A summary process to recover possession of land under the
Landlord and Tenant Act of the District of Columbia (Rev.Stat. D.C.
c. 19) can be maintained only when the conventional relation of
landlord and tenant exists or has existed between the parties, and
cannot be maintained by a mortgagee against his mortgagor in
possession after breach of condition of the mortgage, although the
mortgage contains a provision that until default, the mortgagor
shall be permitted to possess and enjoy the premises, and to take
and use the rents and profits thereof, "in the same manner, to the
same extent, and with the same effect, as if this deed had not been
made."
This was a summary process to recover possession of land in the
City of Washington, under section 684 of the Revised Statutes of
the District of Columbia, commenced September 17, 1894, by
complaint before a justice of the peace by the Eastern Trust &
Banking Company against Edward M. Willis and William G. Johnson,
each of whom pleaded title in Johnson, and the case was thereupon
certified to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.
In accordance with a general rule of that court requiring the
plaintiff in such a process to file "a declaration making demand
for the possession of the premises, with a description thereof, as
in ejectment," the plaintiff filed a declaration demanding
possession of the land, describing it by metes and bounds, and
alleging that the defendants entered thereon, and unlawfully
ejected the plaintiff therefrom, and unlawfully detained the same
from the plaintiff.
The parties submitted the case to the determination of the
court, without a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts, in
substance as follows:
The plaintiff was a corporation organized under a charter
granted by the Legislature of the State of Maine by which it
Page 169 U. S. 296
was located at the City of Bangor, in the County of Penobscot,
and was authorized to establish agencies elsewhere in that state.
Johnson was sued as assignee of the American Ice Company, a
corporation of Maine, and doing business at Bangor, and also at the
City of Washington, and Willis was sued as the tenant or lessee of
Johnson.
On December 2, 1889, by an indenture, in the nature of a
mortgage, executed in Maine and duly recorded in that state and in
the District of Columbia, the American Ice Company conveyed to the
Eastern Trust and Banking Company
"and its successors, in trust with full power of succession to
and enjoyment of the franchises of the corporation, all its real
estate, wharves, ice houses, boarding house, stables, boilers,
elevator, and machinery, situated in the Town or Hampden in said
County of Penobscot, and in the City of Washington in the District
of Columbia, together with, all and singular, the privileges and
appurtenances thereto belonging,"
to secure the payment of bonds of the ice company to the amount
of $40,000, payable to the trust company at its office in Bangor in
equal installments of $5,000 each, in 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10
years after date, with interest. The deed provided, among other
things, as follows:
First.
"Until default shall be made in the payment of the principal or
interest of said bonds, or some of them, or in the maintenance of
insurance, or in the payment of taxes or assessments, as herein
provided, or until default shall be made in respect to something by
these presents required to be done by said party of the first part,
the American Ice Company shall be permitted and suffered to
possess, manage, develop, operate, and enjoy the plant and property
herein conveyed, and intended so to be, and to take and use the
income, rents, issues, and profits thereof, in the same manner, to
the same extent, and with the same effect as if this deed had not
been made."
Second. If the ice company shall pay the principal and interest,
and do all other things required to be done on its part, this deed
shall be void. But if any default shall be made, and shall continue
for ninety days, the whole amount of the bonds, principal and
interest, shall be deemed immediately due and
Page 169 U. S. 297
payable,
"and it shall be lawful for the trustee to enter into or upon
the premises and property hereby granted, or intended so to be, and
to take possession of the whole or any part thereof,"
and to sell and dispose of the same by public auction in Bangor,
giving notice, as therein required, in newspapers published in
Bangor and in Washington, and
"in its own name, or in the name of the American Ice Company, to
make, execute, acknowledge, and deliver to the purchaser or
purchasers at such sale a good and sufficient deed or deeds of
conveyance of the property so sold, and any sale made as aforesaid
shall be a perpetual bar, both at law and in equity, against the
American Ice Company, and all persons claiming by, through, or
under it, from claiming the property, rights, interests, and
franchises so sold, or any interest therein."
The proceeds of the sale, after payment of expenses, shall be
paid over ratably to the bondholders, and the remainder, if any, to
the ice company.
Third.
"The foregoing provision for a sale under the power aforesaid is
cumulative with the ordinary remedy of foreclosure by entry or suit
therefor, and the trustee hereunder may, upon default being made as
aforesaid, institute and carry out proceedings to foreclose this
mortgage or deed of trust, by suit or otherwise, in such manner as
may be authorized by law for the foreclosure of mortgages of real
estate. And the American Ice Company hereby waives any and all
rights of sale or redemption now or hereafter provided by the
statutes of Maine or of the United States."
The bonds were duly issued as recited in the mortgage, and were
delivered to and held by purchasers for value in the regular course
of business. The first installment of the bonds, and all interest
which fell due on or before December 1, 1892, were paid. The rest
of the bonded debt, and the interest thereon, were never paid, and
were due and payable at the time of the commencement of this
suit.
On October 13, 1893, the ice company executed to Johnson an
assignment of all its property for the benefit of its creditors,
under the Act of Congress of February 24, 1893, c. 157, 27 Stat.
474. Johnson accepted the assignment and assumed
Page 169 U. S. 298
the duties of assignee, and as such on January 29, 1894,
executed to Willis a lease in writing of all the ice company's real
estate in the City of Washington, for one year from that date at a
monthly rent of $130.
After the default which took place on December 1, 1893, the
continued more than ninety days, a majority of the bondholders
directed the trust company to proceed in the execution of the
trust. In pursuance of that direction and of the power contained in
the mortgage, the trust company advertised and exposed the whole
mortgaged property for sale by auction at Bangor on May 4, 1894.
The sale was adjourned until September 8, 1894, when the property
was sold and was purchased by a committee of the bondholders, and
for their benefit. The terms of the sale have not yet been complied
with, nor any deed made to the purchasers, it being understood and
agreed between them and the trustee at the time of the sale that
the trustee should first obtain possession of the property.
The trust company, on July 30, 1894, caused a thirty- days'
notice to quit to be served on Johnson and on Willis, and on
September 17, 1894, commenced this suit to recover possession of
the property by causing a seven-days' summons to be issued to each
of them by a justice of the peace of the District of Columbia, and
thereupon subsequent proceedings took place as above stated.
Upon the agreed statement of facts, the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia gave judgment for the defendants. The
plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeals, which reversed the
judgment, and remanded the case with directions to enter judgment
for the plaintiff. 6 App.D.C. 375. The defendants sued out a writ
of error from this Court, which was dismissed for want of
jurisdiction.
167 U. S. 76. They
then obtained from this Court this writ of certiorari to the Court
of Appeals, under the Act of March 3, 1897, c. 390, 29 Stat. 692.
167 U.S. 746.
Page 169 U. S. 299
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the court.
Sections 680-691 of the Revised Statutes of the District of
Columbia, contained in chapter 19, entitled "Landlord and Tenant,"
are a reenactment of the Act of Congress of July 4, 1864, c. 243,
entitled "An act to regulate proceedings in cases between landlord
and tenants in the District of Columbia." 13 Stat. 383.
By sections 681 and 682 (reenacting section 1 of the act of
1864),
"a tenancy at will shall not arise or be created without an
express contract or letting to that effect, and all occupation,
possession or holding of any messuage or real estate, without
express contract or lease, or by such contract or lease the terms
of which have expired, shall be deemed and held to be tenancies by
sufferance,"
and "all estates at will and sufferance may be determined by a
notice in writing to quit of thirty days."
By section 684 (reenacting section 2 of the act of 1864),
"when forcible entry is made, or when a peaceable entry is made
and the possession unlawfully held by force, or when possession is
held without right, after the estate is determined by the terms of
the lease by its own limitation, or by notice to quit, or
otherwise,"
then,
"on written complaint, on oath, of the person entitled to the
premises, to a justice of the peace, charging such forcible entry
or detainer of real estate, a summons may be issued to a proper
officer, commanding the person complained of to appear and show
cause why judgment should not be rendered against him."
The statute further provides as follows: the summons shall be
served at least seven days before the appearance of the party
complained of. If it appears by default, or upon trial, that the
plaintiff in entitled to the possession of the premises, he shall
have judgment and execution for the possession and costs; if the
plaintiff fails to prove his right to possession, the defendant
shall have judgment and execution for his costs. If, upon trial,
the defendant pleads title in himself, or in another person under
whom he claims the premises, the case is
Page 169 U. S. 300
to be certified to the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia, and each party is to recognize to the other -- the
defendant "to pay all intervening damages and costs and reasonable
intervening rent for the premises," and the plaintiff to enter the
suit and to pay all costs adjudged against him. An appeal to the
same court may be taken by either party against whom judgment is
rendered by the justice of the peace. Rev.Stat. D.C. §§
685-689; Act of July 4, 1864, c. 243, §§ 2-4, 13 Stat.
383, 384.
This plaintiff is the mortgagee of land in the District of
Columbia, under a deed of trust to secure the payment of certain
bonds, in installments payable in successive years, with interest,
and providing that, until default, the mortgagor shall be permitted
to possess and enjoy the property and to take and use the income,
rents, issues, and profits thereof "in the same manner, to the same
extent, and to the same effect as if this deed had not been made,"
but that if any default be made and be continued ninety days, the
trustee may enter upon the property and sell the same by public
auction, or may pursue the ordinary remedy of foreclosure by entry
or suit as authorized by law.
The mortgagor assigned the property to an assignee for the
benefit of creditors; the assignee made a lease in writing thereof
for a year at a monthly rent; default was made and continued for
ninety days, and the mortgagee, after giving the assignee and his
lessee thirty days' notice to quit, instituted this process against
them to recover possession under the landlord and tenant act of the
District of Columbia.
The principal question presented by the record is whether, in a
case like this, where there has been neither forcible entry nor
detainer by force, a mortgagee entitled to possession after
condition broken is within the scope and effect of the statute.
In
Barber v. Harris (1888), 6 Mackey 586, affirmed by
this Court in
Harris v. Barber (1889),
129 U.
S. 366, cited in support of the judgment below, this
question was not and could not be decided. That case arose upon a
writ of certiorari to a justice of the peace, by which his judgment
for
Page 169 U. S. 301
possession under the statute was sought to be set aside upon
allegations that the plaintiff was a purchaser at a sale under a
mortgage, and the conventional relation of landlord and tenant did
not exist between the parties, and therefore the justice of the
peace had no jurisdiction. The ground on which both the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia and this Court declined to set
aside the judgment of the justice of the peace was that the
existence of the relation of landlord and tenant between the
parties and the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace over the
case were sufficiently shown by general allegations in the
complaint that the plaintiff was entitled to the possession of the
premises and that they were detained from him and held without
right by the defendant, tenant thereof by the sufferance of the
plaintiff, and whose tenancy and estate therein had been determined
by thirty days' notice to quit, and that these allegations could
not be contradicted upon the writ of certiorari.
See 6
Mackey 594, 595;
129 U. S. 129
U.S. 368,
129 U. S.
371.
In
Jennings v. Webb (1892), 20 D.C. 317, 322, in which
it was decided that one tenant in common could not maintain this
form of proceeding against his co-tenant, Justice Cox, speaking for
Justices Hagner and James as well as for himself, said:
"There seems to be a little misapprehension of the nature of
this proceeding. While our rule requires the plaintiff to file a
declaration, as in ejectment, that does not convert the proceeding
into an action of ejectment at all, in which the plaintiff recovers
upon the strength of his title. In this proceeding, unless he
establishes the relation of landlord between himself and the
defendant, no matter what the form of declaration is, he is not
entitled to recover. I have always held that at special term, and
that is the opinion that we entertain now. It is still a landlord
and tenant proceeding."
In two earlier cases, a purchaser at a sale under a deed of
trust in the nature of a mortgage had been declared by the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia, in general term, to be entitled
to maintain this proceeding against the mortgagor, who had remained
in possession without the plaintiff's consent and had been served
with a thirty-days' notice to quit.
Page 169 U. S. 302
But in the first of those cases, this was wholly
obiter
dictum, the appeal to the general term being dismissed because
the judgment in special term was final, and in the other case no
question appears to have been raised upon the construction of the
statute.
Luchs v. Jones (1874), 1 McArthur 345;
Fiske
v. Bigelow (1876), 2 McArthur 427.
Afterwards, in
Loring v. Bartlett (1894), 4 App.D.C. 1,
the Court of Appeals, speaking by Chief Justice Alvey, reversing a
judgment of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and
quoting from
Birch v. Wright, 1 T.R. 378, 382-383,
refrained from expressing a definite opinion upon the question
"whether the simple and ordinary relation of mortgagor and
mortgagee involves the relation of landlord and tenant, by
implication of law, within the meaning and sense of the
statute,"
and maintained the suit solely upon the ground that a provision
in a trust deed to secure the payment of promissory notes by which
the mortgagee and her heirs and assigns were to be permitted
"to use and occupy the said described premises, and the rents,
issues, and profits thereof to take, have, and apply to and for her
and their sole use and benefit, until default be made in the
payment of said notes, or any of them,"
constituted a redemise from the mortgagee to the mortgagor which
would support a proceeding under the statute. The cases relied on
in support of that decision were
Georges Creek Co. v.
Detmold, 1 Md. 225, 230, and some English cases, all of which
were ordinary actions of ejectment, and none of them under statutes
like that now in question.
The decision in
Loring v. Bartlett was followed by the
Court of Appeals in the present case without further discussion. 6
App.D.C. 375, 383.
Upon full consideration of the terms of the act of Congress, and
in view of the existing state of the law in this country at the
time of its passage, this Court is unable to concur in the
conclusion of the Court of Appeals.
The common saying that a mortgagor in possession is tenant at
will to the mortgagee has been often recognized to be a most unsafe
guide in defining the relation of mortgagee and
Page 169 U. S. 303
mortgagor or in construing statutes authorizing landlords to
recover possession against their tenants by summary process before
a justice of the peace.
In
Moss v. Gallimore (1779), Lord Mansfield said:
"A mortgagor is not properly tenant at will to the mortgagee,
for he is not to pay him rent. He is only so
quodam modo.
Nothing is more apt to confound than a simile. When the court or
counsel call a mortgagor a 'tenant at will,' it is barely a
comparison. He is like a tenant at will. The mortgagor receives the
rent, by a tacit agreement with the mortgagee, but the mortgagee
may put an end to this agreement when he pleases."
1 Doug. 279, 282-283. And in
Birch v. Wright (1786),
Mr. Justice Buller said:
"He is not a tenant at will, because he is not entitled to the
growing crops after the will is determined. He is not considered as
tenant at will in those proceedings which are in daily use between
a mortgagor and mortgagee. I mean in ejectments brought for the
recovery of the mortgaged lands."
1 T.R. 378, 383.
Under early statutes of the State of New York providing that any
tenant at will, or at sufferance, or for years, holding over,
without permission of his landlord, after the expiration of his
term, or after default in the payment of rent, might be removed
from the possession upon a proceeding commenced by the landlord
before a justice of the peace, it was constantly held by the
supreme court of the state that a mortgagee could not maintain this
process against a mortgagor in possession, and Chief Justice Savage
said that for some purposes, indeed, the mortgagor, after condition
broken, was considered as tenant to the mortgagee, but that the
statute
"was clearly designed to afford a speedy remedy where the
conventional relation of landlord and tenant existed, and not where
that relation is created by operation of law,"
and
"the legislature never intended that the mortgagee should have a
right to proceed under this statute to obtain possession of the
mortgaged premises after forfeiture."
N.Y.Stat. of 1820, c.194; 2 Rev.Stat. 1828, pt. 3, c. 8, tit.
10, §§ 28
et seq.; Evertson v. Sutton
(1830), 5 Wend. 281, 284;
Roach v. Cosine (1832), 9 Wend.
227, 231-232;
Sims v. Humphrey (1847), 4 Denio 185, 187;
Benjamin
Page 169 U. S. 304
v. Benjamin (1851), 5 N.Y. 383, 388;
People v.
Simpson (1863), 28 N.Y. 55, 56.
It is true, as has been heretofore observed by this Court, that
in the State of New York, the courts of law had, by a gradual
progress, adopted the views of courts of equity in relation to
mortgages, and considered the mortgagor, while in possession and
before foreclosure, as the real owner, except as against the
mortgagee, and as having the right of possession, even as against
the mortgagee, whereas, by the law of Maryland, prevailing in the
District of Columbia, the legal estate is considered as vested in
the mortgagee, and as soon as the estate in mortgage is created,
the mortgagee may enter into possession, though he seldom avails
himself of that right.
Van Ness v.
Hyatt, 13 Pet. 294,
38 U. S.
299.
But the mortgagee had been equally held not to be entitled to
maintain against the mortgagor a summary landlord and tenant
process in states where, as in New England, the mortgagee is held
to be the owner of the legal title. 1 Jones on Mortgages §
58.
The Revised Statutes of Massachusetts of 1836, c. 104,
§§ 2, 4-9, contained provisions very similar to those of
§§ 2-4 of the Act of Congress of July 4, 1864, as to the
cases in which, and the persons by and against whom, the
proceedings might be instituted, the service of summons, the form
of judgment, and the removal of the case, by certificate or by
appeal, into a court of record.
In that chapter of the Massachusetts statutes of 1836, section 2
was as follows:
"When any forcible entry shall be made, or when an entry shall
be made in a peaceable manner, and the possession shall be
unlawfully held by force, and also when the lessee of any lands or
tenements, or any person holding under such lessee, shall hold
possession of the demised premises without right after the
determination of the lease either by its own limitation or by a
notice to quit, as provided in the sixtieth chapter [section 26 of
which provided that estates at will might be terminated by either
party by notice of three months, or by the landlord by fourteen
days' notice, in case of nonpayment of rent], the person entitled
to the premises may
Page 169 U. S. 305
be restored to the possession thereof in the manner hereinafter
provided."
And by section 4, "the person entitled to the possession of the
premises" might obtain from a justice of the peace a summons to
answer to a complaint charging the defendant with being in
possession of the land in question, and holding it unlawfully and
against the right of the plaintiff.
It was the settled construction of that statute by the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts that a mortgagee, even after he had
entered for the purpose of foreclosure, could not maintain an
action against his mortgagor to recover possession of the mortgaged
premises. "Whilst the parties stood in the relation of mortgagor
and mortgagee," said Chief Justice Shaw,
"the defendant was not lessee, within the meaning of this
statute. A mortgagor in possession is sometimes, in a loose sense,
said to be tenant at will to the mortgagee. But he is not liable to
rent, or to account for rents and profits. These he holds to his
own use. He is like a tenant at will, because the mortgagee may
enter upon the estate at his will, if he can do so peaceably, when
not restrained by covenant."
Larned v. Clarke (1851), 8 Cush. 29, 31. And again:
"The present statute contemplates three cases in which this
process will lie: First. Forcible entry. Second. Forcible detainer.
Third. A tenant holding against his landlord, either (1) after the
determination of a lease by its own limitation or (2) after the
expiration of a notice to quit duly given; or (3) after a notice of
fourteen days, for nonpayment of rent. In the present case, the
proof shows no forcible entry, no forcible detainer, no holding
over of a tenant of demised premises. These are the only cases
contemplated in this statute in which this summary process will
lie. Although, in a loose sense, a mortgagor in possession is said
to be tenant at will of the mortgagee, yet he is not within the
reason or the letter of Rev.Stat. c. 104, § 2. He is not
lessee, or holding under a lessee, or holding demised premises
without right, after the determination of the lease. The remedies
of a mortgagee are altogether of a different character -- clearly
marked out by law."
Hastings v. Pratt (1851), 8 Cush. 121, 123.
See
also Dakin v.
Page 169 U. S. 306
Allen (1851), 8 Cush. 33;
Gerrish v. Mason
(1855), 4 Gray 432.
In chapter 137 of the General Statutes of Massachusetts of 1860,
the provisions of the Revised Statutes of 1836 above mentioned were
substantially reenacted, section 2 being put in the following
form:
"When a forcible entry is made, or when a peaceable entry is
made and the possession unlawfully held by force, or when the
lessee of land or tenements, or a person holding under such lessee,
holds possession without right, after the determination of the
lease by its own limitation, or by notice to quit, or otherwise,
the person entitled to the premises may be restored to the
possession in the manner hereinafter provided."
The words "or otherwise" were apparently added in that section
because of its having been decided under the earlier statute that
"the determination of the lease by its own limitation" did not
include its determination by the lessor's entry for breach of a
condition in the lease.
Fifty Associates v. Howland
(1846), 11 Metc. 99;
Whitwell v. Harris (1871), 106 Mass.
532.
By section 5 of the statute of 1860, "the person entitled to the
possession of the premises" may obtain from a justice of the peace
a summons
"to answer to the complaint of the plaintiff, for that the
defendant is in possession of the lands . . . which he holds
unlawfully and against the right of the plaintiff."
The provision above quoted of the statute of 1860 which defines
the circumstances under which this summary process may be commenced
before a justice of the peace is almost exactly like the
corresponding provision of the act of Congress of 1864, as will
appear by putting the two together, with those words of the
Massachusetts statute which have been omitted in the act of
Congress printed in italics, and the words added in the act of
Congress enclosed in brackets, as follows:
"When
a forcible entry is made, or when a peaceable
entry is made and the possession unlawfully held by force, or when
the lessee of land or tenements, or a person holding under such
lessee, holds possession [is held] without right, after the
determination [estate is determined by the terms] of the
lease by its own limitation, or by notice to quit, or otherwise.
"
Page 169 U. S. 307
This provision, as incorporated in the act of Congress, though
somewhat condensed in form, is essentially in the same words, and
of precisely the same meaning, as the provision of the statute of
Massachusetts. While it omits the words "the lessee of land or
tenements, or a person holding under such lessee," it still, like
the Massachusetts statute (in cases where there is neither forcible
entry nor forcible detainer), is restricted to cases in which "the
lease" has been determined, and differs in this respect from the
provision in the first section of the act of Congress, which
defines "tenancies by sufferance."
The statute of Massachusetts and the act of Congress resemble
each other in many other respects. Each authorizes "the person
entitled to the premises" to recover possession by complaint to a
justice of the peace. Each authorizes the complaint to be in
general terms -- in Massachusetts, alleging that the defendant is
in possession of the land and holds it unlawfully and against the
right of the plaintiff; in the District of Columbia, "charging a
forcible entry or detainer of real estate." Each requires the
summons to be served seven days before appearance. The provisions
as to the form of the judgment of the justice of the peace for
either party are exactly alike in both statutes. Each statute
provides that when the title is put in issue, the case may be
certified to a court of record, that from any judgment of the
justice of the peace an appeal may be taken by either party to that
court, and that, upon such removal, either by certificate or by the
defendant's appeal, the defendant shall recognize to the plaintiff,
with sufficient sureties, to pay intervening rent and damages.
Mass.Gen.Stat. of 1860, c. 137, §§ 6-10; Act of July 4,
1864, c. 243, §§ 2-4; Rev.Stat.D.C. §§
684-689.
The resemblance between the provisions of the Massachusetts
statute of 1860 and of the act of Congress of 1864 is so remarkable
that it is evident that the latter were taken from the former. This
being so, the known and settled construction which those statutes
had received in Massachusetts before the original enactment of the
act of Congress must be considered as having been adopted by
Congress with the text thus expounded.
Tucker v.
Oxley, 5 Cranch 34,
9 U. S. 42;
Pennock v.
Page 169 U. S. 308
Dialogue, 2 Pet. 1,
27 U. S. 18;
Metropolitan Railroad v. Moore, 121 U.
S. 558,
121 U. S. 572;
Warner v. Texas & Pacific Railway, 164 U.
S. 418,
164 U. S. 423.
In
Metropolitan Railroad v. Moore, just cited, where
provisions of statutes of New York regulating judicial procedure
had been incorporated by Congress, in substantially the same
language, in the legislation concerning the District of Columbia,
it was held that Congress must be presumed to have adopted those
provisions as then understood in New York and already construed by
the courts of that state, and not as affected by the previous
practice in Maryland or in the courts of the District of
Columbia.
Before the passage of the act of Congress of 1864, the Supreme
Judicial Court of Maine had held that a mortgagee could not proceed
against his mortgagor, under a statute of that state, the leading
sections of which provided that
"a process of forcible entry and detainer may be commenced
against a disseisor, who has not acquired any claim by possession
and improvement, and against a tenant holding under a written lease
or contract, or person holding under such tenant at the expiration
or forfeiture of the term, without notice; . . . and against a
tenant at will, whose tenancy has been terminated"
by notice to quit, in which last case, "the tenant shall be
liable to the process aforesaid without further notice, and without
proof of any relation of landlord and tenant." Maine Rev.Stat. of
1857, c. 94;
Reed v. Elwell (1858), 46 Me. 270, 278-279;
Dunning v. Finson (1859), 46 Me. 546, 553.
See also
Sawyer v. Hanson (1845), 24 Me. 542;
Clement v.
Bennett (1879), 70 Me. 207.
Similar opinions have been expressed in cases arising in other
states under statutes differing in language but having the same
general purpose.
Davis v. Hemenway (1855), 27 Vt. 589;
McCombs v. Wallace (1872), 66 N.C. 481;
Greer v.
Wilbar (1875), 72 N.C. 592;
Necklace v. West (1878),
33 Ark. 682;
Nightingale v. Barens (1879), 47 Wis. 389;
Steele v. Bond (1881), 28 Minn. 267;
Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. Skupa (1884), 16 Neb. 341.
We have not been referred to, and are not aware of, a single case
in any state in which a summary
Page 169 U. S. 309
process of this kind has been maintained by a mortgagee against
his mortgagor unless specifically given by distinct provision in
the statute.
The view which has been generally if not universally entertained
by the courts of the several states upon this subject has been well
expressed by the Supreme Court of Minnesota in
Steele v.
Bond, above cited, as follows:
"The act concerning forcible entries and unlawful detainers, so
far as it affords a remedy for landlords against tenants who
unlawfully detain the premises after a default in the payment of
the rent, or the expiration of the term, must be construed, as
similar acts have always been construed by the courts of other
states, to apply only to the conventional relation of landlord and
tenant. It was not intended as a substitute for the action of
ejectment, nor to afford means of enforcing agreements to surrender
possession of real estate, where either that relation does not
exist or has not existed. The foundation fact upon which the
jurisdiction rests is that the tenant is in possession of the land
in consequence and by virtue of that relation, and unlawfully
withholds possession after a default in the performance of the
terms upon which he entered, or after his term has expired."
28 Minn. 273.
Considering the terms of the act of Congress, the settled
construction, before the passage of that act, of the statute of
Massachusetts from which it appears to have been taken, and the
general course of decision in this country under statutes on the
same subject, the reasonable conclusion is that in order to sustain
this form of proceeding, the conventional relation of landlord and
tenant must exist or have existed between the parties.
A mortgagee holds no such relation to a mortgagor in possession.
The mortgagor, though loosely called a "tenant at will of the
mortgagee," is such in no other sense than that his possession may
be put an end to whenever the mortgagee pleases. Lord Mansfield, in
Moss v. Gallimore, 1 Doug. 279, 283; Lord Selborne, in
Lows v. Telford, 1 App.Cas. 414, 426; Shaw, C.J., in
Larned v. Clarke, 8 Cush. 29, 31;
Carroll v.
Ballance, 26 Ill. 9, 19. The mortgagee may take possession
Page 169 U. S. 310
at any time, but so long as there has been no breach of
condition of the mortgage, this right is rarely exercised, and the
mortgagor is usually permitted, by oral or tacit agreement with the
mortgagee, or by express stipulation in the mortgage, to remain in
possession. 2 Bl.Com. 158;
Moss v. Gallimore, above cited;
Colman v. Packard, 16 Mass. 39;
Flagg v. Flagg,
11 Pick. 475, 477;
Jamieson v. Bruce, 6 Gill and J. 72,
75;
Van Ness v.
Hyatt, 13 Pet. 294,
38 U. S. 299.
Until the mortgagee takes actual possession, the mortgagor is not
liable, without an express covenant to that effect, to pay rent,
and is entitled to take the rents and profits to his own use.
Teal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 242,
111 U. S.
248-251, and cases cited;
Freedman's Saving Co. v.
Shepherd, 127 U. S. 494,
127 U. S. 502;
Larned v. Clarke, above cited.
When the mortgagor remains in possession with the assent of the
mortgagee without formal agreement, no one would think of saying
that there was a lease from the mortgagee to the mortgagor, or that
the relation of landlord and tenant existed between them. An
express stipulation in the mortgage that the mortgagor may remain
in possession until breach of condition is intended merely to put
in definite and binding form the understanding of the parties as to
the exercise of their rights as mortgagor and mortgagee, and not to
create between them a distinct relation of tenant and landlord.
Anderson v. Strauss, 98 Ill. 485.
That such was the understanding and intention of the parties to
the deed of trust in this case is apparent from its terms, by which
the American Ice Company mortgages all its real estate, wharves,
ice houses, and other buildings and machinery, and it is provided
that until default, the mortgagor
"shall be permitted and suffered to possess, manage, develop,
operate, and enjoy the plant and property herein conveyed, and
intended so to be, and to take and use the income, rents, issues,
and profits thereof in the same manner, to the same extent, and
with the same effect as if this deed had not been made."
The result is that the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain
this process, but must be left, so far as the aid of a court of
Page 169 U. S. 311
justice is requisite to secure the rights conferred by the
mortgage, to the appropriate remedy of a writ of ejectment or a
bill of foreclosure. Comp.Stat.D.C. c. 48, § 1;
Id.,
c. 55, § 10;
Hogan v. Kurtz, 94 U. S.
773;
Hughes v.
Edwards, 9 Wheat. 489.
Judgment of the Court of Appeals reversed and case remanded
with directions to affirm the judgment of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia.