Shultz v. Spreain
Shultz v. Spreain
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
§916. Partition; lease pendente lite. Partition proceedings affect all contracts for lease made pendente lite. Lessees take subject to the rights of the parties to the suit. [Lee v. Salinas, 15 Tex. 497.]
§ 917. Bent; to whom owing. Rent is a yearly profit in money, etc., issuing out of, and for the use of lands [3 Kent, 460], and is owing to the owner of the reversion [3 Kent, 463], usually termed the landlord. This rule obtains as well when a part of the leased lands are sold pending the term, as where the whole is disposed of. [3 Kent, 469.] The sale of a part of the leased premises severs as to that sold the relation of landlord and tenant, as between the original lessor and the tenant. An apportionment follows as a result of the sale without further stipulation. As to that sold, the tenant owes rents to the new landlord for that owned by him. This rule is an exception to the one that contracts are not generally divisible. [3 Kent, 469, 470; Greenleaf’s Cruise, Title XVIII, chap. 3, sec. 32; Bank of Penn. v. Wise, 3 Watts, 398.] Rents not due at the sale go to the owner of the reversion. A parol contract otherwise' has been held inadmissible to control this legal effect of the sale of land. [G-reonleaf’s Cruise, id.]
§ 918. Partition sale; what purchaser takes; rents. In a sale for partition, made in a partition proceeding, the purchaser takes all the interests of all the cotenants in the land, the subject of such proceedings, and is entitled to the full ownership in the laud, and to all future payments of rents thereon, as against all the parties to the partition suit. [Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, § 513.]
§ 919. Payment of rent to wrong party. Appellant rented land of one K. pending a suit for partition of the
Reversed and rendered.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.