payment of the rent originally to him, by the complainant, previous to 1817, was of itself a recognition of his right. And the allegation that he claimed to receive it as agent of his mother, is not supported by any proof; nor by the production of the receipts, in the hands of the complainant, showing that it was receipted for in the character of agent only. If he received any part of the rent as the agent of his mother, it was probably that part of it which accrued before his father’s death, and which, therefore, might have belonged to her as the personal representative- But the subsequent rent belonged to the heir. The defendant in his answer also states that the complainant told him that Thompson, to whom it was paid, was the owner of the rent, and the proper person to settle with for the same. And this part of the answer is responsive to the interrogatory in the bill, which called upon the defendant to state whether Thompson showed any, and what title to, or authority to receive the rent. There is no foundation for the objection that the grantee of the rent could not recover the arrears thereof for more than six years. Even if the only remedy for the recovery thereof was by an action of debt, as upon simple contract, or an action for use and occupation, the facts in this case show that the remedy would not have been barred ; for there was such an admission that the rent remained due and unpaid, as would have been sufficient to take the case out of the statute of limitations. [219]*219At the time the complainant sold to the defendant, it was conceded that the rent had not been paid or demanded for many years previous ; and, according to the testimony of Stewart and of Haring, only up to 1817. The mortgage itself, which the defendant took, was given as an indemnity against these admitted arrears; which are in terms referred to in the writing executed at that time to show the purposes for which the bond and mortgage were given. .Besides, there was no statute that I am aware of, which limited the distress for arrears of rent to six years. Chancellor Kent says, the distress may be made for all the arrears of rent arising during the tenancy, though the rent of several years should happen to be in arrear. (3 Kent’s Com. 2d ed. 483.) And certainly that was the law of England, until the recent statute, (3 and 4 Wm. 4, ch. 27, § 42,) enacted in pursuance of the recommendation of the real property commissioners, restrained the collection of rents, either by distress or suit, after six years from the time when the same became due except upon a written admission that the rent was due and unpaid. (1 Flintoff’s Law of Real Pr. 40.) For these reasons I have no doubt that the defendant was right in supposing that Thompson, the owner of the rent, had a perfect remedy against him, by distress, to recover the arrears from the first of January, 1817 ; and that he is entitled to recover upon his bond and mortgage, so much as the complainant was justly chargeable with, and the interest thereon from the time such rent was paid to Thompson on the 28th of September, 1830.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Paige Ch. 212, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 494, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vechte-v-brownell-nychanct-1840.