Sporer v. McDermott

Holcomb, J.,

dissenting.

Tbe majority opinion in this case provides an effectual landlords’ lien law, in tbe absence of statutory authority, and as I view tbe former utterances of this court, runs counter to a long line of decisions beginning with Lanphere v. Lowe, 3 Neb. 131. Of course it can make no difference with tbe tenant whether provisions for a lien in favor of his landlord for rents due are incorporated in bis contract of lease or become a part of it by virtue of a statutory enactment. In either event, all of bis crops, even though produced in tbe future, are pledged for the payment of rent and be can neither use nor dispose of tbe smallest part thereof, lawfully, until tbe demands of bis landlord are satisfied. If all tbe prior 'decisions of this court are to be'thus brushed aside, it seems to me that they should be squarely repudiated, so that there may be no ground for confusion on tbe part of tbe bench and bar, or of tbe .laity.

*540It is said in the opinion formulated by the commissioner, which is adopted by. the majority of the court, that’ an action for specific performance, for the purpose of establishing a lien on property not in esse at the time of the execution of the contract, is held, on good authority, to be maintainable in a court of equity; citing as authority in support thereof 8 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (2d ed.), secs. 1236, 1237. This summary disposition of the question, involves no great amount of labor, and, possibly, is the best that can be made of a very troublesome proposition. But it is to be noted that in almost every decision of this court on the subject, a conflict in the authorities is recognized. As is said in Cole v. Kerr, 19 Neb. 553:

“There is, to say the least of it, great confusion of the authorities on the point being considered.”

In the language of another who has wrestled with the question:

“One might write a volume, if inclined, to review all of the adjudged cases on the subject.” New Lincoln Hotel Co. v. Shears, 57 Neb. 478, 483.

Or, as stated by another: ■

“The question thus presented is one upon which the authorities are by no means harmonious.” Steele v. Ashenfelter, 40 Neb. 770.

My own views of the subject are stated at some length, with numerous citations of authorities, in Brown v. Neilson, 61 Neb. 765. The mere assertion, in the majority opinion, that the authorities sanction the enforcing of an equitable lien on property mortgaged, or agreed to be mortgaged, which at the time is not in existence, in view of the conflict of authority and in the face of the doctrine accepted and adopted by our own prior decisions, is neither satisfactory nor convincing to me.

An attempt is made in the opinion to distinguish between the case at bar and the case of Battle Creek Valley Bank v. First Nat. Bank, 62 Neb. 825, which is too subtle for my comprehension. The two cases are in sharp conflict, and the attempted distinction appears unsound *541both on principle and in logic. On principle, what distinction can there be drawn between an executory contract to give a mortgage on property not in esse and provisions in a mortgage in form, which, by its terms, undertakes to pledge property to be acquired in the future? Both are, so far as such future acquired property is concerned, at least, executory contracts, resting for a right of enforce: ment upon the same legal and equitable principles, and all the authorities I have examined so regard and treat them. In those jurisdictions where such contracts are specifically enforced, both are held to create no legal interest in the property attempted to be incumbered, and that an equitable lien only attaches when the property comes into existence, which Avill be specifically enforced by a court of equity. The form or particular nature of the agreement Avhicli it is intended shall create a lien, say the text-Avriters, is not material, for equity looks at the final intent and purpose rather than at the form, and an equitable lien will folioav where it appears that such Avas the intent of the parties. The intent to give a security being clear, equity will treat the instrument as an executory agreement for such security. In Apperson & Co. v. Moore, 30 Ark. 56, cited in the majority opinion, is collated a number of authorities, all of which recognize- a mortgage of property not in esse, and an agreement to mortgage such property as being controlled by the same equitable principles. If no reasonable distinction can be drawn between a mortgage of property not in existence and an agreement 'to give such a mortgage, Avhich I contend can not, then the majority opinion is in conflict with the very case it seeks to distinguish and approAre. It should be borne in mind that under our reformed system of administering justice the forms betAveen actions at laAv and suits in equity are abolished. Under the blending of the two systems, it becomes immaterial what the form of the action is. Relief is to be administered, whether legal or equitable, according to the facts as disclosed by the pleadings and the evidence. The distinction, therefore, which *542is sought to be made can have no place in our practice. Whatever relief either of the parties is entitled to, should be awarded regardless of the distinctions formerly existing between actions at law and proceedings in equity. Steele v. Ashenfelter, supra. Alter v. Bank of Stockham, 53 Neb. 223.

Again it is stated, in the opinion, that an equitable action to enforce a lien on such property by virtue of an ex-ecutory contract, is itself brought to supply and obtain performance of “the intervening act” which is necessary to convert a mere contract right against the promisor into an actual lien against the thing itself. My conception of the true rule governing the rights of parties under such an agreement is and has been altogether different.- I had supposed that “the intervening act” spoken of by the authorities regarding such executory contracts to make them effective, was the voluntary act of the promisor, the prom: ise being, at most, until such intervening act took place, a mere license. It had not occurred to me that a coercive decree of a court of equity could supply the place of this intervening act, nór am I yet convinced that it rightfully can. Lord Bacon’s maxim from which the rule is deduced, is to the effect that when the grant of a future interest is invalid, yet a declaration precedent may be made which will take effect on the intervention of some new act. The “new act” must, however, in all cases, come from the grantor. In Broom, Legal Maxims, *482, it is said:

“A power contained in an indenture to seize future crops, if unexecuted, would be of no avail against an execution levied, as giving no legal or equitable title to any specific crops, yet, if the power be subsequently executed by the grantee taking possession of the then growing crops, the seizure will be good as against an execution afterwards levied; for the act done by the grantor is sufficient to give effect to the antecedent declaration within the scope and meaning of Lord Bacon’s maxim.”

The authorities also hold that the license contained in a mortgage conveying future acquired property, from *543which the right to take possession of it after it comes into existence arises and which when done satisfies the rule as to the performance of the new intervening act, is revocable at the will of the grantor and can not be executed against his will. Chynoweth v. Tenney, 10 Wis. 341; Jones, Chattel Mortgages (3d ed.), sec. 165. If the license is revocable at the will of the grantor; if the intervening act must be voluntarily performed by him, I can not understand how it may properly be said he may be coerced in doing that which is to be done voluntarily, or that he may be denied the right to, at will, revoke a license by which the same act may be accomplished. It is quite true that if this court should repudiate all that it has heretofore said on the subject, and hold to the doctrine, as is held in some jurisdictions, that the mortgaging of property not in existence, or agreeing to mortgage the same, creates an equitable lien specifically enforceable in a court of equity when the property comes into being, then the opinion is right; but I maintain that in this state, according to all our decisions, such contracts create neither a legal nor equitable lien, until, as the books say, there has been “a new intervening act,” and, consequently, the grantee in such an instrument has no standing either in a court of law or of equity. Brown v. Neilson, supra, and the authorities there cited.

The right to enforce the lien, in the case at bar, on the crops of the grantor which were planted and grown long after the execution of the instrument which is the basis of the action, can be justified only on the ground that the written instrument of lease operated as a reservation of title, or an interest therein in favor of the landlord of the demised premises, which can be defeated only by a payment of the rent due, and this, I understand is the view entertained by my associates, and which led them to adopt the opinion prepared by the commissioner. I readily concede .that a landlord may retain and reserve to himself an interest in or title to all the crops grown on the premises which he has leased, by suitable stipulations in a lease contract with his tenant, He may reserve to himself a third *544or a half of the crop for his share of the rents; and the title thereto would he his absolutely, to the exclusion of any right which might be asserted by the tenant; or he might retain an interest in, and title to, the crops until the rental was paid, by making an agreement in the nature of a conditional sale; but as I construe the instrument which is made the basis of the present action, nothing of this kind was attempted. What was done, was to lease to the tenant the premises for a cash rental, payable at a stipulated time, each year, to be evidenced by a note which was to be secured by a chattel mortgage on all the crops planted and sown on the leased land. This, I construe to be simply an agreement for the lease of the premises at a cash rental, with the further agreement that the tenant, to secure the rental due each year, will mortgage property which at the time was not in existence, either actually or potentially, and, for that reason, the contract to mortgage created neither a legal nor equitable lien on the property agreed to be mortgaged after it came into existence. The case at bar is to be distinguished from Brown v. Neilson, supra; for, in the latter case, there was no attempt to mortgage or to agree to mortgage, in specie, the crops which were raised on the demised premises, but simply a provision that all property, which should be brought on the premises during the existence of the lease, should be held as security for the aihount to be paid as rental. There is nothing in that contract indicating an intention to reserve to the landlord any interest whatever in the crops grown on the demised premises. The true reason and sound doctrine under which the landlord is permitted to hold the crops grown on the leased premises, for the rents due, is stated quite accurately and succinctly in De Vaughn v. Howell, 82 Ga. 336, 14 Am. St. Rep. 162. Say the court:

“Here was a landlord who made a rent contract with his tenant, and the tenant not only agreed to sell the crop, but went further and agreed that the title to all the crops made on the farm should remain in the landlord until the landlord was fully paid for his rent and all advances. *545* * * The reasoning upon which our decisions go is, that the owner of the land being also the owner of the fruits or products of it, in parting with the use of it to another, may make such conditions and reservations in relation to the land itself or the products grown from it as he chooses, instead of parting with the full right. The principle is the same as that upon which conditional sales of personal property are upheld.”

I find nothing in the leasehold agreement, in the case at bar, from which it seems fairly inferable that the landlord, Sporer, reserved any interest in the crops grown on the land he leased to McDermott, or title thereto, and certainly there is an entire absence of any element of a conditional sale of personal property. The. majority opinion appears to me to be in direct and irreconcilable conflict with the case of the New Lincoln Hotel Co. v. Shears, supra. It is to be observed that the lease of the hotel, in the case referred to, contained a provision that it .should operate as a lien on all the personal property of the lessee, which, should be placed in the hotel on the leased premises, to secure payment of rent, whether then acquired or not. The lessees afterwards mortgaged the property, subject to this attempted lien, but with notice to the mortgagees of the provisions contained in the lease. It was there held that the mortgagees were entitled to a superior lien, and that the question of notice in no manner affected their rights. The same rule should, I think, be applied in the present case. I am of the opinion that Sporer, the landlord, by his agreement, obtained neither a legal .nor an equitable lien or interest in the crops raised in the future on the demised premises, nor was there any reservation, interest or title therein in the landlord; and that the judgment creditor who had levied on the property was entitled to it as against the former; and the judgment of the district court should, therefore, be affirmed. Hence, I dissent.