190 P. 455 | Cal. | 1920
The appeal is from the judgment. The material facts are as follows:
On October 31, 1914, Thomas W. Butcher leased to Ibos and Roche certain premises at the corner of Jackson and Drumm Streets in San Francisco, for the term of five years beginning December 1, 1914. The rental, after the first three months, was five hundred dollars a month, payable on the first day of each month, in advance. Thereafter in August, 1915, Butcher sold the premises to the Cutting Packing Company, subject to the lease. As a part of the consideration of this sale, the plaintiff, Downing, executed an agreement with the defendant in pursuance whereof the plaintiff deposited in the American National Bank the sum of six thousand dollars to be held by said bank for the purpose of securing the payment of the rents falling due thereafter from Ibos and Roche under said lease. The agreement provided that if Ibos and Roehe should make default *92 in the payment of any monthly installment of rent then "as often as payment of said installments of rent shall become in default the said American National Bank of San Francisco, upon the written demand of [Cutting Packing Company] shall pay to the said [Cutting Packing Company] out of the said moneys so deposited with it, the amount of the installment or installments of the rent so in default, until the whole of said sum of $6000.00 is exhausted," and the said bank was thereby authorized and directed, upon receiving written notice that an installment of rent was due and unpaid, to pay to the Cutting Packing Company, out of said moneys, the installment so in default.
The installments falling due for October, November, and December, 1915, and January, 1916, were not paid, by Ibos and Roche, but were paid by the said bank out of the fund deposited by Downing, as provided in said agreement. Because of this failure of Ibos and Roche, Downing became interested in obtaining a new tenant and began negotiations with the Cutting Packing Company to that end. In pursuance of these negotiations Downing procured one Webster as a prospective tenant, and an agreement in writing was proposed by the Cutting Packing Company to Webster, under which a lease of the premises was to be given to Webster as soon as the Cutting Packing Company could obtain possession thereof, either by the surrender of Ibos and Roche or by proceedings to oust them in unlawful detainer. Webster proposed condition to which the company would not agree and the negotiations ceased. The proposal, the counter-proposal, and the rejection thereof all occurred on February 1, 1916. Expecting that such agreement would be made, a notice from the company to Ibos and Roche to pay the rent or quit the premises was prepared by the attorney for the company for service. This notice was in the form required by subdivision 2 of section
The case presents the question whether or not, after having given the notice of February 2, 1916, to pay rent or quit, the Cutting Packing Company had the lawful right to abandon further proceedings under said notice and collect the rents for subsequent months from the fund deposited by Downing as security therefor, notwithstanding the protest of Downing against its so doing.
The respondent contends that the company could not withdraw or waive the notice to pay rent or abandon the proceeding to recover possession and hold Downing liable as surety, without his consent. He states his position as follows: "Where a valid notice to quit is given by a landlord to his tenant, the effect of such notice is to terminate the relation of landlord and tenant between the parties *94 as of the date limited in the notice; that a notice to quit is a notice that cannot be withdrawn or done away with at the option of the party giving it and without the consent of both landlord and tenant; and even if so withdrawn a new tenancy is thereby created; consequently, a guarantor of the rent under the original tenancy is not liable for rent which becomes due after the time the notice would have expired or actually did expire."
The appellant calls attention to the fact that there are two classes of notices to quit. First. Where the tenancy is from year to year, from month to month, or at will, or where a clause in the lease provides for a termination by notice. (Code Civ. Proc., sec.
The language of the section shows that the appellant's theory is correct. Subdivision 1 applies only to cases where the tenant holds over "after the expiration of the term for *95
which it is let to him" and to tenancies at will which have been ended by 4 thirty days' notice. (Civ. Code, sec.
"2. When he continues in possession, . . . without the permission of his landlord, if any there be, after default in the payment of rent, pursuant to the lease or agreement under which the property is held, and three days' notice, in writing, requiring its payment stating the amount which is due, or possession of the property, shall have been served upon him and if there is a subtenant in actual occupation of the premises, also upon such subtenant."
"3. . . . Within three days after the service of the notice the tenant, or any subtenant in actual occupation of the premises, or any mortgagee of the term, or other person interested in its continuance, may perform the conditions or covenants of the lease or pay the stipulated rent, as the case may be, and thereby save the lease from forfeiture."
The language of the last clause of subdivision 3, above quoted, shows that the object to be attained by a notice under subdivisions 2 and 3 is a forfeiture of the lease. If the tenant, or other person interested, shall "pay the stipulated rent" he may "thereby save the lease from forfeiture." The lease in such cases is not terminated by the expiration of the term fixed therein or by any provision therein for a termination by the parties, but solely because of the default in the payment of rent, the subsequent notice, the lapse of three days, and the ensuing forfeiture. The established rule is that where the right to a forfeiture is created by contract or by law "it has always been considered that it was necessary to restrain it to the most technical limits of the terms and conditions upon which the right is to be exercised," (Jameson v. Chanslor-Canfield etc. Co.,
The respondent claims that this result is avoided by reason of the fact that the deposit in the bank was not made by Ibos and Roche, nor at their instance, so far as appears, but was made by Downing at the time of the sale from Butcher to the Cutting Packing Company, and, apparently, for some purpose in the interest of Butcher or Downing. If it was done for this purpose the fact is not fully disclosed by the record. But we regard the point as immaterial, for whatever the motive or inducement to Downing or Butcher may have been, the result was that the security inured to the benefit of Ibos and Roche and to their landlord, the Cutting Packing Company. Ibos and Roche remained in possession after the security was deposited, and availed themselves of the benefit thereof by allowing the rent to be paid out of that fund instead of paying it themselves. After the giving of the notice to quit they still remained in possession, and continued therein until the payments here in controversy were made. It must, therefore, be presumed that they consented to such payments. The bank stood in the position of their agent with respect to the matter of making the actual payments of the rent and the payments operated to their benefit. The forfeiture, as we have seen, bad not occurred at the time the payment of February 4th was made. If the notice had terminated the lease or created the forfeiture, or if *97 Ibos and Roche desired that it should have that effect, it was their duty to vacate the premises on or before the expiration of the three-day period, and also to give notice to the bank to withhold further payments of rent accruing after the 1st of February. Since they did not do either of these things the conclusion must follow that they acquiesced in the payment and that the lease was not forfeited, but remained in force as completely as if no proceedings for forfeiture had been begun, and that the security deposited for the payment of rent remained available to the Cutting Packing Company for that purpose.
The respondent, in support of the position that the notice terminated the lease, cites 1 Wood on Landlord and Tenant, sec. 44; Woodfall on Landlord and Tenant, sec. 423; Underhill on Landlord and Tenant, sec. 127; Alden v. Mayfield,
There are authorities in support of the contention of the appellant. In Tuttle v. Bean, 54 Mass. (13 Met.) 275, it is held that if, after giving the notice to quit, the landlord told the tenant that he need not quit in pursuance of the notice, it constituted a waiver of the notice and prevented a forfeiture of the lease. In Hodgkins v. Price,
The appellant also cites cases which declare the rule to be that even in cases of the first class above described, where the notice operates to fix the end of the tenancy prior to the time it would otherwise expire, the notice can be waived *99 by the landlord and the tenant restored to his original term. This question, however, we need not consider. It is not involved in the case.
It is apparent from these considerations that the court erred in holding that the lease was terminated by the giving of the notice to quit and that the security deposited was not available to the appellant as a fund for the payment of the subsequent rents.
The judgment is reversed.
Lennon, J., Wilbur, J., Olney, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred.