60 Ga. App. 850 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
C. B. Moore instituted suit by dispossessory warrant, in the municipal court of Macon, against S. 0. Cunningham and George E. Saliba, and as a basis for the eviction of the defendants alleged: “Deponent says they failed to pay the rent due on July 1, 1938, which is still unpaid, and that they are holding the premises over beyond their term; that deponent, C. B. Moore, desires possession of the said house and lot, and has demanded from said S. 0. Cunningham and George E. Saliba possession of the same since said rent became due, but the said S. 0. Cunningham and George E. Saliba refused and neglected to give possession of the same.” Upon the affidavit, which was executed on July 7, 1938, a dispossessory warrant was issued, but the proceeding was stopped by Cunningham by a counter-affidavit denying the allegations of Moore’s affidavit, and setting up, among other things, that on July 5, 1938, and before Moore’s affidavit was made, tender of rent due on July 1, 1938, was made to Moore. Cunningham furnished bond as required by law. On the trial of the case the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendants; and on certiorari to the superior court judgment was rendered that the plaintiff was entitled to the possession of the premises, and the defendants were ordered to surrender the same, and it was further ordered that the plaintiff recover from the defendants double rent as sued for. Cunningham excepted to this judgment.
It is contended by the plaintiff in error that the rights of the parties are to be determined as of the date of the affidavit for dispossessory warrant; and that as tender was made for July rent before the making of the affidavit, and was equivalent to payment,
Thus it conclusively appears that the landlord was entitled to the dispossessory warrant and possession, unless, as counsel for plaintiff in error contend, the tender was equivalent to payment. Tender is, of course, ordinarily equivalent to payment; but this principle can have no application where a condition of the contract is that pay
Counsel for the plaintiff in error contend that the recital in the affidavit in the present case that the rent was unpaid was untrue, because, as they contend, the tender constituted payment, and that as the rent was unpaid when the affidavit was executed and filed the landlord is not, under the Hides case, entitled to recover. As we have already ruled, the sending or tender of a check after the due date specified in the lease contract was not payment in accordance with the contract, and such tender was not in' the present case accepted. Hence the rent remained unpaid> and the affidavit spoke the truth. When the court in the Hides case (supra) said that the affidavit must allege that the rent is unpaid at the timé the affidavit is made, it was referring to a situation, not only where there is inaction on the part of the tenant as to paying the rent, but also where there is a tender of the rent after the due date unaccepted by the landlord. That this is so is apparent from the lan
Judgment affirmed.