1. Certain premises in Louisiana belonging to a citizen of that
state were, during his absence therefrom, seized as abandoned
property by the military authorities of the United States, who
compelled the lessee then in possession to enter into a new lease
and to pay to them the rent thereafter due.
Held that the
owner could not recover of the lessee the rent for the period
during which he had paid it to the military authorities.
2. Where suit was commenced Nov. 16, 1868, for rent claimed to
be due up to Aug. 8, 1865, and where, throughout the whole
intervening time, the district within which the cause of action, if
any arose, was under the control of the federal authorities and the
defendant could be served there with process,
held that
the decision of the supreme court of the state that the suit was
barred by the statute of limitations is not subject to
reexamination here.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Certain brick tenements situated in New Orleans, and more
particularly described in the record, were, on the 13th of June,
1859, leased by the plaintiff to the testator of the defendant for
and during the full term of five years, to begin on the 1st of
October in the same year and to terminate at the end of five years
from the commencement of the term, and, in consideration thereof,
the lessee covenanted and agreed to pay to the lessor the annual
rent of $2,000, payable in monthly installments at the end of each
and every month.
Monthly payments were punctually made from the expiration of the
first month until the 1st of May, 1862, when he ceased to make the
required payments. Pursuant to the lease,
Page 92 U. S. 112
the decedent, then in full life, entered into the immediate
possession of the premises, and it appears that he continued in the
possession of the same until the 8th of August, 1865, as alleged by
the plaintiff.
Payments subsequent to May 1, 1862, were refused because the
premises were on that day seized by the military authorities of the
United States as abandoned property, and the lessee was compelled
to pay rent to those military authorities. Notwithstanding that,
rent was still claimed by the plaintiff as the lessor of the
premises, and, payment having been refused, he instituted the
present suit to recover the unpaid installments, amounting in the
whole to $8,103.25, together with lawful interest.
Service was made, and the defendant, as the widow and executrix
of the testator, appeared and filed an answer, setting up three
defenses:
1. That all and singular the allegations contained in the
petition are untrue.
2. That the military authorities of the United States seized the
premises as abandoned property, and that the lessee was compelled
to pay rent to those authorities during the whole period for which
the rent was not paid to the plaintiff.
3. That the cause of action is barred by the prescription of
three years.
Proofs were introduced on both sides in the state district
court, where the suit was commenced, and the court, having heard
the parties, rendered judgment for the defendant. Three exceptions
were filed by the plaintiff, and he appealed to the supreme court
of the state, where the parties were again heard, and the supreme
court overruled the exceptions filed by the plaintiff, and affirmed
the judgment rendered by the district court. Immediate steps were
taken by the plaintiff to remove the cause into this Court, and the
errors assigned in the argument here are substantially the same as
those assigned in the supreme court of the state.
1. Much discussion of the first defense set up in the answer is
unnecessary, as it is clear that the theory of fact which it
assumes cannot be sustained. Sufficient appears to show that the
lease was duly executed, that the lessee took possession of the
premises, and that he continued to occupy the same during the whole
period alleged in the petition.
Page 92 U. S. 113
Suppose that is so; still it is insisted by the defendant that
the second defense pleaded is fully sustained, and the Court here
concurs in that proposition.
2. Conclusive proof is exhibited in the record that the premises
were seized by the orders of the military authorities of the United
States and that the lessee, during the absence of the lessor from
the state, was compelled to pay rent to the military authorities
commanding the district; that the lessee of the plaintiff, then in
full life, was formally ejected from the premises by the military
authorities; and that his agent then and there found it necessary,
in order to preserve his effects and to enable him to retain
possession of the tenements and to continue his business, to enter
into a new contract of lease with the military authorities, by whom
the premises had been seized as abandoned property, and who were in
the supreme control of all such matters within the district where
the premises were situated.
Evidence was also introduced to show that the rent, as
stipulated in the new contract of lease, was subsequently paid by
the agent of the decedent to the military authorities of the United
States throughout the whole residue of the period during which the
premises were occupied by the testator of the defendant.
Satisfactory proof was also introduced by the defendant, and is
exhibited in the transcript, that the military commander of the
district, prior to that time, published a military order commanding
all tenants in possession of properties belonging to persons not
known by them to be loyal citizens not to pay over rents for the
same, but to retain in their hands all moneys due to such persons,
warning such tenants, in case they paid such moneys to such persons
without authority, that they would be held personally responsible
for the amount so paid, and directing that all rents due or to
become due by tenants of property belonging to such persons, should
be paid to the financial clerk of the district.
All rent due to the military authorities of the United States
has been paid; and it is admitted that all rent for the premises to
the 1st of May, 1862, was duly paid to the plaintiff, his claim now
being for the rent of the premises for the period subsequent to the
time when the decedent was ejected from the
Page 92 U. S. 114
premises, and for period during which the decedent paid rent
under the new contract of lease with the military authorities of
the United States.
Enough appears to show beyond all doubt that the premises were
seized as abandoned property, and that decedent was compelled to
pay rent to the military authorities of the United States under a
new contract of lease. Collusion is not even suggested, and,
inasmuch as the decedent was obliged to render obedience to the
paramount authority, it was entirely competent for him to enter
into a new contract to protect his interest.
Grant that, and still it is insisted by the plaintiff that he is
entitled to recover the rent under his lease, deducting the amount
of the rent paid by the decedent to his new lessors, but the Court
here is entirely of a different opinion. His property was seized as
abandoned property, he, the plaintiff, having left the
jurisdiction, and the effect of the seizure was to deprive the
decedent of all right of possession or occupancy, and of course he
was obliged to leave the premises, or make a new contract with
those having the dominion over the same, and, having made such new
contract with those having and exercising such dominion over the
premises, all that can be required of him, or his legal
representative, is to fulfill that new contract. Such payments
having been made, the legal representative of the decedent may well
claim to be exempt from any further demand. La.Code 1875, art.
2696.
From the very nature of the contract, it is held by the law of
that state that the lessor is required to maintain the thing in
such a condition as to serve the use for which it is hired, and to
cause the lessee to be in the peaceable possession of the thing,
during the continuance of the lease, and the provision is that if
the thing be totally destroyed during the lease by an unforeseen
event, or if it be taken for a purpose of public utility, the lease
is at an end.
Id., arts. 2692, 2697.
Seizure, and eviction from the premises, it is insisted by the
defendant, are, under the circumstances, equivalent to
sequestration to support the war; and that the decedent, inasmuch
as he was compelled to give up the possession of the premises to
the ruling military power, is thereby discharged from all
obligation to pay the future rent to the plaintiff.
Page 92 U. S. 115
3. Suppose, however, that the second defense is insufficient;
then it becomes necessary to examine the third, which is the
defense sustained by the supreme court of the state.
By the record, it appears that rent is claimed to the 8th of
August, 1865, and that the suit was not commenced until the 16th of
November, 1868 -- more than three years subsequent to the time
when, by the terms of the lease, the whole rent became due. Two
objections are taken by the plaintiff to the sufficiency of that
defense:
1. That he commenced a prior suit, which was discontinued, and
he suggests, rather than argues, that the statute ceased to run
from the commencement of the first suit.
Statutes exist in some of the states, providing that where a
first suit is abate, and a second suit is brought within a
prescribed time, the statute of limitations shall cease to run from
the date of the first suit; but the court is not referred to any
such enactment as applicable to this case, and it is believed that
none such exists, as the code of the state provides, that if the
plaintiff, after having made his demand, abandons or discontinues
it, the interruption shall be considered as having never happened.
Code, art. 3485;
Levy v.
Stewart, 11 Wall. 252.
2. Grant that, still the defendant insists that the war of the
rebellion did not close until the 20th of August, 1866, and that
the time from the date of the last charge in the claim to the close
of the war should be deducted from the period which has elapsed
since the cause of action accrued, in computing the time fixed by
the statute of limitations. But the Court here is of the opinion
that the rule does not apply in the case before the Court. Beyond
doubt it does apply in a suit in the circuit court of the United
States where the suit is between a citizen of the state where the
suit is brought and a citizen of another state.
Hanger v.
Abbot, 6 Wall. 532;
Levy
v. Stewart, 11 Wall. 249;
Adger
v. Alston, 15 Wall. 560.
Repeated decisions of this Court have established the rule as
applied in the circuit courts of the United States in controversies
between citizens of different states, but the case under
examination was brought here by a writ of error to the state court,
and it appears that the suit and controversy were between citizens
of the same state.
United States v.
Willey, 11 Wall. 512;
The
Protector, 12 Wall. 700.
Page 92 U. S. 116
Congress has provided to the effect that where the defendant
cannot be served with process by reason of resistance to the
execution of the laws or the interruption of the ordinary course of
judicial proceedings, the time during which the defendant shall be
beyond the reach of legal process shall not be deemed or taken as
any part of the time limited by law for the commencement of such
action. 13 Stat. 123.
Cases falling within that provision, whether in the state or
federal courts, are governed by it, but the difficulty which the
plaintiff has to encounter is that the district where the cause of
action, if any, arose was within the control of the United States
throughout the whole period; nor does the record contain any
evidence whatever to show either that the defendant was at any time
beyond the reach of process or that the insurgents were in a
condition to occasion any interruption of the ordinary course of
judicial proceedings in that district.
Stewart v.
Kahn, 11 Wall. 506.
Viewed in the light of these suggestions, it is quite clear that
it was competent for the supreme court of the state to construe and
apply the statute of limitations enacted by the state legislature,
and that their decision in that regard is not subject to
reexamination here under a writ of error to a state court.
Judgment affirmed.