Coggins v. McKinney

Decision Date14 July 1919
Docket Number10220.
PartiesCOGGINS v. McKINNEY et al.
CourtSouth Carolina Supreme Court

Appeal from Common Pleas Circuit Court of Spartanburg County; S.W G. Shipp, Judge.

Action by J. H. Coggins against William McKinney and Minnie Coggins. From a judgment for plaintiff for a part of the relief demanded, both parties appeal. Affirmed.

Sanders & De Pass, of Spartanburg, for appellant.

John Gary Evans and I. A. Phifer, both of Spartanburg, for respondents.

GAGE J.

Action for specific performance, and that denied, for money spent in good faith by the occupant to improve the property.

The master found against the plaintiff on the first issue and for the plaintiff on the second issue; and the circuit court confirmed that report.

Appeal by both sides. We are content to abide the judgment of the court upon the first issue, and without any discussion of the question. The report of the master (confirmed pro forma by the circuit court) satisfies us in the conclusion he reached.

The second issue is not free from difficulty; but upon a settled consideration of the law and the testimony we are of opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to compensation for the improvements he has made, and the amount fixed by the master.

Beyond cavil, as matter of fact, Coggins constructed buildings on the land well estimated to be worth $800. The master so found, the court so found, and the testimony is conclusively to that effect. And it is also true that, while the land yielded $128 per year rent before the improvements were erected, it yielded in 1913, 1914, and 1915 $228 per year rent. Beyond question, as matter of law it is true that generally a stranger may not spend his money in making improvements on another's land and have reimbursement therefor.

But as matter of law it is also true that under some circumstances a stranger who has constructed improvements on land while it is in his possession may be reimbursed for his expenditures.

Such claims, in the cases reported in our books, have generally been made by an occupying tenant in common; and they have been frequently allowed. In the instant case the claim is made by one who, as it turns out, has no title and has no right to a title.

The master found, as a fact, that the tenant erected the improvements with the knowledge and consent of the owner, and with no intention by the tenant to make the owner a gift of the improvements. So much is equivalent to finding that the tenant erected the improvements in good faith, with the knowledge and consent of the owner, and with the intention of enjoying them in the event he came to be the owner. The court confirmed that finding, and the testimony tends strongly to prove it. The appealing owner has not satisfied us that the finding is wrong. Whether the tenant under these circumstances is entitled to be reimbursed is the issue of law to be decided.

It is plain that the improving occupier may be recompensed at all only when the improvements he has made have added value to the land, so that they enhance the rent which the owner may get from it. For instance, if the improvement should be a work of art only, of no rental value, the occupying tenant could have no compensation for it.

To state a simple case which will illustrate the principle we have in mind, and which principle must control the instant case: If, when Coggins went into possession January 1, 1905, the reasonable rent was $128 per year; and if, in that year Coggins spent, under the circumstances found $100 in improvements; and if Coggins should have been put out at the end of that year; and if McKinney should have rented the place in 1906 for $228; and if such increase in the rent was due to the improvements; then McKinney ought, of right, to return to Coggins, out of the rent increase, the $100 which Coggins had spent towards improvements.

The equity of that transaction lies in the fact that the increase was caused by Coggins' efforts, and the return of $100 to him out of that increase does not take anything from McKinney and compensates Coggins for his expenditure. The parties are thus made equal, and equality is equity. See Harper, Ch quoted in Dellet v. Whitner, Cheves, Eq. ...

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