Judges: Woodruff
Filed Date: 3/15/1868
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
I have endeavored carefully to inquire, aided by the ingénious argument of the counsel for the appellant, and my best examination fails entirely to discover that this case differs in any particular whatever from those in which it has heretofore been repeatedly held in this court;, that, under and by virtue of the conveyances in fee from Stephen Van Rensselaer to various parties, of which the grant or conveyance to Robert Smith now in question was
Omitting the employment of technical terms, and without reiterating the legal rules and principles by which it has been, with great ability and various .learning, demonstrated, the practical result is as above expressed.
The argument and brief submitted on this appeal is a re-argument of these propositions, upon the apparent assumption that the legal effect of the original grant and the rights and liabilities of the parties claiming under the same were open questions. •
It seems to me that the simple result of the cases which I have above stated is definitely and conclusively established.
In the case referred to, and relied upon by the counsel for the appellant, decided in 1852, De Peyster v. Michael (6 N. Y. 468), the validity of a condition for the payment of rent reserved on a grant in fee, and the right of the assignee of the grantor to enter for condition broken by the assignee of the grantee, is not only not denied, but distinctly recognized.
In Van Rensselaer v. Hays (19 N. Y. 68), the question arose under a conveyance in fee by Stephen Van Rensselaer in the same form as now in question, and the parties were the devisee of the grantor, plaintiff, and the assignee of the grantor, in possession, defendant, and it was held that the plaintiff could maintain an action in his own name for the rent covenanted to be paid.
In Van Rensselaer v. Hall (19 N. Y. 100), it was held that the present plaintiff was (under circumstances in all respects material to this point identical with those now before the court) entitled to re-enter, upon breach of the condition for the payment of the rent, maintain an action for and recover the possession of the lands.
And in Van Rensselaer v. Slingerland (21 N. Y. 580), the case of Van Rensselaer v. Ball was further examined, and the effect of the act of 1860 considered, and again the right of the present plaintiff to maintain an action against the assignee of the grantee, and recover the possession of the lands for the breach of the condition for the payment of the rent, is affirmed.
And again, in Van Rensselaer v. Dennison (35 N. Y. 393), in reference to one of these same conveyances by the plaintiff’s devisor, it is declared that although a grant in fee, the reservation of a perpetual yearly rent as a condition of the estate is valid, and that such condition runs with the land and binds the heirs and assigns of the original grantee, and that the present plaintiff, as devisee of the original grantor, on breach of the condition, is entitled to recover the land.
The discussion in each of these cases, refers to numerous earlier cases, in which the principles decided lead to the like result, and we are referred to others in the Supreme Court, and still others, including the more recent case of Vanderzee v. Vanderzee, in this court to the like effect. (36 N. Y. 231.)
When to this it is added that in no case has the right of the plaintiff) in a case like the present, to recover possession for a breach of such condition, been denied, we have no alternative but to say it is settled.
It would be wholly unprofitable, if it were possible, to go again, by way of either dissertation or argument, over the discussion, fully, ably, and with great research, exhibited in the cases referred to. It would in my judgment be neither useful nor proper to treat the question as an open one.
There is therefore but a single question in this case which calls for any further .consideration. In Van Rensselaer v. Dennison, the contract with James Kidd, which was pro
In the case now before us, the agreement with Kidd is shown to embrace the premises, and it is therefore not immaterial to consider what effect the existence of such an executory agreement, outstanding at the time this action was brought, should have upon the right to maintain the action.
And this question could never arise except for that provision of our Code of Procedure, which requires all actions to be brought in the name of the real party in interest; for there is no pretence that by force of that agreement, any legal title to the premises or to the rents, or to the re-entry, had passed to James Kidd. Upon making the payments provided for in the agreement, he was to receive grants, assignments and conveyances thereof. But it was neither proved nor found, that, at the time this action was commenced, he had paid any thing except the sum acknowledged to have been paid at the execution of the contract. And if he did not make the subsequent payments he was not to receive title, but the plaintiff was thereby released from the contract.
It cannot, upon this state of facts, be seriously argued, that the plaintiff had not an interest in the subject-matter of the action, or that the right of recovery, if it existed, did not continue in him, and if so, the action was properly brought in his name. Non constat at that time that Kidd would ever become entitled to the rents or to the possession of the premises on default of their payment.
The utmost that could be plainly suggested is, that Kidd, by virtue of the contract, had acquired such an interest, that he might have been a proper party, jointly with the plaintiff.
It is proper to notice the somewhat extraordinary and' apparently inconsistent statement in the case, that the referee found that “the defendant was, at the commencement of the action, and had been for years prior thereto, the owner in fee of said premises, and held the same immediately of the State, and that the contract upon which the action is brought was one of the assignments by means whereof the title came to the defendant, and that the plaintiff had, when the action was commenced, no estate or interest in the premises.”
All the proofs which were given on the trial are certified to be set forth in the case. Those proofs, and the other findings of the referee, show conclusively that the defendant’s title, and his sole title, is under and by virtue of the conveyance from Stephen Van Rensselaer, the plaintiff’s devisor reserving rents, as above mentioned. And the same proofs and findings show, that the plaintiff has succeeded to all the rights reserved to the grantor by force of that conveyance.
To say that the defendant held immediately of the State, could, consistently with his finding of facts not disputed, only import that, although he held of Van Rensselaer and under and by virtue of his conveyance, his tenure was nevertheless
And to say, in the face of the express finding of the facts and in the face of the repeated decisions of the courts, some of which are above referred to, that the plaintiff, who was entitled to the rents arising from the land, who could maintain an action to recover them, who could enter upon the land in case of non-payment, who could maintan an action and recover the possession of the lands for the breach of the condition of such payment — a condition of the defendant’s title inui’ing to the plaintiff’s benefit by which such title might be divested and become vested in the plaintiff,— to say that after the condition was broken the plaintiff had no estate or interest in the premises, was to give a legal construction to the rights of the parties wholly unwarranted, and itself at variance with the conclusion of the referee that the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
The conclusion of the referee upon the whole case was in conformity with the law, as settled by the previous cases, and it is clear that these apparent errors in the defendant’s favor, in some of the language of the case, furnish no ground for disturbing the judgment.
The judgment must be affirmed.
And as the other six cases were submitted to abide the decision of the first, the like affirmancs anv\ follow in each.
All the judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.