78 W. Va. 721 | W. Va. | 1916
By this writ of error the Federal Coal & Coke Company, J. W. Devison and W. H. Skinner, the last two named being agents and servants of the former, plaintiffs in error, seek reversal of a judgment of the intermediate court of Marion county, recovered against them by the plaintiff, Pete Bachin-sky, and later affirmed by the. circuit court of said county, on writ of error to said intermediate court. The suit was brought in a justice’s court, and judgment there obtained by plaintiff for $50.00. An appeal was then taken to the circuit
Numerous errors are assigned, one of which is that the case was tried without joinder of issue. This assignment is not well taken. The transcript of the justice’s docket shows'that summons was issued on the 21st of January, 1913, stating that plaintiff’s claim was for “$300.00 damages for wrong;” that all parties were present and ready for trial on the 6th of the following February; that defendants pleaded “not guilty and do not owe; ’ ’ and that witnesses were then examined, on behalf of both parties, and judgment was rendered. True no written complaint or plea was filed, either before the justice or in court. But Sec. 169, Ch. 50, Barnes’ Code, provides that, the appeal may be tried upon the pleadings made up in the justice’s court, and clause 2, See. 50 of the same chapter, provides that, the pleadings in a justice’s court may be oral or in writing, and, if oral, the substance ofithem shall be entered by the justice in his docket. "We have held that, where the record fails to to show any issue was formally joined, in a suit originating in a justice’s court, but does show that the case was fully tried as if a definite issue had been joined, such failure to join issue is' not reversible error. Bank Note Co. v. Shrader, 70 W. Va. 475; and Simpson v. White, 43 W. Va. 125. But it is not necessary to resort to the principle of those cases, for the record does show that there has been a substantial compliance with the letter of the statute. The action, although not expressly so denominated in the record, is an action of trespass on the case; and the plea, “not guilty”, orally made in the justice’s court presented a proper issue, and the record shows that the intermediate court tried the case on the issue made up in the justice’s court.
The action is for damages for the destruction of plaintiff’s business as a boarding house keeper, and for injury to his furniture. The Federal Coál & Coke Company removed
“FEDERAL COAL AND COKE COMPANY. “HOUSE LEASE. NO. 26. '
“THE FEDERAL COAL & COKE COMPANY, a corporation, doth hereby lease to the Nick Partine the certain house in Marion County, West Virginia, described as Number 26, to be held by the said Nick Partine, Lessee, aforesaid, as tenant from month to month, beginning on the 23 day of Sept. 19 — , 'at the monthly rental of $4.50 per. month, which the said lessee agrees to pay to the said lessor at the expiration of each month during the continuance of the tenancy hereby created; which tenancy is hereby expressly made determinable at the will of'the said lessor, at the expiration of any month thereof, upon giving to said Lessee a written notice to quit, at least ten days before the end of the month, at the expiration of which the said tenancy is to be terminated. Said house being for the use of an employee of the Lessor, it is further agreed that should the Lessee quit the employ of the Lessor, whether voluntary or by reason of his being discharged, this lease shall terminate and said Lessee shall immediately leave said leased premises, and without notice surrender possession thereof to the Lessor. And immediately upon the determination of said tenancy, it shall be lawful for the said Lessor, without legal process, to re-enter into and upon the said demised premises, and to take and have exclusive possession of the same and every part and parcel thereof. And it is hereby mutually agreed by and between the said Lessor and said Lessee that whenever during the continuance of the said tenancy any part of the rent hereinabove reserved shall be in arrear, such rent in arrear, together with all other •moneys, debts or .accounts,-, if any, which-shall or may be due*725 and owing by the said Lessee to the said Lessor, shall constitute and be a credit upon, and shall be offset against and deducted from any sum or sums which may or shall, at the same time, be due by the said Lessor to the said Lessee, whether for labor or any other account, and every such credit and deduction shall be, as against said lessor, equivalent to the payment of the amount thereof by the said Lessee in cash. And it is further 'agreed that the said lessee shall not sublet' or assign the said demised premises without the consent, in writing, of the said Lessor for that purpose first had and obtained.
“Witness the following signatures this 23 day of Sept. 1912.
“FEDERAL COAL & COKE CO.,
By J. W. Devison, Supt. C. K.
W. H. Skinner. , . 118
X Nick Partine.”
It does not appear why the lease was excluded. It may be that it was because the name of the lessee, appearing thereon, is Nick Partine, instead of .Nick Martiniek, the right name-of the lessee. He, as well as plaintiff, is a Russian and unable to speak English. W. H. Skinner, who was the company’s agent in making the lease, and who signed the same as a witness, testified that Nick Martiniek made his mark on the lease opposite the name Nick Partine, which he, Skinner, says he wrote down as he understood it to be pronounced by Nick Martiniek at the time the lease was signed. Nick Martiniek "himself testified that his check number wás 118, which is the number appearing on the lease, and that he made his mark at the bottom of it. Martiniek’s testimony proves that he made his mark for the purpose of signing the lease, for, he says, “I thought that paper means that I took that house in my name. ” It is also proven that Martiniek paid the rent to defendant company. He says, “They took it in the office every month from my pay.” Nor is it denied that the name, Nick Partine, was intended for Nick Martiniek, who is shown to be the real lessee. The written lease was, therefore, important to prove the contractual relation of the parties, and the right of the defendant company to re-enter and take posses
Plaintiff rented the house from Nick Martinick by oral contract, paid him the rent therefor and boarded and lodged about fourteen of his fellow countrymen, most, if not all, of whom were employes of defendant company. Plaintiff was not himself its employe. None of the occupants of the house having gone to work on the morning of January 14, 1913, the defendant Devison, who was the coal company’s superintendent, went to the house, about eight o’clock A. M., and told the men to go to work. Some of them said they were not going to work that day, as it was Russian New Year day, and a big holiday. There is also evidence tending to show that a number of them were drinking and were intoxicated. Devison told them, if they were not going to work he wanted them to gel out of the house, and immediately discharged them from the services of the company. Nick Martinick was present and was one of the men so discharged. An hour or so later, W. H. Skinner, constable of Marion county, and also a special police officer employed by the coal company, came to the house with teamsters, wagons and teams, and moved all the furniture out of the house and piled it up by the railroad tracks, without covering to protect it from the weather. There is evidence tending to prove that it rained on it and damaged the bedding, and that some of the furniture was roughly handled and broken. Liability for breakage and for damage from exposure to the weather, is apparently admitted, for Mr. .Devison testified that he told Mr. Glumacich, who came to him in behalf of plaintiff and complained that it was raining, or looked like rain, and the goods would be damaged if they were not protected, he would have them put back again, and further says he did have them put back in the house a day or two thereafter. He further admits he promised to replace anything that was broken and restore the goods to the condition they were in when they were taken out of the house. Regardless of his admission, the defendants would bo liable for the damages thus occasioned.
Over their objection, and to which aétion of the court the defendants excepted, the intermediate court permitted plain
It seems to be well settled law that, upon the termination' " of the tenancy, the lessor may re-enter and take possession, without legal process; provided he does so peacably and without violence or breach of the peace. But he has no right to do so forcibly, or to commit an assault upon his tenant. This right is fully sustained by the text-writers and by the decisions, both in England and in this country. 4 Blackstone’s Commentaries, 148; Turner v. Meymott, 1 Bingham 157, 130 Eng. Rep. 64; Rex v. Wilson, 8 T. R. 358, 101 Eng., Rep. 1432; Cockerline v. Fisher, 140 Mich. 95; Commonwealth v. Haley, 4 Allen 318; Jones on Landlord and Tenant, See. 556; 2 McAdam on Landlord and Tenant, (4th ed.), Sec. 275; 2 Tiffany on Landlord and Tenant, See. 216; and 2 Tayr lor on Landlord and Tenant, (9th ed.), Sec. 531. But the right of re-entry, without judicial proceedings, is a qualified and limited one, and should be exercised with much caution, lest it occasion a breach of the peace, in which ease the lessor becomes a trespasser db initio. There is no evidence here’ tending to prove that force or violence, or even threats of violence, were used by the servants and agents of defendant coal company in order to obtain possession of the house, or that any resistance was made by any one then in the house. The tenancy was ended in the manner provided by the terms of the lease which expressly provides that the landlord might thereupon re-enter without judicial process, and .the evi-
. Having already determined the law of the case, it is unnecessary to enter upon a lengthy discussion of the alleged error in refusing instructions asked for by defendants. It suffices to say that defendants’ instructions, Nos. 2, 4, 5, 6, and 7, should have been given. Some of them are even more favorable to plaintiff than the' law warrants, especially No. 6, which would submit to the jury the question, whether or not the relation of landlord and tenant existed between plaintiff and the defendant coal company, on the 14th of January, 1913. There being no contradiction of the testimony, whereby it is'proven the tenancy of Martinick terminated on the morning of that day, in a manner provided by the terms of the lease, the court would have been justified in instructing the jury, as a matter of law, that defendant company had a right to-re-enter immediately, without judicial process; provided it could do so without force or violence and without committing a breach of the peace.
Our conclusion is to reverse the judgment of the circuit court, and likewise the judgment of the intermediate' court Of Marion county,, set aside the verdict of the jury, and remand the case to the circuit, court for further proceedings therein according to law.
Reversed-.