80 Mo. 199 | Mo. | 1883
The plaintiff presented in the probate court for allowance against the estate of Robert Aull, deceased, a demand of $1,639.04, for rent of office in the Aull Savings Bank building, and use of vault and safe from March 19th, 1874, to November 19th, 1878, at $25 per month, payable monthly. The amount of the demand consisted in part of interest charged on each month’s rent as it was alleged to have fallen due. George "Wilson, the agent of Robert Aull, deceased, had for years occupied a desk and a portion of the space in the room or rooms in the bank building,' and after the transfer of that building by decedent to the plaintiff, Wilson continued to occupy this desk, etc., transacting some business for Aull, but being also president of the bank and entitled as such to desk-, room in the building. The transfer to the plaintiff occurred
I.
It is well settled law in this State that an action for use and occupation does not lie unless the relation of landlord and tenant, either express or implied, exists between the parties. Edmonson v. Kite, 48 Mo. 176, and cases cited. In the present instance it is clear there was no express agreement for the payment of rent, and the fact that no rent was ever charged against Aull on the hooks of the bank, none ever demanded of Wilson, the agent, from the time of the transfer down to the time of Anil’s decease in 1878, is so inconsistent with the ordinary course of business, if rent payable monthly was really thought of or claimed by the bank to be due, that these circumstances alone were entitled to considerable weight in determining whether any compensation for the space occupied was ever contemplated by the parties. The silence and acquiescence of the hank, its failure to charge, demand or receive rent during the space of more than four years, is evidence in and of itself that none was to be charged or that the matter had been otherwise arranged. Baile v. Ins. Co., 78 Mo. 371; 1 Greenleaf Ev., § 197.
n.
Objection is taken here, as below, to the admissibility of testimony to the effect that it was part of the consideration of the transfer that Wilson, the agent, was to continue occupying the desk, etc., in the bank building in winding up the business of Aull.' This evidence was admissible. It did not tend to vary or contradict the deed made by Aull. The consideration clause in a deed can be explained or contradicted, since it occupies no higher plane than an. ordinary receipt for money. Baile v. Ins. Co., supra, and eases cited.
The law never implies what the parties never intended; never raises a promise in such circumstances. Morris v. Barnes, 85 Mo. 412; Guenther v. Birkicht, 22 Mo. 489; Hart v. Hart, 41 Mo. 441. The instructions, as well for plaintiff as for defendant, put the law of the whole case, as already set forth, to the jury in the fairest possible manner, and neither party would have had any ground for complaint had the verdict been adverse to their claim. The jury have found that plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and this must be accepted as dual.
IV.
Respecting the fourth instruction aslced. by plaintiff and refused by the court, it is enough to say that what it holds for law is at best but a mere abstraction. It is true a reservation of real estate can only be made by deed, nor did defendant claim otherwise. The question is not what the parties could do, but what did they do. If plaintiff, without a reservation formally made in the deed, granted to Robert Anil’s agent certain privileges, such privileges as, according to John Aull, rightfully belonged to him and formed a part of the consideration for that deed, it is quite too late after years have gone by, after Robert Aull is in his grave, to raise the point now that the reservation of those privileges should have been made in the deed with all the formality incident to a technical reservation. Besides, this instruction ignores the theory of a parol license subsequent to the sale.
V.
It is claimed that error was committed by the trial court in refusing to permit a witness to testify as to what a deceased witness had testified to, on a former occasion, before the probate court. "What the nature of that testimony was, whether material or immaterial, we are not informed. It is the duty of a party alleging error to establish
For these reasons, judgment affirmed.