Iowa Railroad Land Co. v. Estate of Boyle

Evans, J.

On March. 1, 1909, the plaintiff leased to P. J. Boyle for the term of one year -one hundred and three and fifty-five hundreths acres of farm land -at a rental of $362.42 (being $3.50 per acre), payable January 1, 1910. On December 10, 1909, the plaintiff entered into an executory contract of sale to the intervener of seventy-three and twenty-five hundreths acres of the leased farm. This contract provided “that, in consideration of the stipulations herein contained and the' payments to be made as hereinafter specified, the first party hereby agrees to sell unto the second party” (description of land). The second party agreed to pay $10,000 in four equal annual payments of $2,500 each, with interest from the date of the contract; the first installment being paid on the date of the contract. The second party also agreed to pay all- “taxes and assessments as may be hereinafter lawfully imposed on said premise's,” and also “that all improvements placed upon saiid premises shall remain thereon and shall not be removed until final payment.” It provided also as follows: “In case the said second party, his legal representatives or his assigns, shall pay the 'several'sums of mioney aforesaid punctually, and at the several times above specified, and shall strictly and literally perform all and singular his agreements and stipulations aforesaid, after their true tenor and intent, then the first party will make unto the said second party, his heirs or assigns (upon request a't the office of the first party 'at Cedar Bapids, Iowa, and the surrender of this contract) a deed, conveying said premises in fee simple, with the ordinary covenants of warranty, excepting, however, from the -operation and subject matter of said covenants, the before mentioned taxes and assessments, and all liens and' incumbrances created or imposed *251by said second party or his assigns.” Other provisions of the contract made time of the essence thereof, and provided for forfeiture in case of default on the part of the purchaser. The intervener claims that, by virtue of this contract, he became the owner of the land on the date thereof, and as such, was entitled to collect the rent therefor subsequently falling due. This claim is resisted by the plaintiff. It is urged in its behalf that the intervener is' not a pur-' chaser in such a sense as entitled him to demand the rent for the year 1909, and that the rent was in fact earned, though not due prior to such contract. The intervener set up the contract and the lease and based his claim solely upon the writing. The plaintiff demurred to the petition of intervention, challenging its sufficiency to state a cause of action on various grounds. The trial court sustained the demurrer.

There is no controversy over the general rule that a conveyance of land carries with it to the grantee as an incident of the title and possession ’the right to receive unaecrued rent under an existing lease. The point in dispute here is whether the particular contract is such as to entitle the intervener to the advantage of this rule. There are many of our own cases where the rule has been applied, but they are all oases of complete conveyance by deed. Hatfield v. Lockwood, 18 Iowa, 297, 298; Abercrombie v. Redpath, 1 Iowa, 115; Ferguson v. Epperly, 127 Iowa, 216, 217; Van Wagner v. Van Nostrand, 19 Iowa, 428; Townsend v. Isenberger, 45 Iowa, 672; Van Driel v. Rosierz, 26 Iowa, 577; Winn v. Murehead, 52 Iowa, 65. The rule was invoked by plaintiff in Hall v. Hall, 150 Iowa, 277. In that case the plaintiff had obtained a referee’s deed in the fall of 1908, and he claimed the unaecrued rent for that year. He was defeated upon a showing by oral evidence that possession had been reserved until March 1st following. The oral testimony had been received without objection, and its oompentency was not passed upon. In Winn v. *252Murehead, 52 Iowa, 65, it was held that oral evidence was not competent to show reservation of possession as against a warranty deed. In the Hall case, supra, it .was said: “Bent belongs to the person entitled to the possession of the premises when it becomes due.” In the case before us the contract is Wholly executory on the part of the plaintiff. It specifically provides for a conveyance in 'the future. It is silent upon the subject of possession.

The argument of appellant is that such a contract car-mes the equitable estate of ownership to the purchaser, and that the legal title is held by the vendor only as security. As to this general proposition, there can be no controversy, but the question still remains whether tfhe equitable owner is necessarily entitled to the possession in 'the absence of provision in his contract to that effect.

If possession were in fact given to the vendee after execution of the contract, it would doubtless be deemed referable to the contract. On the other hand, there is nothing in the contract to forbid the appellee to maintain its possession until performance. The appellee concedes in argument that the appellant was to have possession on March 1st following the contract, and that he has hiad possession ever since. This is only another way of claiming that this was the understanding and agreement between the parties. If such fact appeared in this record in a competent way, it would be determinative of the case as against the intervener. But the intervener has chosen to rest his claim solely upon the written contract and upon the proposition that the equitable ownership acquired by the contract necessarily carried the possession. In view of tire fact already indicated that the contract in its terms was wholly executory as to the appellee and bound it to no performance even in part, until full performance was made by appellant, and in view of the further fact that the contract contained no terms of “present assurance,” it devolved upon the intervener to plead and to prove either by way *253of reformation of the eon tract, or by way of oral agreement, if competent (a question we do not decide), that he was to have possession- of the premises, and the date thereof. Unless he could prove that he was entitled to possession before the rent accrued, he was in no position to claim imaeorued rents. The case of Nungesser v. Hart, 122 Iowa, 647, is quite in point, but by no means controlling -of this case. In that dase a contract similar to the one before us was entered into in the fall of 'the year and partial payment made thereon. It also provided that a deed and possi-on would be given on March 1st following. It was held that the purchaser did not become the “owner” of the land until March 1st. The fact that the contract contained no wiords of “present assurance,” -and that it expressly provided for a future conveyance, was deemed controlling on that question. In Toerring v. Lamp, 77 Iowa, 490, the rule as to nnaecrue-d rents is stated in these words: “Rents una-ccrued pass with an unconditional conveyance.” Putting this statement of the rule alongside of that in Hall v. Hall, supra, they both impeach t)he sufficiency of the contract before us.

It is our conclusion, therefore, that the trial court properly sustained the demurrer, 'and its order is accordingly affirmed