City Council of Charleston v. Terry Fish Co.

102 S.E. 13 | S.C. | 1920

January 26, 1920. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Proceeding by the city of Charleston under section 3509 of the Code of Laws to eject the Terry Fish Company from premises aforetime let to it by the city. The proceeding was instituted before a magistrate, who on June 10, notified the defendant to show cause before the Civil and Criminal Court of Charleston, and that Court granted the remedy. On appeal to the Circuit Court the judgment of the trial Court was affirmed. Now the fish company appeals here from the judgment of the Circuit Court.

The subject matter in issue is the foot of Market street, hitherto for long years used by fishermen as a place to land their catch; and for years lately occupied by the defendant as a vendor of fish.

The appellant has consolidated the 11 exceptions made into four grounds. Let so much be reported at folios 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18 of the appellant's brief, and in lieu of the exceptions. These four grounds we now consider in what is the consecutive order of them.

The jurisdiction of the Court of trial is challenged, and that because the proceeding involves title to land. And that affirmation, that title to land is involved, rests on another contention, to wit, that an examination of an ancient deed from Pinckney to the city would disclose the fact that the city's title is of such a character that the city has not the legal right she now asserts. The trial Court ruled that in a proceeding by a landlord to eject his tenant the tenant could not question the landlord's title. The appellant is not understood to question the rule of law that generally a tenant in possession is estopped to deny the title of his then landlord, when the landlord shall proceed to eject the tenant. The appellant's present contention is that a tenant so situated may prove, in order to defeat ejectment, that his landlord's *251 title has expired or been terminated by operation of law. It is true the rule of law stated above is not absolute under all circumstances. The appellant has cited a recent case to that effect from the Federal Supreme Court (Johnson v.Riddle, 240 U.S. 480, 36 Sup. Ct. 393, 60 L.Ed. 752), and an old case of our own Court is to the same effect (Givensv. Mullinax, 4 Rich, 590, 55 Am. Dec. 706), and to like effect is Tant v. Guess, 37 S.C. 504, 16 S.E. 472. But the Pinckney deed is not in the "case," and is, therefore, not before us for construction; and all we know about it is what transpired when Mr. Bryan (then attorney for Terry and now deceased) was cross-examining one Dingle, who styled himself "Secretary of the Dock Commission." This is the record of that circumstance:

"Q. Do you happen to know the property of the market, from Meeting street the whole way, what it is known in the city; do you know where it comes from? A. I cannot tell where it comes from? By Mr. Rivers: I object to that because this is a question of landlord and tenant. The question is, Is the city council of Charleston the landlord and the Terry Fish Company the tenant? That is the only question in this branch of the case. I submit it is absolutely incompetent, anything in relation to the title of this property, who it came from and where it comes from. By Mr. Bryan: My point is: First, this property as I expect to prove, is a trust, and the beneficiary is in possession under the terms of the trust. The city holds it in trust, and cannot turn defendant out. I make another proposition, the act of the trustee in this case is a breach of trust, and has no title under the trust deed to turn defendant out. By the Court: Under these pleadings the only question, under section 3509 of the Code, is the right to possession of this property as between the landlord and the tenant, if such a relation is proved between the parties in these proceedings, and, therefore, all other testimony along any other lines will be stricken out; that is the position of the Court. By Mr. Bryan: Excepts to the ruling; *252 the object of the testimony offered is to prove: (1) That the property in question is held as trustee for the use of dealers in fish; (2) that Terry Fish Company is such a dealer in possession under the trust; (3) that the city has committed a breach of trust, and title is not any longer in the city, and by operation of law the title is divested, and under both of these grounds the doctrine that the tenant is estopped to deny the title of the landlord does not apply."

And the present attorney for Terry says in his brief that "The deed would have shown that the property occupied by the Terry Fish Company was deeded to the city council of Charleston to use for the purpose of a public market, and that the city council, in claiming to take this property out of the hands of the board of market commissioners who have charge of the public market of the city of Charleston, and putting it into the hands of the dock commission, and in endeavoring to eject the Terry Fish Company, was acting in violation of the terms of the trust deed."

The same counsel also says: "That while counsel for the city made an objection that the proper notice had not been given to him that the deed would be produced, yet the real reason why the deed was excluded was upon the ground that this was a proceeding between landlord and tenant, and that the tenant could not dispute the title of its landlord."

Granting that the trust deed has been correctly recited by the appellant's counsel, the terms of it so recited do not negative the right which the city now asserts, for there is no testimony tending to show that the city intends to divert the wharf from the purposes of a public market. And as the deed is not before us, we are limited in the construction of it to what counsel for the defendant has said about it. There is, therefore, no circumstance to exempt the instant cause from the operation of the general rule of law before stated, if Terry was tenant of the city.

We revert now in sequence to the first ground, that the notice to quit ought to have run in the name of the commissioners *253 of the market or the dock commission, and not in the name of the city. The contention of the appellant is that the dock commission, a creation of statute law, and not the city, was landlord. But Mr. Bryan contended at the trial: "That the dock commission is not the landlord, or the representative of the landlord, in this matter." And Mr. Terry testified: "I stand under this contract with Mayor Rhett; he being the landlord and I being the tenant. I claimed the wharf needed repairs and charged it to the rent account. I have been there as tenant, first of the Consolidated Company and afterwards as tenant of the city council of Charleston, a supposed case of tenancy. I paid rent."

It is, therefore, perfectly manifest that the city is landlord and Terry is tenant under it.

Finally, it is contended by the appellant that Terry was not formally notified by the city three months before January 1, 1918 (the time set for the tenant to quit), that the premises should be vacated on that day. About that matter the appellant's counsel says: "There is, of course, no doubt that Terry had been notified that possession of the property occupied by him was desired, but the point we make is that, if the city council was the landlord, then Terry never received any three months' notice from such landlord that it was desired to terminate the tenancy. And this was necessary before he could be ejected."

Counsel for the city admitted at the bar that the tenant was entitled to have three months' notice to quit. The testimony is plain to the effect that on July 2, 1917, Dingle, who was both secretary of the dock commission and city engineer sent the defendant a letter of notification "that the lease of the city property, east end of Market street, shall terminate January 1, 1918. And on June 27, 1917, Mr. Barbot, who was clerk of the city council, sent the Terry Fish Company a letter, advising it "that the lease of the city property at the foot of Market street shall terminate January 1, 1918." *254 And on July 10, 1917, in a regular meeting of the city council, the action of the dock commission first above stated was approved by the council. And on September 5, 1917, the Terry Fish Company acknowledged in a letter to the chairman of the market commissioners that it had received "a notice from the ways and means committee that we are to vacate our present place of business on January 1, 1918."

The judgment below is affirmed.