43 Wash. 690 | Wash. | 1906
This is an action for the possession of real estate, brought under the-forcible entry and detainer statute. The plaintiff alleges that an April 30, 1896, George M. Forster and wife were the owners of a certain described lot in Spokane, and that.on said date they executed a lease thereifor to the Spokane Meat Company,' a corporation; that by the terms of the lease the premises could not be sublet without the written consent of the lessors, and that the lessee waa required to pay the sum of $200 in advance upon the 1st 'day of each and every month during the leasehold term; that during the term of the lease and upon thei written consent of all the parties thereto, it was assigned by said lessee to E. H. Stanton, who thereby became bound by all the conditions of the lease which were imposed upon the original lessee; that Stanton, in violation of the terms of the lease, did, without the consent of the lessors, sublet the premises to the defendant herein, and that he did also fail to make payment on the 1st day of December, 1904, of the rent then due under the lease; that thereafter, on the 17th day of December, 1904, the lessors notified Stanton that the lease was cancelled and that Stanton thereupon consented -to said cancellation and surrendered the premises to the lessors; that on the 30th
The defendant answered with denials, and also affirmatively alleged that, after the assignment of the original lease to Stanton, as averred in the complaint, and on the 19th day of April, 1901, Stanton leased to the defendant and another the east twenty-four feet of said lot, together with the store building situate thereon, for the term of five years from May 1, 1901, to May 1, 1906, which lease is now owned by the defendant ; that said sublease waslmade with the full knowledge and consent of the holder of the original lease, and that the subsequent sole ownership thereof was also with the like full knowledge and consent of the original lessor; that the defendant made valuable and permanent improvements in said building to the extent and value of $1,800, all of which were made with the knowledge and consent of Forster, the first lessor, and with the further knowledge and consent on his part that they were
It is argued by appellant that a subtenant is chargeable with notice of the provisions of his- lessor’s lease, and takes the chance of its being cancelled. The proposition as stated is true, if by the terms of the lease and attending facts the original lessor has it in his power to- declare a forfeiture and cancellation. It is argued that the fire which occurred in the building was recognized as a termination of the lease to Stanton, for the reason that the lessor Forster felt himself insecure as to future rent without the. building as- security therefor. It is also argued that Stanton consented to
“When, before a surrender, third persons have acquired interests in the demised premises, a surrender by the lessee cannot affect their rights; as to them the surrender operates only as a grant subject to their rights, and the interest surrendered is considered as continuing to exist so far as is necessary to preserve their rights.” 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), p. 366.
See, also, Taylor, Landlord & Tenant (9th ed.), § 111; 2 Current Law 676; Eten v. Luyster, 60 N. Y. 252; Gashill v. Trainer, 3 Cal. 334; Hessel v. Johnson, 129 Pa. St. 173, 18 Atl. 754, 15 Am. St. 716, 5 L. R. A. 851.
The lease provided that the entire premises could not be sublet without the written consent of the lessor. It was not provided, however, that a part of the premises could not be
It is also alleged by respondent that appellant accepted from him the further sum of $600 as rent under the sublease. That he did receive $600 appellant admits, but he denies that he accepted it as rent. He says that hei accepted it merely as part payment on damages he had sustained by reason of respondent’s retention of the premises-. The check which he received stated that it was on account -of rent, but the receipt which he gave stated that the $600 was received on account without ¡prejudice. Even if it be true, in view of the receipt and of appellant’s testimony, that it may not have been for the court to say that the payment was on account of rent, nevertheless, as we have stated, the evidence clearly showed that appellant did receive rent from respondent for the balance of the month of December, after appellant became the owner of the original lease as lessee- thereunder, and that continued the relation of landlord and tenant between him and respondent.
It cannot be maintained that appellant does not claim as assignee under Stanton, and that he does claim -only as- lessee under the new lease from Forster. That new lease expressly stated that it was made subject to the Stanton lease-. Appellant obtained no- rights under the new lease as- against the Stanton lease-. He fully acquired the Stanton lease December 15, which was prior to the alleged forfeiture. He therefore stood in the place of Stanton as the landlord of respondent, and he is not in position to urge a forfeiture- of the Stanton lease-, which could then have occurred only through his own. neglect or voluntary surrender.
Appellant has assigned some special errors upon the introduction of testimony, but we have discussed the essence of
Mount, O. J., Chow, and Dunbar, JJ., "concur.
Fullerton, J., concurs in the result.