Court Opinion

ID: 8000538
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:48:53.790856+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:40.700508
License: Public Domain

RichardsoN, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The words relied upon in this case as creating a covenant for quiet enjoyment are these: “ The said Wright hereby leases unto said Difley,” &c. It is almost an axiom in the law that the words “ demisi,” “ concessi,” or demise and grant, in a lease for years contain an implied covenant for quiet enjoyment and that the lessor had power to demise ; but it is insisted that no other words have that technical operation. In many of the early cases, which discuss the force of particular words on this subject, the leases were in Latin, and, as the words “ demisi” or “ concessi” were always employed, it was only necessary to decide on the effect of these words; and as in England leases are drawn by professional conveyancers, who use established forms or follow stereotyped phrases that contain the words “ grant” and “ demise,” their courts have *206not been called on to decide whether other equivalent words would not have the same force and imply the sgme covenants. Whilst therefore the adjudged cases assume or decide that the use of the word “ demise” of itself implies a covenant, it can not be inferred that no other translation of “ demisi” has the same operation. The case of Levering v. Levering, 13 N. H. 517, is the only case we have seen, which denies that such an effect can be implied from the words'“ let qnd lease ,” and the reasoning of the court is founded solely on' the absence of these words in the older cases. But Rawle, in his learned treatise on covenants for title, properly observes that the only difference would seem to be that they used the Latin word “ demisi,” of which he thinks “ lease” is a fair translation; and the law now seems to be that the implied covenants arise, not from particular or fixed terms, but from the words of leasing, or, as Furlong expresses it, “ from the iase of words of demise in a lease.” (Furlong on Land. & Ten. 456 ; Maule v. Ashmead, 20 Pa. 482; Young v. Hargrave’s Adm’r, 7 Ohio, (Pt. 2) 63; Black v. Gilmore, 9 Leigh, 448.) The lessor.must have intended that the lease should be beneficial to the lessee, and the latter had the right to require of his landlord that the quiet enjoyment of it should be secured to him against eviction or disturbance by his act or the act of those who claim under or paramount to him. (Smith, Land. & Ten. 262, 268.) We think, then, that the lease in this case contained a covenant for quiet enjoyment implied by law, which ran with the land, and for the breach of which an action accrued to the assignee of the term.
The next question is whether the administrator of Wright is liable upon the implied covenant. It is said that as the lessor was only a tenant for life, the covenant was limited to the estate which he could lawfully grant, and that it ceased at his death because there was no longer an estate to support it. The two cases of Swan v. Scarles, Dyer, 257, and Adams v. Gibney, 6 Bing. 656, decide that if a person having only an estate for life makes alease for years, which contains the covenants implied from the use of certain words, and, *207after Ms death, but before the expiration of the term, the lessee is evicted by the remainder man, an action will not lie against the personal representative of the lessor, because “ the covenant in law ends and determines with the estate and interest of the lessor.” Conceding, however, to these cases the full weight of authority claimed for them, although they have been doubted, they do not govern or apply to the case under consideration, because it is clearly distinguishable from them. The principle on which they are founded seems to be that it will only be supposed that a party covenanted for what he could lawfully grant, and that the thing covenanted is within his power, or, as remarked in Bragg v. Wiseman, Brownl. 23, “ that a covenant in law shall not be extended to make one do more than he can, which was to warrant it as long as he lived and no longer.” But by the deed which vested in Wright an estate for life with the power of appointing by last will, the disposition of the property after his death was expressly conferred, so that he had the right and full power to make good the lease during the whole term, and to protect his lessee against any intrusion by the remainder man as effectually as if he had possessed an absolute estate in fee simple. The act necessary to secure the tenant in the full enjoyment of the leasehold for the full term of ten years was within his power, and as it was by his default that the lessee was injured, indemnity ought to be made by his personal representative. It is said by Judge Williams, in his notes to . the case of Holder v. Taylor, Hobart, 47, that if in such case the lease had been made by a tenant in tail, his executor would be liable; upon the principle, we suppose, that the tenant in tail can effectually dock the entail by a common recovery, and in this respect the analogy is perfect.
It may often happen that the application of the rule in Swan v. Searles will work no injury; for as the lessor is released from his covenants, the lessee will be discharged from the further payment of rent; but in this case the lessee was required not only to pay rent and all taxes and to keep the building insured, but to make lasting and valuable improve*208ments, which were to remain on the land to enhance the value of the estate, and under such circumstances it would be a fraud ón him to terminate the lease without compensation, and to sacrifice the improvements he had made. The principles involved in this case are treated in the text and elaborate notes of Rawle on Covenants (p. 472, 480 ; and we have thought it only necessary to state our conclusions, without reviewing the authorities which have been industriously collected and ably discussed by the counsel representing the parties in the cause.
In our opinion the demurrer was improperly sustained, and the judgment therefore will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Judge Napton concurs.