The plaintiffs, the Ernsts (landlords), leased a parcel of land to Rogers (the original tenant) for a go‑kart operation for a fixed term, with an option to renew. The lease contained a standard clause prohibiting assignment or subletting without the landlords' written consent. After operating for some time, Rogers negotiated with Conditt to take over the premises and the business. With the Ernsts' written consent, Rogers and Conditt executed an instrument captioned as a "sublease" that gave Conditt exclusive possession of the premises for the entire remainder of Rogers's lease term and obligated Conditt to perform the covenants of the original lease, including payment of the stipulated rent. Rogers did not retain any right of reentry, right to recapture possession, or any other reversionary interest in the premises or the term; the only reservation was Rogers's continued personal liability on the original lease covenants. Conditt took exclusive possession and operated the business but later defaulted on rent. The Ernsts sued Conditt directly for the unpaid rent, asserting he was an assignee and therefore in privity of estate with them. Conditt defended that he was merely a sublessee, lacked privity with the Ernsts, and thus could not be held directly liable for rent.
When a tenant transfers possession for the entire remainder of the lease term under an instrument labeled as a "sublease," with no reversionary interest retained, is the transaction an assignment that creates privity of estate between the landlord and the transferee, making the transferee directly liable for rent?
A transfer by a tenant of the entire remaining lease term, leaving no reversionary interest in the transferor, constitutes an assignment; a transfer for less than the tenant's entire interest, or one that reserves a right of reentry or other reversionary interest, is a sublease. The characterization turns on the legal effect of the instrument and surrounding circumstances, not the label the parties use. An assignee is in privity of estate with the landlord and is liable on lease covenants that run with the land, including the promise to pay rent. The original tenant remains liable on the original lease absent a clear novation or express release by the landlord.
The transaction between Rogers and Conditt was an assignment, not a sublease. Because it transferred the entire remainder of the term and left no reversionary interest in Rogers, Conditt stood as assignee in privity of estate with the Ernsts and was directly liable to them for the unpaid rent.
The court focused on substance over form. Although the instrument was captioned a "sublease," its operative terms transferred to Conditt all of Rogers's leasehold interest for the remainder of the term and vested Conditt with exclusive possession and control of the premises. Rogers retained no right of reentry, reversion, or other interest in the term; his only continuing connection was a personal undertaking that he would remain liable on the original lease obligations. That personal obligation does not create a reversionary estate and thus does not convert an assignment into a sublease. Because the transfer was an assignment, privity of estate arose between the landlords and Conditt. Under well-settled doctrine, covenants that run with the land—foremost among them the covenant to pay rent—bind the assignee for so long as the assignee holds the leasehold. The landlords therefore could sue Conditt directly for the unpaid rent. The court further noted that the landlords' written consent to the transaction did not release Rogers; a consent is not a novation and does not extinguish the original tenant's liability absent a clear and express release. But whether or not Rogers also remained liable, Conditt's status as assignee independently supported direct liability to the landlords. The court rejected Conditt's argument that the label "sublease" controlled or that the parties' subjective intent to avoid assignment should be dispositive. The governing test in Tennessee, consistent with the general common law, looks to whether the transfer leaves the original tenant with a reversionary interest. Because no such interest remained with Rogers, the court concluded that the transaction was an assignment as a matter of law, and it affirmed judgment for the landlords on the rent claim.
Ernst v. Conditt is frequently cited for the bright-line test distinguishing assignments from subleases: ask whether the original tenant retained any reversionary interest. If not, it is an assignment regardless of labels or subjective intentions. The case thus directly informs exam analysis on landlord–tenant problems, privity concepts (privity of estate vs. privity of contract), covenants that run with the land, and the effect of landlord consent. It also highlights that consent to an assignment does not, without an express novation, release the original tenant—a point that influences risk allocation and drafting strategy in commercial leases.
Ernst v. Conditt teaches that courts privilege substance over form in leasehold transfers. When a tenant conveys away the balance of the term and keeps no reversion, the transferee is an assignee as a matter of law. That status carries real consequences: privity of estate arises with the landlord, and the assignee must honor covenants that run with the land, including rent.