181 Iowa 1186 | Iowa | 1917
“12. That should lessee hold over by permission of lessor for three days after expiration of this lease, it is agreed by all parties signing the same that it shall constitute a renewal hereof for the same term and upon the same conditions, except that lessor at his election may terminate such renewed lease by giving three days’ notice to quit.”
After this lease had been executed, and during the term thereof, another corporation, known as the Aetna Explosives Company, being the defendant herein, was organized and took over the business of the lessee and went into possession of the leased premises, paying to plaintiff the stipulated monthly installments of rent as they fell due. The defendant is a New York corporation, its business in Des Moines being in charge of one McCauley, its agent or employe. A .short time before the expiration of the year for which the lease was made, a representative of the plaintiff approached McCauley upon the subject whether his company desired to retain the building another year, but no agreement was then made. Plaintiff prepared a form for a new lease for the succeeding year, naming defendant as lessee, and gave it to McCauley, who appears to have for
The defendant, answering, denies the plaintiff’s claim, and denies that it ever assumed any obligation to pay rent under said leose except for the time it was in possession of the property. It further pleads the fact already stated: that, before the lease expired, plaintiff tendered a form of lease for another year to defendant’s agent, who sent it to the defendant for approval; that said negotiation terminated in the determination of the defendant not to accept the lease, of which conclusion it notified the plaintiff, and that defendant also gave plaintiff 30 days’ written notice of its intention to vacate the property, and that in fact it did vacate within the time so fixed, having paid the full rental for all the time it had occupied the premises.
The testimony offered on either side indicates nothing
I. Counsel for appellant, with much industry, have collated authorities to the effect that, where one corporation takes the entire business and effects of another which is dissolved and goes out of business, the former is held to have assumed the obligations and liabilities of the corporation so absorbed. This abstract proposition may be admitted for the purposes of this case, though it is doubtful whether the facts developed in this record are such as to call for an application of the principle contended for. In other words, the proposition of fact which counsel assumes, that the defendant corporation is but another name for the lessee in the written lease, is not so clearly or conclusively shown in the evidence that we can say that it has been established as a matter of law.
.We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the district court is — Affirmed.