57 Tenn. 22 | Tenn. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants were the tenants of the plaintiff, of a store house in Memphis, under a written lease for the term of one year, commencing on the 1st day
'This action was brought on the 11th of December to recover the rent for the month of November. The plaintiff failing in the action, has appealed in error.
Upon the foregoing facts the court below charged the jury, in substance, that if it appeared from the evidence that there was a new contract for leasing, this contract should govern and not the old lease. That if there was such a new contract of tenancy, and a distinct agreement between thé parties that the tenants were to occupy the premises until they could find another place, then they could quit the premises and terminate -the lease without notice. When the payment of money is offered upon certain terms, the acceptance of the- money without dissenting from the terms is an acceptance of the terms; and in this case, if the jury find from i the evidence that the plaintiff, through his agent, accepted the money paid by the defendants on the 2d day of September, 1867, after the defendants had stated the terms upon which they were willing to pay it, such acceptance of the money is an acceptance of the defendants’ terms.
To portions of this charge, taken alone and in the abstract, there could be no exception; but as a whole, and without qualification, it was not the proper charge
This was deciding the ease, and was not correct. The defendants were notified, before the expiration of the first year, that if they held over after the expiration of their term, they would be required to take the premises for the year at the rent of $5,000 per annum, payable monthly in advance. If they did not desire to accept these terms, it was their duty to have vacated the premises before the 1st of September. If these terms were not accepted, the plaintiff was upon that' day entitled to the possession. And the mere fact that with this notice they continued .to hold possession after that date, in the absence of a different agreement, is sufficient evidence that they accepted the lease for the next year upon the terms proposed by the plaintiff, and the contract thereby became complete./ That, at the time these terms were proposed, they said that the rent was too high, -and did not' then say they would accept the terms, does not change the result. They were notified by the plaintiff that if they held over, he would treat this as an acceptance of his terms. They did hold over, and it is this fact which constitutes their acceptance of the contract. Had no terms been proposed or agreed upon,- a holding over would have been upon the terms of the original contract. This, then, being the state of facts,
On the 2d of September the agent, Goodloe, called on the defendants for $416.66, the rent for the month of September; the defendants tell Goodloe that the rent is too high, that they are willing to take the house by the month at that rate, but by the year they are only willing to give $4,000. Goodloe tells the defendants that he has no authority to change the terms. They pay him the $416.66 for the month „ of September. This he accepts and pays to his principal, notifying him that the defendants are dissatisfied with the terms, but he refuses to make any change.
The Circuit .Judge tells the jury that, under this state of facts, the acceptance of this money was an acceptance of the terms proposed by the defendants.
"We cannot so understand it. This overlooks the fact that the terms of the lease had already been settled, as we have before seen, by the defendants holding over after the .first of September, after being no- . tified of the only terms upon which they could do so. To change this, both parties must assent.
"Was it proper to tell the jury that the acceptance of the rent for September should be construed as an assent to this change? In receiving this money the plaintiff only received what, by the terms of his previous contract, he was .entitled to. The defendants, in paying it, were not making a contract; they only
The facts in the record are few and simple. There are but two witnesses, and no material conflict in their testimony. If the charge was entirely free from exception, the evidence would not sustain the verdict for the defendant.
Reverse the judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.
Subsequently, on the 13 th of November, 1868, Brinkley brought suit against the defendants for the rent of the property for the remainder of the year; and failing also in this suit, has appealed in error, and the two causes have been in this court heard together. The facts proven in this latter case, by the two witnesses examined in the first case, are precisely the same. In addition, in this latter case, two of the defendants are examined in their own behalf— A. M. Smith and L. M. "Walcott.
The only material facts proven by them in addition to the facts proven by the other witnesses, are, that Smith proves that sometime in July he was informed by Goodloe that the rent for the next year would be $5,000, and witness replied, that he would not keep the store, it was too much. Walcott proves, that in
The charge of the Circuit Judge in this case is full, and in most respects very clear and accurate. The jury were told in substance, among other things, that if the plaintiff assented to the proposition of Wal-cott, made in August, this would be binding upon him, and it was not necessary that he should assent openly, — his assent might be presumed from his silence; provided, under the circumstances, good faith required that he should have openly announced his dissent. This was not error. However, it would have been perhaps proper for the court to have told the jury, in the same connection, that in determining
As to the transaction of the 2d of September, the •following proposition was submitted to the jury: “If, after the defendants’ old lease had expired, they continued to occupy, and, upon the plaintiff’s agent applying for the payment of rent, they paid one month’s rent, with the declaration that they paid it with the understanding that they were only to pay so long as they occupied; and the plaintiff’s agent replied, that he had no authority to reduce the rent, but that he would see the plaintiff; and the agent took the rent and paid it over to the plaintiff, and told him the circumstances under which it was paid, — that it was paid by the defendants with the understanding that they would only pay so long as they occupied the premises; and the plaintiff took the rent with this knowledge, he would be bound by this contract; and in this event you will find for the defendants.”
This proposition, without qualification, was not correct. Upon the assumption that Walcott’s proposition to the plaintiff, in August, was assented to by the plaintiff, then the above proposition would not be ob
If the plaintiff by his silence assented to this, there is nothing to show which one of the two propositions he accepted, for they are widely different, so it would have been taken, that if he did assent at all, he assented generally, with the right afterwards to elect which of the two he would accept. It may be doubted whether a general assent to two different propositions, without any indication which of the two is accepted, would constitute a contract. But passing this, and assuming that the plaintiff, by his silence, had agreed upon one or the other of these propositions, — then the defendants were not informed which of the two propositions was accepted; and in this view, when Goodloe called on the 2d of September for the rent, and the defendants paid him $416.86, with the declaration above set forth, and with a knowledge of this the plaintiff accepted it, this acceptance might then be taken as evidence that the plaintiff thereby elected to accept the latter proposition; that is, the defendant might hold at the rate of $5,000 per annum, with the right to quit at pleasure, otherwise he was receiving more than was due; and in this view the proposition of the Circuit Judge was not erroneous. But, as has been said, this is upon the assumption that the silence of the plaintiff in the interview between him and Walcott, was an assent
On the other hand, if this proposition of Walcott was not assented to by the plaintiff, then the proposition under discussion was erronepus. If the interview between the plaintiff and Walcott did not amount to a contract, then, this being out of the way, the fact that the defendants held over after the expiration of their lease, would amount to an acceptance of the terms proposed to them by Goodloe on the 20th of July, as the Circuit Judge correctly told the jury. This being so, the defendants could not, after their liability on this contract had attached, annex to their payment of the rent for September, which they were then bound to pay, the condition that they were only paying it upon the agreement that they were thereafter to hold at the same rate, with liberty to quit at pleasure without notice, and make the acceptance of the money, then due, acceptance of the terms they then dictated. If, before the expiration of the first lease, the defendants had tendered á month’s rent with this condition annexed, and the plaintiff had accepted it, then the acceptance of the money would be an acceptance of their proposition. If the plaintiff did not desire to accept the proposition, it would in that ca.'-e be his duty to return the money. But the error here is in telling the jury that this would be the effect of accepting the money after the termination of the first lease, when the defendant had already become bound to pay the money.
Reverse the judgment.