59 So. 106 | La. | 1912
On August 2, 1909, plaintiff leased to defendant the premises 344-46 Dryades street, in this city, for a term to begin on the 1st day of October, 1909, and end on the last day of September, 1912, at a rental of $80 per month for the first two years, and $90 per month for the third year, for which the lessee furnished his notes, payable at the end of each month.
The lease stipulated that, should the lessee fail to pay any one of the notes punctually at maturity, all of the notes should become due and exigible, without the necessity of any putting in default; and that, in case of suit on the notes, the lessee should pay an additional 10 per cent, on the amount of the notes.
The plaintiff alleges that the two notes falling due on the last day of September and October, 1910, are due and unpaid, notwithstanding amicable demand, and prays judgment for the aggregate amount of the notes, plus 10 per cent., and has obtained a provisional seizure.
The defense is that a course of business
The alleged arrangement by which the rent was to be payable out of the sums to become due defendant by the Orleans Undertaking Company is not proved, since it is testified to only by the defendant, and is denied by plaintiff. Defendant but faintly, if at all, denies that he was constantly in default on his rent, and was being pressed by plaintiff. Thus:
“Q. Was not Mr. Briede around your place pretty nearly every day, off and on?
“A. 1-Ie Was around there pretty'nearly every day.
“Q. Was he constantly after you to pay your rent?
“A. I did not see him around' my place before the seizure took place.”
Elsewhere he says that plaintiff was to take the surrey at $90 “on a compromise of the rent.”
To such a situation the doctrine of the ease of Standard Brewing Co. v. Anderson, 121 La. 935, 46 South. 926, 15 Ann. Cas. 251, is totally inapplicable. That doctrine can obtain only where the tenant is ready to pay the rent promptly and needs no indulgence, but delays in paying simply because he is under the impression, produced by the lessor’s past conduct, that it is a matter of no moment whether the payments be made promptly or a few days late.
A tender, to be effective, must include the whole amount due. La Molasses Co. v. Le Sassier, 52 La. Ann. 2070, 28 South. 217. In the present, case, the entire amount of the rent, together with ten per cent, thereon, and
The judgment appealed from is set aside, and it is now ordered, adjudged, and decreed that plaintiff, Albert Briede, have judgment against the defendant, Louis Babst, for the sum of $2,200, with 8 per cent, per annum interest on $80 thereof from September 1, 1910, and like interest on $80 thereof from October 1, 1910, and like interest on the balance thereof from the date of the filing of this suit, October 18, 1910, plus 10 per cent, upon the said amount in capital and interest, and that defendant pay the costs of this suit, and that the provisional seizure herein be maintained, and the property provisionally seized be sold to satisfy fhis judgment.