216 Mass. 234 | Mass. | 1913
The plaintiff in this action was the lessee of the basement in Southwick block in the city of Lynn, under a lease for three years, from the then owner, dated June 1, 1907. The defendant succeeded to the reversion by force of a deed dated July 8, 1907. Under an earlier lease the plaintiff had installed in the basement four bowling alleys (which were his property), and the 1907 lease provided "that there shall be no forfeiture or breach of this lease for less than three months arrears of rent and then only on thirty days notice in writing to the lessee and mortgage[e] declaring a forfeiture and that any time before the expiration of said 30 days before a forfeiture or breach shall occur upon paying up the arrears the lessee or a purchase[r] from him or the mortgagee or his assigns may remove the bowling alleys in said basement making such openings in the building as may be necessary but replacing such opening in as good a condition as it was before the removal.” On June 3, 1908, the plaintiff’s rent for three months (amounting to $58.98) being unpaid, the defendant gave the plaintiff notice of a forfeiture of the lease, stating in it the provisions of the above thirty days’ notice quoted above. According to the plaintiff’s evidence the plaintiff thereupon called upon the defendant and at this interview the defendant told him that he was going to remodel and make improvements in the basement which would involve giving up one of the alleys; that the other three would not be removed and would be protected while the work was going on, and "that the rent question was to remain and be taken care of when a new lease was drawn up;” further, the defendant told him that
The plaintiff had a verdict, and the case is here on a question
On this evidence it was for the jury to decide whether on the one hand it was the intention of the parties in June, 1908, that the plaintiff should then surrender all rights under the 1907 lease, including his right to remove the four alleys and their sub-structurc, (found by the auditor
The defendant offered in evidence a letter to the plaintiff which he offered to prove was handed to the plaintiff’s attorneys when the lease executed by him was handed to them. This letter of the defendant stated that the alleys had been forfeited to him and that he would sell them to the plaintiff on certain terms therein stated. Although both the plaintiff and his attorneys denied having received the letter the jury could have found that they did. The letter was excluded by the judge and an exception was taken. The only ground on which this self-serving letter of the defendant could have been competent was that the.plaintiff had admitted the truth of the statements contained in it by keeping the letter and remaining silent. It is settled that failure to
Exceptions overruled.
The presiding judge was Irwin, J. The rulings asked for by the defendant were as follows:
“9. On all the evidence the plaintiff is not entitled to recover on count 3 in his amended declaration [for an alleged conversion].”
“13. The evidence in the case relative to the surrender of the key and the conversations about the same are not enough to constitute a waiver of the notice of June 3.”
“17. If the plaintiff Callahan surrendered his key to Goldman in June, 1908, in the absence of an agreement to 'the contrary this was a surrender of his tenancy and a forfeiture of the alleys.”
“20. If the jury finds the tenancy of Callahan was not terminated by the expiration of thirty days from the notice, or by abandonment upon the surrender of the key, then the tenancy terminated on or before the commencement of this suit by the plaintiff, and his right to remove the alleys thereupon terminated, and Callahan cannot recover therefor.”
Samuel H. Hollis, Esquire.