83 S.W.2d 1095 | Tex. App. | 1935
Appellee held a five-year lease from appellant, terminating on April 1, 1929, with an option to renew for an additional five years. In January, 1929, Ladd, president of appellee, approached Heston, Fort Worth manager for appellant, which is a Missouri corporation with many retail stores scattered through various states, and told him appellee would not claim the tenancy under the option, and in March offered to Heston to rent from month to month at the same price. To this Heston agreed, and appellee remained in possession for more than a year, finally vacating.
The issue made by appellant on the merits is the authority of Heston, for it contends that Heston was without authority, and that the holding over by appellee is an election to take for five years under the option.
Appellee leased only a part of the second floor of the building, the first floor of which was occupied by appellant in the conduct of its retail paint store. When appellee rented same in 1924, the negotiations were conducted and terms agreed with Heston's predecessor local manager, but the final written lease was consummated by appellant's "land man." The rent was paid monthly as per the terms of the lease to Heston, as was also the monthly rental after April 1, 1929.
The jury found that Heston had actual and apparent authority to make the lease. Apparent authority is that which an agent appears to have by the reasonable deductions to be drawn from his doing of that which he actually has authority to do. Thompson v. Keys (Tex.Civ.App.)
Apparent authority must be relied upon and believed under circumstances which justify such reliance. In view of the evidence that the original lease to appellee was negotiated for by the local store manager of appellant, but same was actually signed and delivered by an especial representative of appellant, we believe an issue of fact is made as to whether Ladd, the president of appellee, was justified in believing that Heston had authority to make a month to month contract with him for the premises. This issue has been resolved by the jury in favor of appellee, but in the argument to the jury on that issue counsel for appellee took a slip of paper from his pocket and testified to the jury that it was a certain dictionary's definition of "manager." Over the objection of counsel he was permitted to read the same to the jury. This was prejudicial error. Dictionaries are supposed to record meanings already established for words. Whether a particular dictionary does so with reference to a particular word is a question which scholars have found rich field for controversy, sometimes acrid. In the first place, counsel makes an unsworn witness of himself to testify that such definition is in any dictionary. Secondly, if a word has a meaning as used in the trial different from its general meaning, the court will define it in his charge; if it is used in its general sense, the jury is presumed to know it, and cannot be instructed by counsel as to what somebody else thinks it means, even though that other be an editor. Corpus Christi St.
Interurban R. Co. v. Kjellberg (Tex.Civ.App.)
Likewise, we agree with appellant that the argument of counsel that "this great chain store is here in court jumping on a local man" was improper argument, and that the trial court should have sustained appellant's objection thereto and should, in appropriate language, have relieved the jury's mind, as far as he could, of any such appeal to passion. While we would have some hesitancy in reversing this cause if this were the only error, it is no justification to say the record shows the appellant to be a chain store, and that the president of appellee is a "local man." Evidence is ofttimes admissible for one purpose and not proper to be used for another.
When Ladd gave Heston notice that appellee would not continue as tenant under the option for the extending five years, he was not acting by any requirement to that effect in the lease, and hence those decisions, which hold that an agent with authority to collect money does not ipso facto have authority to surrender rights of the principal in connection with the money which such agent has authority to collect, such as Russell v. Brooks (Tex.Civ.App.)
Now in its last analysis the extension of a lease by holding over under an option to extend is one of intention — an intention which the law implies from an unqualified holding over. Shipman v. Mitchell,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.