Case ID: hill_2/html/0274-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Bronson, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Willard vs. Tillman.
    Where a lessor has assigned the reversion, the assignee may maintain an action in his own name against the lessee, upon all such covenants of the latter, whether in law or in deed, as run with the land.
    Rent may be assigned by a lessor without parting with the reversion ; and although in such case there exists no privity of estate or contract between the assignee and lessee, yet it has been settled in this state that the former may sue in his own name for rent accruing after the assignment.
    But where the plaintiff, as assignee of K., sued the defendant on a covenant alleged to have been made by him with K. on a certain day, by which, aftef reciting that in consideration of a lease for years executed on the same day by K. of three rooms, &c. the defendant covenanted to pay K. the sum of $90 per year, so long as the defendant should be permitted to occupy the premises ; and the declaration, after setting out the covenant, averred the assignment of it to the plaintiff, and that by virtue thereof he became the assignee of the rents therein secured, &c.: Held, that the declaration was defective for not showing directly, the execution of a lease, that the' defendant was lessee, and that rent was reserved which had been assigned to the plaintiff; for without such allegations it did not appear, except inferentially, whether the $90 was agreed to be paid as rent, or on a collateral covenant which did not run with the land.
    As a general rule, a deed should be pleaded according to its legal effect and operation, and not according to its terms merely.
    Covenant, by the plaintiff, as assignee of Kendrick. For that whereas heretofore, to wit, on the 22d November, 1833, at, &c. by a certain covenant then and there made by the defendant under his hand and seal, to and with Stewart B. Kendrick, (making profert of the deed,) by which said covenant the defendant, after reciting that in consideration of a lease on the same day aforesaid executed by Kendrick of three rooms, &c. (specifying the prem ises,) from the 15th of December then. next to the 1st day of May, 1837, covenanted to pay said Kendrick the sum of $90 per year, payable quarterly, so long as the defendant should be permitted to occupy the premises described in the lease in the manner therein set forth. The plaintiff avers, that afterwards, to wit, on the 16th April, 1834, Kendrick, by an instrument of assignment in writing, duly executed under his hand and seal, for' value received, assigned and transferred to Augustus Pettibone all Kendrick’s right and interest in and to the aforesaid covenant, and authorized Pettibone to use all lawful means in his name or otherwise for the collection of the rent agreed to be paid by the defendant in and by said covenant, (making proferí of the- assignment.) The plaintiff further avers, that Pettibone, on the 28th April, 1834, by an instrument, «fee. transferred and assigned to the plaintiff all his right and interest acquired in the aforesaid covenant by the assignment from Kendrick, (making proferí of the last assignment.) By virtue of which said two assignments, the plaintiff became assignee of the covenant aforesaid, and of the rents therein secured and payable thereby. The plaintiff further avers, that the defendant was permitted to occupy, &c. for the whole term mentioned and set forth in the covenant. The plaintiff then avers, that afterwards, on the 15lh September, 1835, the sum of $22,50 of rent, it being the rent for the preceding quarter, commencing, &c. and ending on that day, accrued to the plaintiff as assignee as aforesaid, upon and by virtue of the said covenant. Averments like the last, are then made as to each quarter, down to the end of the term, May 1st, 1837. Breach, that the defendant has not paid the said several sums of money so as aforesaid accrued to the plaintiff as assignee as aforesaid, or any part thereof, according to the tenor and effect of the said covenant. The defendant craved oyer, and set out the covenant of the defendant with Kendrick and the two assignments, which corresponded substantially with the statements of those instruments respectively in the declaration ; and then pleaded four pleas. The plaintiff demurred to the third and fourth pleas; and the defendant joined in demurrer. The nature of the pleas demurred to are not stated, as the defendant’s counsel upon the argument claimed to go back and attack the declaration, insisting, that the latter being defective in substance, it was immaterial whether the .pleas were defective or not.
    
      
      J. Porter, for the plaintiff.
    
      D. Cady N. Hill,jr., for the defendants.
   By the Court,

Bronson, J.

Between lessor and lessee there is privity, both of estate and contract. The same relation also exists between the lessee and the assignee of the reversion; and the latter may sue in his own name upon all such covenants of the lessee, whether in law or in deed, as run with the land. As to implied covenants, his right to sue stands on the privity of estate, and was complete at the common law. He might bring debt for the rent reserved by the lease, the rent being incident to the reversion. But as to express covenants and conditions contained in the lease, the right of the assignee to sue in his own name was given by the statute, 32 H. 8, c. 34, which we have reenacted, (2 R. S. 747, § 23, 24,) and which transfers the privity of contract, so that the assignee stands in the same plight in relation to the tenant that the lessor did before he parted with the reversion.

Although the rent may be granted without the reversion— not being inseparably incident to it—yet I see no principle upon which the assignee of the rent, without the reversion, can sue in his own name. There is no privity of estate, and, so far as I can see, no privity of contract between him and the lessee. Still, it seems to be settled that such assignee may sue in his own name for rent accruing after the assignment. (Demarest v. Willard, 8 Cowen, 206. Allen v. Bryan,. 5 Barn, Cress. 512.) The last case was decided, without as signing any other reason, on the authority of Roberts v. Cox, (1 Lev. 22.) That case is also mentioned as having decided the point, in 3 Salk. 118, and Vin. Abr., Estate, (B. b. 18,) pl. 10.) But on looking at the report in Levinz, it will be found that nothing wás decided—the judges being equally divided in opinion. This also appears by the report of the same case in Sir T. Raym. 11, and 1 Keb. 1, where it is given by the name of Robins v. Warwick. But the point was decided, or rather assumed, in Ards v. Watkin, (Cro. Eliz. 637 tmd 651.) The authorities upon which the judges relied prove nothing whatever on the point now in question ; nor have I been able to discover any thing in their reasoning going to take the case out of that general rule of the common law which declares that choses in action are not assignable. But the right of the assignee of the rent to sue in his own name was recognized by this court in Dernarest v. Willard, and we ought not now to depart from that doctrine.

But there are other difficulties in the plaintiff’s case. It is possible, perhaps, to infer from the declaration that there was a lease, that the defendant was the "lessee, that rent was reserved, that the rent has been assigned to the plaintiff and that he is now suing to recover it; and yet not one of those facts is directly alleged. They can only be made out, if it can be-done at all, by argument and inference. There may be an intrinsic difficulty in making out a case upon which the plaintiff can recover in his own name, owing to the manner in which the business was transacted; but that will not change the rules of law. The plaintiff must show all the facts to which I have alluded, or else he must seek a remedy in the name of Kendrick, with" whom the covenant was made. The plaintiff is here suing upon a covenant made with Kendrick to pay him ninety dollars per year so long as the defendant was permitted to occupy certain premises. The ninety dollars may be for rent, or this may be a collateral covenant which neither runs with the land nor is assignable upon any other ground. As a general rule it is not enough to plead a deed according to its terms, and then ask the court to draw inferences and give effect to the instrument in a particular form. It must be pleaded according to its legal effect and operation; and if the language be such that it may operate in several ways, the pleader must set it forth in that manner which will answer the particular purpose for which it is produced. Thus, the words give, grant, fyc. in a deed, may operate as a release; and where it is necessary for the pleader to show a release he must plead the deed as such, instead of setting it forth in terms. So, if tenant for life grant his estate to him in reversion, this is, in legal effect, a surrender; and it must be pleaded as such, and not as a grant. Other examples might be given but they cannot be necessary. The cases in support of this doctrine are collected in 1 Saund. 225, c. note (9.); Chester v. Willan, (2 Saund. 96, and p. 97, b. note (2).) Stephen on Plead. 391, 2; 2 Chit. Prec. 468, note (f).) In order to recover in this action the plaintiff must aver in direct terms, and with all proper circumstances of detail, that Kendrick demised certain premises to the defendant, reserving a certain annual rent, which the defendant covenanted to pay: that Kendrick afterwards assigned the rent to Pettibone, and Pettibone assigned to the plaintiff. In Allen v. Bryan, (5 Barn, & Cress. 512,) after stating the demise by Fell, the rent, and the defendant’s covenant to pay, it was averred in the declaration that Fell assigned to the plaintiff the rent reserved by the lease, the counterpart of the lease, and the benefit of the covenants for the payment of the rent for the remainder of the term. It was, perhaps, unnecessary to go beyond the averment that the rent was assigned; but that question does not now arise.

As the declaration is defective, it is of course unnecessary to examine the pleas.

Judgment for defendant.