Court Opinion

ID: 6899839
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:53:49.503611+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:07.860392
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
This is a suit for an accounting. The complaint states, in effect, that one P. O. Lundin was on June 29, 1894, and September 21, 1895, the owner of certain real property in Portland, which he mortgaged to the Alliance Trust Co., Limited, to secure the sums of $3,000 and $1,000, respectively, the debts maturing July 1, 1899 and 1900; that these mortgages were assigned to one Jennie Y. Wade, who, upon default in the payment of the sums due, secured a decree foreclosing the liens thereof, and executions having been issued thereon, the premises were sold thereunder to the defendant, who, on a confirmation of the sale, September 18, 1902, took possession of the land and collected the rents thereafter accruing, amounting to $528.20; that on August 19, 1903, Lundin and his wife sold and conveyed the premises to plaintiff, who, three days thereafter, redeemed the same from the sale thereof under the decree of foreclosure; and that the defendant, having been requested by plaintiff to pay to him the rents she had collected, refused to comply therewith. A demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it did not state *310facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit having been overruled, and the defendant declining further to plead, a decree was rendered against her for the sum demanded, and she appeals.
1. It is contended by defendant’s counsel that the rents received in the case at bar accrued prior to the conveyance of the -premises to plaintiff, and the right thereto did not pass by the deed executed to him, and that a suit in equity cannot be maintained for the recovery of the sums' secured, for which reasons an error was committed in overruling the demurrer. Rent, in the legal sense, is a compensation paid for the use of demised premises, and is treated as a profit arising out of lands and tenements corporeal: Wood, Land. & Ten. § 448. The rents involved herein accrued before the land was conveyed to plaintiff, and, though the right to recover the sum received on account thereof might have been assigned by Lundin, as a chose in action (West Shore Mills Co. v. Edwards, 24 Or. 475, 33 Pac. 987), such right did not pass to plaintiff under the habendum clause of his deed: Jolly v. Bryan, 86 N. C. 457. There is no averment in the complaint that the right to the rent which accrued prior to the execution of the deed to plaintiff was assigned to him, and, as the compensation for the use of the premises was payable to Lundin, the owner of the reversion when the rent became due, the plaintiff does not show a prima facie right to recover the sum collected by the defendant: 18 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (3 ed.), 280; Page v. Lashley, 15 Ind. 152; Van Driel v. Rosierz, 26 Iowa, 575; Damren v. American L. & P. Co. 91 Me. 334 (40 Atl. 63); Burden v. Thayer, 3 Metc. 76 (37 Am. Dec. 117); Hayden v. McMillan, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 479 (23 S. W. 430). The complaint therefore did not state facts sufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover the rents which accrued prior to the execution of his deed.'
3. If the complaint were sufficient in this respect, however, the remedy would be an action to recover the rents as money had and received to plaintiff’s use, unless, possibly, by reason of the account being long and complicated, a resort to the other forum might be upheld (Harris v. Reynolds, 13 Cal. 514, 73 Am. Dec. 600), which is not alleged herein. As the complaint does not state any facts justifying a recourse to a court’ of equity, and *311fails to aver an assignment of the rents, the decree must be reversed, the. demurrer sustained, and the suit dismissed; and it is so ordered. Beversed.