This was an action for rent by Robinson against Bartlett. The former recovered judgment, and the case is submitted to this court on agreed printed abstracts. The first question presented is whether the petition states a cause of action. It alleges that on the 9th day of March, 1895, plaintiff by oral agreement leased to defendant certain premises for a term beginning on said day, defendant promising to pay therefor the sum of $20 per week; that on said day, under said contract, defendant took possession and remained in possession until July 6, a period of seventeen weeks, whereby he became indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $310, all of which remains unpaid and for which plaintiff prays judgment. The argument against the sufficiency of this petition is that it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to allege either that defendant received possession frojn the plaintiff or that it was plaintiff’s land. We think the averments were sufficient. The action was on a
It is next urged that the plaintiff failed to show, by-proof, a right to recover. The testimony on behalf of the plaintiff tended to show that prior to the making of the lease the premises had been in the possession of a receiver, who had leased the same to defendant, or at least that defendant had been occupying them. The defendant was sheriff and he had levied one or more writs on certain goods. His occupancy was by storing the goods on the premises. On the 9th of March, 1895, the receiver delivered at least constructive possession to plaintiff’s agent, who then told the sheriff he must rent of plaintiff and pay rent to him or vacate the premises, and further, that plaintiff would not look to suitors for whom the sheriff was acting, but must have his personal promise to pay, and that defendant thereafter promised and agreed to pay rent at the rate alleged in the petition, and held possession until July 6. As we understand the position of defendant, it is that the proof failed because it showed that defendant had entered under a receiver and did not show any order of court terminating the receiver’s authority. This would be immaterial under the other evidence. If the receiver surrendered to the plaintiff and the receiver’s tenant attorned to the plaintiff, as the evidence tends to show that he did, the rightfulness of the receiver’s acts or of plaintiff’s possession or claim to the property is not involved. The defendant became plaintiff’s tenant and is estopped to deny his title.
The remaining assignments go to the rulings on the evidence. Many of these are governed by the same considerations as the points already decided, and as the rulings were in accordance with the principles already
Affirmed.
