54 Ind. App. 658 | Ind. | 1913
Appellants being the owners of certain farm lands in Marion County, Indiana, leased the same to appellee on February 13, 1908, for the term of one year from March 1, 1908. The lease contained among other provisions the following: “Said lessee agrees to pay as rent for said premises the sum of one thousand dollars per annum, payable in equal quarterly installments in advance. It is also agreed that said lessors reserve the right and privilege to conduct, maintain and operate tracks across the above described property or any part thereof at any time during the term hereof upon thirty days written notice to said lessee. It is further agreed that in event said lessors find it necessary, expedient or desirable to conduct, maintain and operate track or tracks upon and across the premises above described or any part thereof said lessee shall have no recourse against said lessors for damages or losses by reason thereof, but said lessors shall and do hereby agree to refund to said lessee in full compensation and satisfaction of all claims for such damages or injury if any to said crops, if any such value exists, and if not the actual value of the labor and seed necessary to have prepared the ground, done the sowing or planting, and the cultivation which may have been done. It is further agreed that if said lessee shall perform his obligations under this lease he shall quietly have and enjoy said premises during said term free from molestation by said lessors”, etc. When the lease was executed, another tenant was in possession, whose tenancy terminated on the same day appellee’s lease com
The complaint is in three paragraphs. The first, after averring the execution of the lease, contains allegations showing that plaintiff had performed all the acts required of him by the terms of his lease, but that defendants had failed to give possession of the premises until March 23, twenty-three days after the date when he was entitled to the full possession of the farm and that he was damaged thereby in the sum of $2,000. The second paragraph is in all essential respects similar to the first, except that this paragraph contains a detailed statement of the particular damages sustained by the plaintiff on account of the delay in obtaining possession of the land, and the third, in addition to the necessary averments found in the first paragraph, charges that while plaintiff was in possession of the lands under his lease, the defendants committed certain acts of trespass on the land to his damage.
The first paragraph of answer was a general denial, the second an affirmative answer, which, omitting the formal parts, is as follows: “The defendants for a second paragraph of answer to the first and second paragraphs of complaint say that the plaintiff had full knowledge of all the wrongs and acts alleged in said paragraphs of complaint to have been done by the defendants and after he had, as he alleges, been kept out of the possession of the same from March 1, 1908, to March 23, 1908, inclusive, he then decided to take possession of said real estate under and by virtue of the terms of the lease set up in his complaint and did so take possession of it and did occupy, use and enjoy his rights in and to said real estate and did all this under and by virtue of his rights under said lease and .did so use and occupy said
The errors relied upon for reversal are in sustaining the demurrer to appellants’ second paragraph of answer, and in overruling their motion for new trial, upon the grounds that 'the verdict of the jury is contrary to law and is not sustained by sufficient evidence, that the damages assessed are excessive, and that the court erred in giving to the jury instructions Nos. 1 to 13, and in refusing to give appellants’ requested instructions Nos. 1 to 6.
Appellee introduced evidence to show that the previous tenant, during the period of his holding over, had pastured the fields and hauled over them when they were wet and muddy, and had thus put them into such a physical condition that the land could not be properly prepared for planting, and eould not be properly cultivated, that because of such condition, he obtained a very poor stand of corn, and a very poor crop; also that the tenant’s hogs had rooted up the grass in the pasture during this period, and had thus practically rendered the pasture worthless for the summer; also that because he was prevented from beginning work on the land during the time from March 1 to March 23, he was unable to get all his crops planted, and was forced to let some of the land remain idle, and some of the crops planted were so late that the yield was greatly lessened; also that because of the late start in farming operations occasioned by his being kept out of possession, he was compelled to purchase certain new farming implements; that he paid out for rent of a house and three acres of land for twenty-three days $220; that during the summer appellants with teams and plows entered upon the land and committed a trespass. The trial court permitted witnesses acquainted with the farm to testify concerning the normal production of the land in the past, the average cost of production of crops such as appellee planted, and the average yield and
The lessee cannot recover as damages the loss of profits or the value of the crops which he might have raised if he had obtained possession at the beginning of the term, which seems to have been taken as the basis of damages below.
So much of the evidence objected to as tends to show the rental value of the premises from the time appellee went into possession until the end of the term, together with the amount which appellee was required to pay as a result of the default on appellants’ part was properly received. Most of the evidence objected to was admitted on the theory that
The instructions asked by appellant on the subject of waiver were properly refused, as appears from the discussion of the same question when the sufficiency of the answer was considered. The incorrectness of the tendered instructions to the effect that it was the duty of appellee to eject the former tenant holding over and not that of appellant also appears in the discussion of the same subject-matter in an earlier part of the opinion. It is apparent from the
Note.—Reported in 103 N. E. 354. See, also, under (1) 24 Cyc. 1050; (2) 24 Cyc. 1051; (3) 24 Cyc. 1052; (5) 24 Cyc. Anno. 1052. As to measure of damages when lessee is evicted or prevented from taking possession, see 100 Am. Dec. 428. As to covenants implied on part of landlord, see 32 Am. Dec. 355; 43 Am. Rep. 227. As to whether the acceptance of premises by lessee after contract time constitutes waiver of damages for failure of lessor to put him in possession, see 9 D. R. A. (N. S.) 1131. On the implied duty of lessor to put lessee in possession of leased premises, see 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1127, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 239; 14 Ann. Cas. 402.