3 Ga. App. 65 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The Americus Manufacturing and Improvement' Company sued out a distress warrant against Mrs. A. F. High-tower for $109.32, besides interest, for rent due under a rent contract for a storehouse in the city- of Americus from May to December, 1906, inclusive. The defendant filed a counter-affidavit, in ' which she set up that the sum distrained for was not due, and further that she had been released from said rent contract by the plaintiff, who had accepted as tenant, in lieu of herself, her subtenant, one E. J. Leben, to whom she had sublet the premises with the sanction and the approval of the plaintiff; that subsequently the plaintiff collected the rents from said Leben and recognized him as the tenant under said contract; and that the indebtedness distrained for was the indebtedness of Leben; and not of the de
The evidence for the plaintiff was, a contract of lease, made between it and the defendant, for the period of three years from September 8, 1905, for a stipulated rental; and that the defendant had not paid the ren,t due for the months covered by the distress warrant, and that demand had been repeatedly made on her for the amount, and payment refused. The evidence further disclosed the fact that the defendant, soon after the execution of the rent contract, had sold her stock of merchandise in the rented storehouse to one E. J. Leben, and had given the possession of the store to him, and had asked the secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff corporation to consent that the rent contract of the defendant with the plaintiff- be transferred to and assumed by Leben, and the secretary and treasurer had agreed to submit her request to the board of directors of the jDlaintiff; that for several months after the premises had been sublet by the defendant to Leben, he (Leben) paid the rent to the plaintiff, but that in every case where this was done, the defendant had called upon the plaintiff for the rent, and she had instructed its secretary and treasurer to go to Leben and that he would pay the rent for her, which he had done for several months; that all the rent the secretary of the company had collected from Leben by direction of the defendant had been placed to her credit, and that the company had never in any way recognized Leben as its tenant or released the defendant from her contract; that when Leben got behind with the rent, the secretary of the company informed the defendant of the fact and demanded of her the payment of the rent; that when Leben went into bankruptcy, he was behind in the payment of the rent, and, at the request of the defendant, the secretary of the plaintiff company proved, in behalf of the defendant, Leben’s debt to her on account of the rents, and collected on'said proof an amount for the rent and placed the same, at her request, to the credit of her rent account with the plaintiff; and that the board of directors of the plaintiff did not release the defendant from her contract, and did not accept Leben in her stead as tenant of the corporation.
Numerous exceptions are made to certain portions of the charge •of the court, but, in the view which we take of this case on the merits, these exceptions all become immaterial. In our opinion, the evidence as set out in the record is wholly insufficient to show that the plaintiff released the defendant in any manner, either expressly or by implication, from the contract. The mere fact that the plaintiff allowed the subtenant to remain in possession of the leased premises for several months, and collected from him the rent for this period, would not be sufficient, without, more, to .show any release of the tenant from her contract. Cuesta v. Goldsmith, 1 Ga. App. 48 (57 S. E. 983). It is not claimed by the defendant that there was any expressed release, but it is insisted that the request made to the secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff corporation to release her and accept in her stead her subten•ant, followed by the collection of the rents from, the subtenant, operated as a release of the tenant from her contract and the substitution of her subtenant. This position is wholly untenable for several reasons. The request of the defendant and her attorney at law, made' to the secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff, asking
Judgment reversed.