70 Neb. 100 | Neb. | 1903
On May 5, 1902, the Philadelphia Mortgage & Trust Company, defendant in error, filed in the county court of Douglas county its complaint in an action of detention brought to recover possession of certain premises owned by it in the city of Omaha, plaintiffs in error, who were tenants thereon, being made defendants. The complaint was in the ordinary form, alleging ownership, the possession of the defendants at an agreed rental of $15 a month, payable on the 12th of each month, their default from March 12, 1901, to April 12, 1902, service of notice to quit and demand for possession, with prayer for judgment. There was judgment for defendant in error, and the cause was removed to the district court, where there Avas a trial to the court and a jury. After hearing the evidence, the court, on motion of defendant in error, instructed the jury to return a verdict for it, and a motion for a new trial being overruled, the cause is presented to this court for review.
It is shown by the record that plaintiffs in error originally went into possession of the premises under a lease dated October 20,1899, Avhich provided for a rental of $15, payable monthly in advance on the 12th day of each month. The lease contained a provision that in default of payment of rent in accordance with the terms of the lease, it should be lawful for the lessor or his agent, without
It is made to appear that, at the time the motion for a new trial was ruled on by the trial court, plaintiffs in error were not present in court either in person or by attorney, and that no notice was served on them as to the time when the motion would come on for hearing, in seeming contravention of sections 2 and 8 of the rules of the district court for Douglas county, which are made a part of this bill of exceptions, providing for one day’s notice in writing of the hearing of a motion. Counsel for plaintiffs in error contend that in this action of the trial court then' is such error as requires the reversal of the judgment without further inquiry into the merits of the case made. On the contrary, we think the judgment can not be reversed for this reason alone. The enactment and enforcement of rules for the conduct of business is an inherent power of the courts of general jurisdiction (Andres v. Kridler, 49 Neb. 535), and while doubtless the rules referred to are of great importance and convenience to litigants and counsel, we do not think that their strict observance in acting upon a motion for a new trial is an essential to the court’s jurisdiction. The purpose of a motion for a new trial, is to give the trial court an opportunity to review its own proceedings and to correct its own errors. If the trial court, which has heard the evidence, chooses to rule on the motion without the presence of the applicant, or the assistance that may be rendered in argument of the motion, it would seem that complete justice could be done by presenting the cause on error to this court, where error in the ruling on the motion may be corrected. It would seem to be a vain thing to reverse a judgment, because of
Complaint is made of the insufficiency of the notice to vacate the premises served on plaintiffs in error prior to the commencement of this action. This notice was served on April 16, 1902, and this action was commenced May 5, 1902. The contention made is that section 1021 of the code, defining a tenant holding over his term as one who “has failed, neglected or refused to pay the rent, or any part thereof, when the same was due,” is unconstitutional, being in contravention of section 11, article III of the constitution, the subject of the act being broader than its title, and the amendment of 1875 not being germane to the original section. Proceeding upon the theory that this section is unconstitutional, plaintiffs in error contend that mere failure to pay the rent does not make the holding unlawful or a holding over the term, and that the right to terminate the tenancy must be determined by the language of the lease. The lease contained a provision as follows:
“That if such rent or any part thereof shall at any time be in arrears or unpaid, * * * then, * * * it shall be lawful for the party of the first part, * * * without any formal notice or demand, to enter into and upon said premises peaceably to hold and enjoy,” etc.
Thus it appears that under the lease, without reference to the provisions of section 1021 of the code, the defendant in error had a right to re-enter in the event of default in payment of rent. The notice given was reasonable, and it would seem that the right to maintain this action can not be doubted.
Whether there was a default at the time of the notice and the commencement of this action, is the next question for consideration, and is involved in the question whether there was error in directing a verdict for defendant in
“Omaha, March 25, 1902. Commercial National Bank, of Omaha. Pay to the order of Brennan Love Co. Fifteen & No-100 Dollars. 1 Mo. rent 1021 S. 36 St. to Apl. 25, ’02. H. E. Cochran.”
There was an effort made by defendant in error at the trial to show that this notation on the check was not there at the time of its receipt, but was put on afterwards. Inasmuch as the case was taken from the jury, this disputed question must be resolved in favor of plaintiffs in error, and the inquiry accordingly is whether the receipt and retention of this check constituted a new contract covering the period designated on the face of the check, so that during that period plaintiffs in error were not in default. Such is the contention now made.
H. E. Cochran testified that he wrote the check; that at the time he was in default for twelve months’ rent; that he was well aware of this long default; that his purpose in putting the notation on the check was that if it were accepted, there would be no default during that period. His evidence also shows that many efforts were made by defendant in error through its agent to collect the delinquent rent, and that he had from time to time paid sums ranging from $164 to $5, and that in sending this check he did so by mail, inclosing it in an envelope, without any letter of explanation or instruction. The testimony of defendant in error shows that the check was received in the ordinary course of business, was handled alone by a young woman in charge of that department, was cashed and the amount thereof applied on the account against plaintiffs in error. It is now contended that the acceptance and retention of this check, with its notation, has the effect, not only to waive any prior for
But it is manifest to us that the placing of this notation upon the check was an attempt to set a trap in which it was sought to catch the agent of defendant in error. Under Cochran’s own testimony, it amounted to his saying, “I am in default for twelve months’ rent, but by means of this check, without letter of explanation or any act to challenge attention to what I am doing, I will limit the application of the amount to the present month.”
There is nothing in the evidence to indicate that this payment would have been received upon the express'condition, brought to the notice of defendant in error, that it was to apply otherwise than on the large indebtedness already past due. While, doubtless, a notation on a check stating the purpose for which it is sent may be notice to the payee, checks are not intended to be used as a means of creating contracts, and should it be held that the drawer of a check may, by abbreviated notations thereon entirely foreign to the legitimate functions of such an. in
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.