108 Neb. 9 | Neb. | 1922
Lead Opinion
This is an action of forcible and unlawful detainer originally brought before a justice of the peace under sections 8466-8482, Rev. St. 1913, to obtain possession of
The plaintiff, appellee, Avas, at the time of the commencement of the action, the owner of the brick block, sought to be recovered, situated in south Lincoln and used for business purposes. The defendant, appellant, was one of his tenants. The lease involved in this case Avas made by Louis R. Wood, the grantor of the premises to appellee, George G. Farmer, to the appellant, John H. Pitts, and provided for the payment of monthly rentals in advance on the first day of each month at the office of A. P. Peterson, agent of the original lessor. It appears that the lessee attorned to the appellee after his purchase of the premises, and that the place of payment of rent was changed to 140 North Eleventh street, Lincoln, Nebraska. It further appears from the record that the lessee Avas in the habit and customarily paid the rent by mailing the appellee a check therefor at or about the time the rent became due; that this continued until November 1, 1919, when the appellee again changed his residence and address and notified appellant, in writing, thát in the future the place of payment of the rents for the leased premises would be at 130 North Twenty-seventh street, Lincoln, Nebraska, instead of 140 North Eleventh street, where it had been payable for some time after the purchase of the property by appellee.
On the 1st day of April, 1920,'the record shows, and it is agreed by stipulation between the parties, that the appellant, Pitts, mailed to the appellee his check for $40, inclosed in an envelope Avith a dollar bill, in payment
The lease contained the provision that, if any rent shall be due and unpaid, it shall then be lawful “for any of said party of the first part to reenter said premises, and party of the second part agrees to vacate said premises without notice.” It is the contention of appellant that (1) he did not fail, neglect or refuse to pay the rent when the same became due, and that the mailing of the check on the 1st of April was a compliance with the terms of the lease under the custom established between the parties; and (2) that, even if there was a technical default, a forfeiture of the, lease as tenant should not be enforced, since, prior to the commencement of the action, he tendered the full amount of rent due.
The propositions or contentions of appellant, Pitts, will l)e considered in their order.
No demand whatever was made on lessee for payment of the rent excepting that contained in the lease, and the landlord, of his own volition and without the consent of the lessee, had moved or changed the place of ►such payment a mile or two farther away than that provided in the lease or the place of payment agreed upon after the purchase of the property. The lessee could not be legally required to travel all that additional distance to the new place of payment and personally pay or tender to the lessor a check or the money for such rent. Suppose the lessor, instead of going a mile or two away, had gone 10 miles, or 500 miles, certainly the lessee, neither in law nor in reason, would be obliged to travel that distance io make the payments on the exact date stipulated, or be obliged to mail the envelope containing the check days, weeks, or perhaps months, in advance in order for it to reach the lessor at the time the rent became due. The ordinary principles of reason, common ►sense and justice should govern in questions of this kind. The lessee, in law, had a right to assume that the post office department would do its duty and deliver the envelope containing the rent in due time, and that the lessor would, in justice, accept such rent; and if for any reason it was not received or delivered the lessee should, as a matter of ordinary fairness and justice, be advised of such fact and have a chance to remedy the same. The writer of this opinion cannot but be impressed with the idea, which seems to come from a reading of the record, that it was not the rent the lessor wanted, but rather a forfeiture of the lease contract. Now, the provision of the statute regarding a forcible entry and detention, as well as the provision in the lease as to the nonpayment of the rent, is for the security of such rental
In a note in 24 Cyc. 1365, it is said: “Where by accident or mistake the covenant in a lease is broken, and the lessors have not been in fact injured and can be put in statu quo, equity will relieve against a forfeiture. See Mactier v. Osborn, 146 Mass. 399.
And in Giles v. Austin, 62 N. Y. 486, the court say: “A covenant in a lease by the tenants to pay taxes and assessments is in the nature of a covenant to pay money, and a forfeiture incurred by a breach thereof may be relieved against on the same principles. In the absence of bad faith on the part of the tenant, and where the, position, of the parties has not been changed and no new rights have intervened, mere delay on the part of the tenant in making the stipulated payments will not bar him from relief.”
In 1 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (4th ed.) sec. 453, it is said: “Where a lease contains a condition that the. lessor may reenter and put an end to the lessee’s estate, or even that the lease shall be void, upon the lessee’s failure to pay the rent at the time specified, it is well settled that a court of equity will relieve the lessee and set aside a forfeiture incurred by his breach of the condition, whether the lessor has or has not entered and dispossessed the tenant. This rule is based upon the notion that such condition and forefeiture are
“Under a lease authorizing the lessor, in case of failure of the tenant to pay an instalment of rent when due, to consider the lease forfeited, forfeiture may not be enforced and an action of forcible entry and detainer be maintained without a demand for and a reasonable opportunity to make payment.” Cole v. Johnson, 94 N. W. 1113 (120 Ia. 667).
“Where, in a lease, it was stipulated that if the lessees failed to pay, first, rent at a certain time, or second, taxes, etc., or to refund those paid by lessor, the lease should be forfeited. * * * Where such lessors were accustomed to collect rent themselves, and the rent was due July 1st, and where the lessors were not in the state until the 5th, when the rent was tendered; held, that a sufficient and substantial compliance with the terms of the lease was shown.” Burnes v. McCubbin, 3 Kan. 221. See Wilson v. Jones & Tapp, 1 Bush (Ky.) 173.
The adjudicated cases of the supreme court of this state are in accord with the doctrines announced in the other states. In the case of Haynes v. Union Investment Co., 35 Neb. 766, Judge Maxwell, who wrote the opinion, says: “Under the decisions of this court a demand may be made by a notice to quit. Hendrickson v. Beeson, 21 Neb. 61. If this is a sufficient demand it is probable that a tender of payment at that time would defeat a recovery.” Paragraph 2 of the syllabus reads:
“In order to work a forfeiture of a lease for nonpayment of rent there must be a demand on the tenant for the rent, although such demand may be in the form of a notice to quit.”
The case of Haynes v. Union Investment Co., supra, is cited by the supreme court of South Dakota, in which that court lays down the general rule as follows: “Payment or tender of the rent by the lessee within three days after the notice to quit, given under Comp. Laws, sec. 6073, for nonpayment, is served, prevents a forfeiture.”
Where there is no attempt at evasion or fraud in the payment of rent, but on the contrary an honest endeavor and intention to comply with the terms of the lease, as shown by the record in this case, a forfeiture should not be given.
In the case of Springfield F. & M. Ins. Co. v. McLimans & Coyle, 28 Neb. 846, this court said: “Forfeitures are not favored and should not be enforced unless the courts are compelled to do so.” And in the case of Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Gustin, 40 Neb. 828, this court reiterates this doctrine: “Forfeitures are odious in law and should never be enforced unless the court is compelled to do so.”
Tn the opinion written in the case of Estabrook v. Hughes, 8 Neb. 496, it is said: “Where a tenant has forfeited his lease, by a breach of the covenant for the payment of the rent, courts both of law and equity consider the clause of reentry (or forfeiture) to be mainly inserted for the landlord’s security, and will interfere in the tenant’s behalf, although all the formalities of a common-law demand may have been complied with, upon his satisfying the rent due, and making compensation for any damages Avhich the landlord may have sustained in consequence of this omission.”
In Ostenberg v. Scottsbluff Investment Co., 106 Neb. 143, this court announces the general doctrine: “Equityt has power to relieve against a forfeiture of a lease for the nonpayment of rent on the day stipulated, and such poAver should be exercised when the circumstances are such as to call for the exercise of equitable principles, and where, if withheld, gross injustice will folloAV, when the failure to pay the rent was not wilful of such culpable neglect as to amount to the same thing.”
In the instant case everything in the record shoAVS the good faith of the lessee and his intention to pay the rent promptly at the time the same became due and in the customary manner agreed upon between the parties. As this court has held, equity considers the
Under the plea of not guilty or under an answer of general denial in cases of forcible entry and detention brought by a landlord against a tenant, the tenant is entitled to all the defenses, whether of law or equity, which are warranted by the evidence, and in this case it appears that the facts, the law and the equities are all on the side of the tenant.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and this cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I am iinable to concur in that portion of the opinion, and the rule stated in the syllabus, that a tenant is entitled to a demand for and a reasonable opportunity to pay the rental before a landlord can claim a forfeiture. Our statute was intended, I believe, to put an end to that common-law rule. Where a tenant fails, refuses or neglects to pay his rent when due, he is from that moment a tenant holding over his term, and the landlord’s right to eject the tenant has then become complete. Unless by some action on his part the landlord affirmatively waives the forfeiture, he need only serve the statutory notice to vacate and bring an action in forcible entry.
I agree with the rule, as stated in the opinion, that equity may relieve against the forfeiture, and that it is proper that it should do so, when it appears that the rent has been forwarded in conformity with a custom