107 Wash. 639 | Wash. | 1919
This action was brought against the principal and the sureties upon a bond for the faithful performance of a lease, to recover damages on account of the eviction of the plaintiff from leased premises. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for twelve hundred dollars. Mr. Atwood, one of the sureties upon the bond, has appealed from that judgment.
The facts are not disputed. They are as follows: In the year 1912, John J. Ferguson was the owner of a building known as the Brooklyn Building, located on the southeast corner of Second avenue and University street, in the city of Seattle. On December 4th of that year, he leased this building to Albert E. Gfrafke for a period of fifteen years. Thereafter the lease was assigned by Mr. Gfrafke to the Richmond-Gfrafke Company, a corporation. The portion of the premises on the first floor on University street was occupied by a drug store operated by this corporation. A space fronting’ approximately ten and one-half feet on Second avenue, adjoining the drug store on the south, was used and occupied as a cigar store. The cigar store was twenty-four feet deep. On June 13, 1916, the Richmond-Grrafke Company sublet to the respondent that portion of the premises called the cigar store. The sublease provided that the lessor would, at its own
“That, so long.as said lessee shall keep and perform his covenants and agreements herein contained on his part to be kept and performed, the said lessee shall be kept in quiet and peaceful possession of said leased premises against the claims and demands of all persons whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same or any part thereof. ’ ’
At the time of the execution of this lease, the Richmond-Grafke Company, as principal, and defendants Chase, Sliter and Atwood, as sureties, executed a bond to the respondent in the penal sum of two thousand two hundred dollars ($2,200), conditioned that, if the lessor should fail to perform any of the covenants of the lease, the sureties would indemnify the lessee for any and all damages which he might sustain by reason of such breach of covenant.
Upon the execution of this lease, respondent remodeled this cigar store and conducted the same, paying the rental provided for in the lease, namely, two hundred dollars per month, to the Richmond-Grafke Company. Two hundred dollars was also paid for the last month that the lease was to run. The duration of the lease was for more than six years. In the year 1916, after the death of Mr. Ferguson, the owner of the fee, the Richmond-Grafke Company became financially embarrassed and was delinquent in its rental for the premises. Thereupon it entered into an agreement
Appellant contends, first, that he was released as a surety upon the bond because the original lease was surrendered by the principal, Richmond-Grafke Company, to the Ferguson estate, and because the respondent thereafter paid the rent to persons who acquired the interest of the Richmond-Grafke Company in the premises. We think it is plain from the facts that the sureties upon this bond were obligated with the principal to retain the respondent in the peaceful and quiet possession of the premises as they were leased. The fact that the Richmond-Grafke Company did not maintain its original lease, but surrendered the same, did not change the relation of the Richmond-Grafke Company or the sureties to the respondent. The respondent was permitted to remain in the premises by virtue of its lease, and paid its rent to the RichmondGrafke Company during all the time that company had possession, and thereafter paid the rent to those who acquired the interest of the Richmond-Grafke Company in the premises. It is plain, therefore, that, as long as the respondent remained in possession, it remained there under the terms of the sublease executed by the Richmond-Grafke Company. It was through no fault of the respondent that the RichmondGrafke Company did not remain in possession of the premises until the expiration of the original lease. So far as the record shows, the respondent had no voice in changing the terms of the original dominant lease, or in the assignment thereof to the different persons who acquired the interest of the Richmond-Grafke Company in that lease. The respondent was not in
‘ ‘ The interest of an under-lessee cannot be defeated by the mesne lessee’s surrendering his estate in the premises to the lessor.
“ ‘When, before a surrender, third persons have acquired interests in the demised premises, a surrender by the lessee cannot affect their rights; as to them the surrender operates only as a grant subject to their rights, and the interest surrendered is considered as continuing to exist so far as is necessary to preserve their rights. ’ ’ ’
In support of this rule, a number of authorities are there cited. We think there can be no doubt that the sureties, along with the principal, were bound to maintain the sublease executed by the Richmond-Grafke Company to the respondent.
It is next contended that there was no eviction of the respondent from the premises. The lease from the Richmond-Gfrafke Company to the respondent provides that the lessor should, at its own expense, cut back the south display window of the drug store adjoining the demised premises four and one-half feet, and that the space between the display window on the demised premises and the northerly drug store display window, for a depth of four and one-half feet back from the sidewalk line, should remain open and unobstructed for the joint benefit of the lessor and the lessee. After the Leudan Company had acquired the interest of the Richmond-Gfrafke Company in the
“It is a well established rule that actual force is not necessary to effect an eviction in law, but that any interference by the landlord with the full and substantial enjoyment by the tenant of the thing leased amounts to an eviction.”
We are satisfied, therefore, that there was an actual eviction and that respondent was entitled to recover.
It is next contended by the appellant that because the evidence showed that respondent had permitted dice shaking for cigars upon the premises, which was in violation of law, respondent thereby forfeited its lease. It is sufficient to say upon this question that respondent was not evicted for that reason. If respondent had been evicted for that reason it could not have recovered from the appellant. Appellant or the owner of the dominant estate apparently made no objection to this sort of gambling and respondent was not evicted for that reason, but was evicted because the dominant tenant changed the building in violation of the terms of the lease and desired respondent’s removal from the premises. The appellant cannot now
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Parker, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.