Davis v. Hemenway
Davis v. Hemenway
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
We think the defendant may fairly be regarded as having the same equity in these premises under the contract B as under the contract A. The only objection urged
This is altogether matter of fact, and, unless all the testimony is detailed, and we could thus see that it had no tendency to show a mortgage, we could not revise this finding of the county court on an issue of fact, as we could the finding of the court of chancery, upon such a question, when the matter comes into this court upon appeal.
II. In regard to the extent of this remedy, it is obvious to us that neither the fifteenth section, which expressly limits the remedy to a written lease and a demand in writing, after the determination of the lease, for the surrender of the premises, or the twenty-third or thirtyeth section which only extend to the lessee of any lands ”— “ or the person holding under such lessee ” could have any just
The sections above alluded to' are the only ones relied upon in the argument as sustaining the present proceeding, and the only ones giving such a proceeding, I think, before one justice, which this was.
And we are satisfied it was not the purpose of the statute to give this summary remedy against one in possession of lands, unless all title and right in him, both legal and equitable, had ceased, or indeed unless he were a technical lessee and nothing more, his term having expired.
Whether the original provisions of this act against forcible entry and detainer afford any redress in such case is not now before us. That is a proceeding before one justice and a judge of the county court, wholly unlike the present.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Marshall P. Davis v. Joseph Hemenway
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Where, in an action at law, the county court find that the defendant has the interest of a mortgagor in certain premises, the legal title of which is in the plaintiff, and the bill of exceptions does not detail all the evidence or state all the facts in the case, that finding cannot be revised by the supreme court. The defendant, having the interest of a mortgagor in certain premises, which was evidenced by a written contract between him and the person who had the legal title, assigned his contract and interest in the premises, with a provision that the assignment should be void upon the failure of the assignee to perform certain conditions,* the assignee did fail to perform, and abandoned the possession of the premises, which the defendant retook, without auy reconveyance of them to him; thereupon the mortgagee executed to the defendant another and similar contract, and afterwards conveyed the premises to the plaintiff, who had knowledge of the defendant’s interest: Held that the defendant held the same interest under the second as under the original contract, and that the plaintiff could not set up any possible interest in said assignees to defeat it. If a person had an equitable interest in a piece of land, and a contract for a deed of it upon the payment of a given sum by a certain time, which has expired; an acceptance of the interest accruing upon that sum after that time, will be an acknowledgment of his equity as still subsisting and a renewal of the contract for a deed. If a mortgagor or purchaser agree to pay a certain sum as rent, that will not constitute him a lessee, if that sum is really only the interest on the debt or purchase money. Neither section, 15, 23 or 30 of Chap. 4á of the Compiled Statutes respecting forcible entry and detainer has any application to the case of an equitable mortgagor or purchaser in possession. They apply only to technical lessees whose terms have expired, and whose • entire right, both legal and equitable, has ceased.