135 So. 372 | La. | 1931
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *830 On February 28, 1929, plaintiff leased to defendant for 10 years a certain gravel pit, and the pertinent clauses of said lease, so far as they concern this controversy, are as follows: "The lessee shall have the right to mine, extract, remove and take from said premises, all the merchantable and marketable sand, gravel and stone, on, in, or under said premises. The lessee shall pay the lessor for all material mined and shipped from said premises at the rate of 50 cents per carload for all sand and $1.80 per carload for all other material * * * removed and shipped by the lessee."
Defendant has tendered to plaintiff the full amount due for all sand and gravel taken from the premises, less, however, the amount of the severance tax levied by Act No. 140 of 1922, claiming that said tax is due by lessor (plaintiff) and not by the lessee (defendant), by whom, however, it has actually been paid to the state, as required by said act. On the other hand, the plaintiff claims the whole amount of the rent agreed upon without deduction for said taxes, claiming that the severance tax is due solely by the lessee (defendant) and not by the lessor (plaintiff). And accordingly plaintiff prays for judgment for the full amount as aforesaid, and for cancellation of the lease for nonpayment of the rent. *831
This distinction is perfectly clear. Thus, if a landlord lease a plantation in consideration of half the crop to be grown, the landlord and tenant own the crop in common; but, if the landlord lease the plantation in consideration of $1 to be paid him for each bale of cotton grown, then all the cotton belongs exclusively to the tenant, who simply owes the landlord $1 for each bale grown.
And in our opinion the lease herein involved is of the latter kind and not of the former. It seems to us clear that the parties meant that the sand and gravel should become the exclusive property of the defendant as soon as the same were severed from the soil, and that plaintiff should have no ownership therein, but only a claim for his rent. Cf. Logan v. State Gravel Co.,
Accordingly we think that the severance tax was due exclusively by defendant and not by the plaintiff. *832
We do not think he is entitled to it. It is true that ordinarily a lessor may dissolve a lease for failure on the part of the lessee to pay the rent promptly when due. But "the right to dissolve a lease is subject to judicial control according to circumstances." Sieward v. Denechaud,
In the present case defendant has not refused arbitrarily to pay the rent, but was in good faith in refusing to pay more than he thought was due according to the advice of his counsel. We do not think a lease should be canceled under such circumstances. Thus, where a lessor refuses or neglects to make certain repairs the tenant may make them at his own expense and deduct them from the rent. Rev. Civ. Code, art.
The judgment appealed from is in all respects correct, except as to the $105.40 above referred to.