Catlin v. Barnard
Catlin v. Barnard
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The sole question submitted in this case is, whether a joint action can be supported for the non-payment of both or either of the rents mentioned in the covenant of the defendants, or, whether the plaintiffs should not have separately sued for the sums to be paid to them respectively ? The property out of which the rent was to issue was leased to the defendants in part by the plaintiffs jointly, and in part by Guy Catlin alone. Whether the respective interests of the plaintiffs in the estate demised, were in the same relative proportion to each other as their respective portions of the rent reserved, does not appear; but the fair inference from the transaction is probably in favour of that supposition. And it is also to be inferred, that the several sums were to be received by the plaintiffs in their own individual rights, respectively. If, therefore, there is nothing in the covenant itself which makes it joint, the present action ought not to prevail. The indenture consisted of three parts: Lynde Catlin making the first part, Guy Catlin the second, and the defendants the third. It contains a joint demise from the
As already remarked, separate acts were to be performed to each of the plaintiffs, in which they were to be separately interested ; and the question is, whether the legal interest in the covenant, while unperformed, follows the ultimate heneficial interest in the fruits of it ? It is difficult to discover the object of the parties, in adding this covenant, if it was not to vary their respective rights and liabilities, which were otherwise sufficiently declared in the preceding parts of the indenture. Enough had been already said to entitle each of the plaintiffs to his respective portion of the rent; and though a more explicit engagement were supposed necessary; yet, if the purpose remained the same, why was not the express covenant for payment made to each of the plaintiffs separately ? or why was not this covenant qualified by the introduction of disjunctive expressions ; as the word respectively, or the more common words, and each of them ? Every such expression appears to be studiously avoided, and the covenant is couched in the most explicit terms of a joint undertaking to both the plaintiffs. And we are of opinion, that no views to the consideration of the covenant, to the separate interests of the plaintiffs in tbe rent when received, will justify us to control the clear language of this contract. With suitable disjunctive expressions,' this covenant would certainly have been construed to be several with each of the plaintiffs, by reason of their several interests; but without such expressions, it must be considered joint, for such are its terms. And this opinion is not without precedent. In Slings-by’s case 5, Co. 19, it is said, “when it appears by the declaration, that every of the covenantees hath, or is to have, a several interest or estate, then, when the covenant is made with the covenantees, and with each of them, these words, with each of
Judgment, that the declaration is sufficient.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lynde Catlin and Guy Catlin v. Lansing Barnard and Charles Burnham
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published