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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> James Miller - Kea - Abercrombie v. Lord and Lady Gwydir - Adam. D. Dundas [1826] UKHL 2_WS_52 (8 March 1826) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1826/2_WS_52.html Cite as: [1826] UKHL 2_WS_52 |
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Page: 52↓
(1826) 2 W&S 52
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND, 1826.
2 d Division.
No. 7.
Subject_Landlord and Tenant — Penal Rent. —
A tenant having entered to possession of a farm, on a missive of lease for nineteen years, prescribing a certain course of cultivation for the first sixteen years, and another during the last three years, under the penalty of paying an additional rent for these last years, and not having complied with the rules so prescribed,—Held (affirming the judgment of the Court of Session) that he was liable in the penal rent, and that it was not a valid defence, that he had adopted the same course as the other tenants on the estate, and as was prescribed by their leases, or that he had done so with the knowledge of the landlord.
Miller received from the factor on the Perth estate an offer of lease of the farm of Leystone for nineteen years. The offer contained this, among other clauses:—
“With regard to the general mode of managing the farm, you shall always have one third part of the arable land under green crops and summer fallow, (the fallow uniformly getting four ploughings, and not
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less than twenty bolls of lime-shells laid on the acre,) and shall not plough the same field more than twice for a white crop; and during the last three years of the lease you shall only have the one-third part of the arable land in crop and tillage, the other two-thirds shall be in grass, and which shall be cut only one year for hay, and pasture the other two. And should you fail to leave these two-thirds of the arable land, all or any of these three last years laid down in good heart, and properly sown with ryegrass and clover, or contravene any of the other regulations before laid down, then, for every acre managed otherwise than as above directed, you shall pay an additional rent of £4 Sterling per acre, for each year so mismanaged.”
The lease was to commence at Martinmas 1801, and it was stipulated that, when it suited the conveniency of the proprietor, a regular tack should be extended, but that Miller's acceptance should in the meanwhile bind him.
Miller accepted this offer, and entered into possession. No regular tack, however, was extended, and he alleged that no copy of the missive was delivered to him. He did not pursue the rotation prescribed, but adopted that followed by and prescribed to the other tenants on the estate; and no objection was made, although the farm was annually visited, and he received several agricultural premiums from his landlord. The rent of the first of the last three years was discharged, and the farm was not in bad order at the conclusion of the tack. During the last year of the lease, an action was raised against him by his landlord, before the Sheriff of Perthshire, founded on the missive, and averring that he was bound, “during the last three years of the lease, to have only the one-third part of the arable land in crop and tillage, and the other two-thirds in grass, which shall be cut only one year for hay, and pasture the other two, and also to have always one-third part of the land under green crops and summer fallow, the fallow uniformly getting not less than four ploughings, and twenty bolls of lime-shells laid on the acre;” and alleging that the stipulations had been contravened, and therefore concluding for the additional rent and damages, for miscropping, in so far as the tenant “had not for the present, or the two last years, the stipulated quantity of grass or fallow, nor has the fallow received the stipulated quantity of lime.”
The Sheriff, after various proceedings, and finding that the rent for 1817 having been discharged by the pursuers, no claim for that year could be maintained, found, that “the obligation on the defender in the missive of lease to have always one-third
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Miller having advocated, and the Lord Ordinary having remitted simpliciter with expenses, he petitioned, and the Court, on the 2d March 1824, adhered as to the rents, but altered as to the expenses; and, on the 26th May 1824, refused a reclaiming petition, without answers. *
_________________ Footnote _________________
* See 3, Shaw and Dunlop, No. 41.
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Miller appealed.
Appellant.—The Sheriff's judgments adhered to on the merits by the Court of Session, are inconsistent with the terms of the summons, and his interpretation of the missive is widely different from the respondent's. Instead of loss from the appellant's
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Respondent.—The stipulations of the lease are intelligible to any practical agriculturist. The respondent did not, before the Sheriff, press the conclusion as to want of fallow with lime, during the three last years. The regulations were satisfactory to the landlord (who had a right to dictate them) and to the tenant, at entering into the lease, and must be fulfilled. The question is not as to good or bad management, but as to the obedience to the rules agreed upon. There was no consent by the landlord to depart from them, nor any acquiescence in the unwarranted management followed by the tenant.
The House of Lords ordered and adjudged that the interlocutors complained of be affirmed, with £50 costs.
The summons, after stating the covenant into which the tenant had entered, concludes in these terms: “That by the said lease, which expires at the term of Martinmas first, the said James Miller is taken bound, during the last three years of the lease, to have only the one-third part of the arable in crop or tillage, the other two-thirds in grass, which shall be cut only one year for hay, and pasture the other two ; and also to have always one-third part of the lands under green crops and summer fallow, the fallow uniformly getting four ploughings, and not less than twenty bolls of lime-shells laid on the acre.” It alleges, first, that there was not a sufficient quantity of grass; and, secondly, a deficiency of fallow and manure. The lease having provided an increased rent of £4 an acre in case of contravention of any of the covenants, my Lord Gwydir claimed that increased rent.
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The defence set up by the tenant (the present appellant) was, that the farm was very properly managed, and that the course of cultivation required of him, as set forth in the summons, was impracticable; and also, that Lord Gwydir had acquiesced in the system of management which he had adopted, for that he had received rent for the year 1817, the first of the three years, in respect of which he makes his demand; and that in respect of the years 1818 and 1819, his lordship's factor, or managing-man, had been fully aware of the course which was pursued by the tenant, and had never given him the slightest intimation, that, in his opinion, he was conducting himself in a manner contrary to the contract.
The Sheriff of Perth, in the first instance, and the Court of Session, before whom this case went subsequently, held that the tenant was liable for the increased rent during the last two years of the lease; but that Lord Gwydir having actually received the rent for the year 1817, the tenant was, by that circumstance, discharged from paying an increased rent, for that he must be considered as having acquiesced in the management pursued during that year.
My Lords, the first question is, Whether or not the complaint is adapted to the case? and if it is, then, secondly, whether the defence has been proved? Upon the first question I entertain no doubt that the summons does sufficiently state the ground on which a demand for increased rent is made by Lord Gwydir, namely, that the tenant had not a sufficient quantity in grass during the last three years of this lease. The next question then is, Whether Lord Gwydir has debarred himself from seeking an increased rent for the first of these three years, by having accepted the rent? whether that is to be considered as amounting to an acquiescence in the course pursued, and discharge of a tenant from the liability under which he had placed himself? The Sheriff of Perthshire, and the Court of Session, in affirmance of his finding, have decided that Lord Gwydir has, by that receipt of rent, precluded himself; and Lord Gwydir has not cross appealed.
My Lords, it has been argued very ingeniously, that if he acquiesced in this during the year 1817, he must have known that, by the course pursued, if it went on during 1818 and 1819, it could be grass only for two years, whereas it is contended that it must be grass for three years. My Lords, I see no ground whatever for holding that because Lord Gwydir accepted the rent for 1817, therefore he was to be considered as acquiescing in the tenant going on in breach of the covenant during the two subsequent years. It has been contended, that the factor of Lord Gwydir having seen on one occasion the mode of cultivation which was adopted, if objection was intended to be made, he ought to have expressed his disapprobation of that management. But really, my Lords, if it be expected that a landlord is to give notice to his tenant to this effect— “You have entered into a stipulation to manage your farm in such and such a manner; I have reason to fear you are not conforming to the stipulation ; and I hereby give you notice, that if you do not manage your farm in that manner, I shall enforce the contract;” and if it is to be said, that,
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My Lords, having taken this review of the circumstances, I feel bound to say, that it appears to me, there is no fault to find with the decision of the Sheriff of Perthshire in the first instance, and the Court of Session afterwards ; and I shall therefore take the liberty of moving, that the interlocutors be affirmed; and in this cause I shall propose that they shall be affirmed with the sum of fifty pounds costs. It is stated that this farm was managed in the general in a proper manner. I should think that, under all the circumstances, your Lordships would be satisfied with awarding to the respondent that sum for his costs, instead of the precise sum which he may have expended, which very probably exceeds that sum. It appears to me that justice requires that the interlocutors be affirmed, and that some costs should be given to the respondent, who has been brought by the appeal to your Lordships' bar.
Appellant's Authorities—Murray's Trustees, 26th Feb. 1806, (No. 12 Ap. Tack.)
Respondents' Authorites—Grahame, 11th May 1789, (F. C. XVI. 425 note); Fraser, 25th Feb. 1813. (F. C.)
Solicitors: J. Richardson, and Spottiswood, and Robertson, Solicitors.