HENRY BLACK, Respondent, v. ROBERT S. KNIGHT et al., Defendants; HENRIETTA C. KNIGHT, Appellant.
S. F. No. 7212
In Bank. Supreme Court of California
December 14, 1917
Rehearing denied January 10, 1918
176 Cal. 722
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Henshaw, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
LEASE—EVICTION—JUDGMENT FOR UNLAWFUL DETAINER—EFFECT OF REVERSAL—ACTION FOR DAMAGES.—Where a landlord, without malice, prosecutes an unlawful detainer action to a judgment, which, by its terms, requires the tenant to deliver possession of the premises, and the tenant thereupon surrenders the possession without the issuance of process, and the judgment is afterward reversed on appeal, the tenant is not entitled to maintain an action for damages for an eviction.
ID.—COVENANT FOR QUIET ENJOYMENT—ACTS CONSTITUTING BREACH.—The covenant for quiet enjoyment goes only to the possession, and, to constitute a violation, there must be some act of molestation affecting to his prejudice the possession of the covenantee.
ID.—COVENANT FOR QUIET ENJOYMENT—RIGHT OF LANDLORD.—So long as there is no disturbance of the tenant‘s beneficial enjoyment of the premises caused thereby, the right of a landlord to prosecute, in good faith and without malice, an action for the purpose of determining the question whether the tenant has forfeited his term by violation of some covenant of the lease, without making himself amenable to the tenant in damages, cannot be disputed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Francisco, and from an order denying a new trial. Jas. M. Troutt, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Arthur H. Barendt, for Respondent.
ANGELLOTTI, C. J.—This is an action for damages for the alleged unlawful eviction of plaintiff by his landlord from premises held and occupied by him as a tenant under a lease. Judgment was given for the sum of $10,449, and the appeal is from such judgment and from an order denying a motion for a new trial. All but $586 of the amount awarded was on account of the value of the unexpired term of the lease (fixed at $11,544), such $586 being for expense and damage incurred in defending the unlawful detainer action.
The only alleged eviction found was the prosecution by the landlord to judgment in the superior court of an unlawful detainer proceeding on account of the alleged violation by the tenant of a covenant of the lease, the judgment entered therein declaring the lease canceled and forfeited, and adjudging that the tenant “restore” and the landlord “have” possession of the demised premises, and that the landlord recover from the tenant two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars damages, two hundred dollars attorney fees, and thirty dollars costs. The tenant appealed from the judgment, staying by bond the enforcement of the judgment pending appeal in so far as the money recovery was concerned, but not seeking any stay as to the portion of the judgment relative to possession of the demised premises. In the complaint it was alleged that by the judgment the tenant was required to “and did surrender possession of said premises” to the landlord. By the answer it was denied that “the tenant was obliged to surrender” possession of the premises, “or that he was deprived of the possession thereof by either of defendants.” It was further alleged that without asking for any stay, “and before the issuance of any writ of execution or assistance whatever,” the tenant “abandoned the possession of the said premises.” The trial court found simply that the tenant “in compliance with said judgment was required to and did surrender possession of said demised premises” to the landlord. This finding is assailed as being without sufficient support in the evidence. There was no evidence whatever as to the circumstances attending the change of
The theory upon which this judgment is sought to be sustained is that the prosecution by the landlord of the unlawful detainer action to a judgment in his favor, which judgment, by its terms, required the tenant to deliver possession to the landlord, entitled the tenant to treat the conduct of the landlord as a breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment and an unlawful eviction, with the result that not only could he regard the lease upon voluntary surrender of possession, as at an end and himself exempt from liability for further rent, etc., thereunder, but also treating the lease as still in force, recover as damages the value of the unexpired term thereunder, in the event that he succeeded on his appeal from the judgment.
Consideration of the authorities satisfies us that such a theory finds no substantial support therein. It may be assumed purely for the purposes of this decision that if the tenant is actually ousted from possession under process issued upon such a judgment, he may treat such ouster as a breach of the implied covenant for quiet enjoyment, and recover his damages in the event of a reversal of the judgment. Certain states have statutes providing for the recovery of such
It is elementary that the covenant for quiet enjoyment goes only to the possession, and that to constitute a violation thereof, as said in Levitzky v. Canning, 33 Cal. 299, “there must be some act of molestation, affecting, to his prejudice, the possession of the covenantee.” It is true that a complete physical ouster of the tenant is not always essential to an eviction, and it has often been declared that any wrongful act of the landlord which directly results in depriving the tenant of the full beneficial enjoyment of the premises is an eviction. In Levitzky v. Canning, supra, where the tenant was never actually ousted from or abandoned the premises, the slandering of the tenant‘s possession, the giving out and pretending publicly that the tenant had no right to possession, and the bringing of two actions at law to recover possession from the tenant and his subtenants under the pretense that the lease had expired (one of which actions was dismissed by the landlord, and the other of which resulted in judgment for the tenant), with the result that the subtenants quit the premises by reason of their doubts caused thereby as to the lawfulness of the tenant‘s possession, leaving them vacant, and he was unable to let to other parties, were held to disturb and interrupt the possession of the tenant to his injury, in violation of the covenant for quiet enjoyment, to the same extent as if he had taken plaintiff‘s tenants by the shoulders and forcibly ejected them. But that there must be an actual deprivation of the beneficial enjoyment of the premises to constitute an eviction was emphati-
So long certainly as there is no disturbance of the tenant‘s beneficial enjoyment of the premises caused thereby, the right of a landlord, acting in perfect good faith and without malice, to prosecute an action in the courts for the purpose of obtaining a determination of the question whether the tenant has not forfeited his term because of violation of some covenant of the lease, without making himself amenable to the tenant in damages, cannot well be disputed. Indeed, there is much authority which goes further in favor of the landlord‘s rights in this respect. It is substantially said in 2 Tiffany on Landlord and Tenant, section 289, that the general rule is that in order to make one liable for the institution of a civil suit, it must have been with malice and without probable cause, and that, under this rule, a landlord would not be liable to his tenant for damage to the latter arising from his wrongful institution of a summary proceeding to recover possession, unless it was instituted maliciously and without probable cause. (See, also, Porter v. Johnson, 96 Ga. 145, [23 S. E. 123]; Hegan-Mantel Co. v. Cook‘s Admr.
Decisions to the effect that the establishment of a title paramount to that of the landlord by decree of a court of competent jurisdiction warrants the tenant in yielding possession to the true owner, without waiting to be dispossessed under a writ of possession, and in treating the judgment as an eviction by title paramount are, of course, not in point. In Mack v. Patchin, 29 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 20, Id., 42 N. Y. 167, [1 Am. Rep. 506], a case strongly relied on by plaintiff, the tenant was compelled to yield possession by virtue of a writ of assistance issued in foreclosure of mortgage proceedings, the mortgage being prior in right to his interest as lessee. The writ had been issued and placed in the hands of the sheriff, who “by virtue of it demanded the possession of” the tenant. It appeared further that the landlord had expedited, if he did not instigate, the foreclosure of the mortgage, and was a joint purchaser on the mortgage sale, and a joint petitioner, with the other purchaser, for the writ of assistance. In short, he had apparently actually connived, for his own benefit, in having the tenant dispossessed by paramount title.
From what we have said it necessarily follows that, upon the record before us, the recovery against appellant cannot be sustained in whole or in part. It appears unnecessary to consider other points made by her for a reversal.
The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Sloss, J., Victor E. Shaw, J., pro tem., Lawlor, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
