Perkins v. Potts
Perkins v. Potts
Opinion of the Court
This cause was appealed to this court from an adjudication in the district court of Buffalo county of the
It appears that the appellant was, on November 1, 1887, the owner of a tract of land in Buffalo county, this state, and on said date, by written contract with one Kilgore, agreed to sell to Kilgore the tract of land. The land was to be paid for at a date fixed in the contract of sale at ten years subsequent to the date of the contract, and it was further provided that there should be annual payments of interest on the principal sum, the consideration for the sale, from the inception of the agreement to its fixed termination. It was further of the contract that the vendee should pay the taxes which might be assessed against the land. The payments provided for were to be made according to the terms of the contract; if not, a forfeiture of the vendee’s rights thereunder was to ensue. There were assignments of the contract by the vendee and assignees until by assignment the appellee claimed to be entitled to the benefit of its proAdsions. January 30, 1896, one Knox was in actual possession of the land as lessee of the appellee, and on said day an agent of appellant went to the land and induced Knox to accept a lease thereof from the appéllant. Knox remained on the land and duiing the farming season of 1896 raised a crop of grains thereon. After the maturity of at least some of the crops, the appellee took into'his possession and removed from the land 120 bushels of oats which had been grown on the land during that-season. To recover these the appellant commenced an action of replevin, and also this action in the distrid court of Buffalo county, stating in the petition in this t!k*t he was the owner in fee of the land and in possession thereof, also the owner of the crops grown thereon duv
This court in the decision formerly rendered held:
“1. One Avho takes possession of real estate as the tenant of another cannot hold said real estate adversely to his lessor without first having actually or constructively surrendered the premises to him.
“2. 'Where a tenant in possession without his landlord’s consent attorns to a third party, — the latter not having acquired the interest of the landlord in the real estate either by grant or operation of law, — the'possessory rights of the landlord are not thereby affected, as such an attornment is void.
“3. The vendee of an executory contract for the sale of real estate by virtue of such contract entered into possession, made certain improvements upon the premises, and partly performed his contract of purchase. Afterwards the vendee, while in default in the performance of his part of the contract of purchase, leased the premises to a tenant for one year, and put him in possession. The vendor by reason of the default of the vendee, and in pursuance of the provisions of .the contract of sale, declared the same forfeited, and demanded possession of the premises from the vendee. The possession was not surrendered, and thereupon the vendor went upon the premises, and induced the tenant, Avithout the vendee’s knowledge or consent, to accept a lease from*447 him (the vendor) for said premises. The vendee forcibly entered and removed part of the crops grown by his tenant, and threatened to enter and remove the remainder, and the vendor applied to the district court for a perpetual injunction to restrain the vendee’s entrance upon the premises. Held, that the application was properly denied.” .
We have carefully re-examined the questions upon the determination of which the appellant’s right to institute and successfully maintain this action depends, and are strengthened in the views we before entertained and which were embodied in the opinion heretofore rendered. That the appellant induced Knox, the tenant of appellee in the manner disclosed by the facts herein, to receive a lease of the land he occupied from the appellant, to attorn to him, did not give appellant any greater possession of the premises than he possessed before such act, and did not dispossess the appellee. The possession of the lessee, Knox, remained the possession of his landlord to whom he first attorned, of whom he had received the possession which he had never abandoned or surrendered. Change of possession of lands cannot be so readily and easily effected. Where a tenant disclaims holding under his landlord and attorns to a stranger the attornment is void and does not operate a dispossession of the landlord. (Blue v. Sayre, 2 Dana [Ky.] 213; Rogers v. Boynton, 57 Ala. 501; Springs v. Schenck, 6 S. E. Rep. [N. Car.] 405; Taylor, Landlord & Tenant [7th eel.] sec. 705.) “A tenant cannot repudiate the title of the landlord under whom he originally entered, and claim to hold the premises under another, until he has first surrendered possession to his original landlord. It is not enough that he has abandoned the premises for a time, and after-wards entered under the new title, unless he has given notice of such abandonment to the original landlord.” (Juneman v. Franklin, 3 S. W. Rep. [Tex.] 562.) As supporting the first portion of the doctrine announced, there is cited: Rector v. Gibbon, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 606; Killoren v.
The counsel for appellant in the brief filed in support of the motion for a rehearing requested that certain other questions be at this time decided, though the court might conclude to adhere to the opinion formerly rendered as to the points therein considered. This we would be pleased to do, but their discussion and determination here would scarcely be proper or pertinent since they are not directly involved, and in a contest between the parties in another form of action they might be involved. The decree of the district court is
Reaffirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charles E. Perkins, Trustee v. Edward Potts
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published