62 Cal. App. 2d 938 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1944
This is an action for unlawful detainer based upon a written lease between W. D. Isenberg, now de
The trial court, in construing the lease, admitted the evidence showing the facts and circumstances surrounding the making of it and the negotiations of the parties in connection therewith for the purpose of explaining the language used in the lease and interpreting what the parties intended thereby. It then found in favor of defendant on the issues presented and denied plaintiffs’ prayer for relief.
The material portions of the lease may be thus summarized: October 1, 1937, lessors leased jointly to lessee the land described. By its terms lessee agrees to pay to lessors “by way of advance rental for the year beginning on Oct. first, 1937,
In construing an agreement it is the general rule that although the agreement of the parties be reduced to writing, if there be a latent ambiguity therein or if the language of
Plaintiffs do not dispute this rule but contend that the lease is not susceptible of more than one interpretation, and that as signed and executed the term of the lease was for a fixed period of three years and no more, and that their objection to the admissibility of parole evidence bearing on the surrounding circumstances and intent of the parties should have been sustained. This is the main question here involved.
The evidence surrounding the execution of the lease, if admissible, fully supports the court’s conclusion that the lease was not intended as a lease for a definite term of three years. Defendant Salyer testified that he and a former partner had leased Isenberg's land in 1933 and 1934; that during those seasons they farmed the land and paid a cash rental of $1 per acre; that the partnership dissolved and his partner leased the same land in 1936 at the same rental; that in August, 1937, Salyer went to Los Angeles to see the owner, W. D. Isenberg, who was a retired attorney at law and lived in that city, and informed him that he was interested in leasing the lands and that they discussed both a cash rental and a crop rental with cash advance payments; that they discussed the possibility of the lake flooding the lands and that they both knew the lands were under water from 1915 to 1919; that although crops had been planted, none had
Salyer then testified that in October, 1937, he entered into possession of the premises, expended $6,646, which included cost of building levees, seeding, plowing and rental for three years, and that his only return therefrom was a check for $646.45, which was for two years’ parity payments from the government.
We will therefore consider the terms of the lease to determine whether they come within the exception to the rule that where a contract is reduced to writing there can be, as between the parties, no evidence of the terms of the agreement other than the contents of the writing. (Secs. 1856 and 1860, Code Civ. Proc.) In the first place, the lease fails to provide any definite term for which 'it should run. It is dated as of October 1, 1937, and provides that lessors hereby léase to lessees the property described; that the lessee agrees to and did pay $760 advance rental for the year beginning October 1, 1938, which amount “is to be refunded . . . out of the first crops produced upon the same being harvested and sold.” (Italics ours.) It fixes no year when that first crop must be produced. There appears to be no limitation on that subject. If a first crop were not, therefore, produced until the third or fourth year, lessee, under the terms of the written lease as set forth, might be entitled to remain in possession of the property until such first crop was produced. The same argument and interpretation would apply as to the cash advance rental for the second and third year, which rental was to be refunded “respectively at harvest; time of the second and third crops produced thereon.” (Italics ours.) Again, there is no particular year specified or term fixed within which such second or third crop must be produced or harvested. It therefore clearly appears that the intention of the parties as to the term of the lease is left in doubt from a mere reading of the lease itself. Parole evidence was therefore admissible to ascertain the true intention of the parties and an issue of fact was therefore presented to the trial court for its determination. It cannot be said that the lease, considered in the light of the evidence, is not susceptible of the interpretation placed upon it by the court. Hence, we cannot disturb the decision. It was the province of the trial court to resolve doubtful language in the lease and to determine the meaning and effect of it. When the construction given an instrument by the trial court appears to be reasonable and consistent with the intent of the parties making it, courts of appellate jurisdiction will not
Judgment affirmed.
Barnard, P. J., and Marks, J., concurred.