231 Mo. 694 | Mo. | 1910
Plaintiffs sue for fifteen thousand dollars damages for defendants’ failure to comply with^ a covenant to deliver possession of certain premises and to carry out other terms of a -written lease.
The petition alleges and the answer admits the execution of the lease on the 3d day of September, 1904. This lease demised to plaintiffs a certain brick building and basement, known as 1029 Main street, Kansas City, Missouri, for a term of five years, commencing on the 1st day of February, 1906, at a rental of seven hundred dollars per month. It contained provisions as follows for a renewal term of five years: ‘ ‘ Provided plaintiffs would agree to pay as much as any other party making a bona fide offer to lease such premises; ’ ’ that the premises were leased “in the present condition thereof;” for repairs, keeping the premises free from filth, nuisances, danger of fire and against carrying on any unlawful business; for forfeiture on violating any covenant or agreement, including default of payment of rent; for surrender of peaceable possession at the end of the term; and for regulating liability for
The petition alleges and the proof shows the lease contained a provision that .the lessees would not convey or assign it without the written consent of lessors. Further, that neither it nor the premises should pass ‘ ‘ by operation of law nor by any species of conveyances by the parties of the second part or their heirs.”
The answer denies that plaintiffs owned the lease or had any right, title or interest therein. It avers that all such right, title and interest prior to the 1st day of February, 1906-, passed out of plaintiffs and was vested in defendants. It further alleges (and the proof shows) that about two months after the lease was executed, to-wit, on the 7th day of November, 1904, plaintiffs, as individuals and as copartners, filed their voluntary petition in bankruptcy and on said date by virtue of such proceeding in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri were declared bankrupts as individuals and as copartners. The answer also alleged (and the proof shows) that plaintiffs listed their assets under oath as individuals and copartners in said bankrupt proceeding. It further alleges (and it is contended on one side that the proof shows, on the other that it does not show) that the right, title and interest of plaintiffs in said leasehold as individuals and as copartners was listed as an asset, was sold by virtue'of the bankrupt proceeding to defendants, who became the owners'of the lease— this sale being made by the trustee in bankruptcy in
At the close of plaintiffs’ case, defendants asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which instruction was allowed and a verdict accordingly thereby coerced. On due steps, plaintiffs come here by appeal.
The case can be disposed of without setting forth the testimony. It may proceed on the theory it tended to show that on the 3d day of September, 1904 (the date of the lease in question, which for convenience we will call the second lease), plaintiffs held possession of the premises under a former lease, which we will call the first lease. The term of the first wa,s from February 1, 1901, to February 1, 1906 — the second commencing where the first ended. During the life of the first lease (i. e., before the bankruptcy) plaintiffs conducted a millinery store in the demised premises. The building was two stories high in front, but did not extend that high all the way to the rear — the last fifty-five feet back to the alley being only one story high. The walls of the one-story part were too old, thin and weak to support a second story. There was a basement or cellar under the front part of the building, but it was unconnected with the outside and could not be rented. Under the one-story part there was no basement. The building was in a region where leaseholds were in demand and rents stiff. Plaintiffs were paying $375 monthly rent during the term of the first lease. While things were in this fix and their term had yet nearly a year and a half to run, they made the second lease.. That lease contemplated a rather ambitious plan of improvement at the expense of the
At that time plaintiffs had prepared paper plans and specifications for the remodeling, but presently fell over the brink of insolvency and began proceedings in the Federal court to be relieved of their pecuniary liabilities. It creeps into the casethatthey were discharged as bankrupts in October, 1905', though no certificate appears. It is conceded the first lease was listed as an asset and sold. It is not as dear as it might be how possession was held of the premises after plaintiffs’ failure — we mean whether under plaintiffs’ first lease so
(a) Some doubt, arguendo, is thrown on the good faith of plaintiffs’ acts looking to performance. Plaintiffs, before final discharge in bankruptcy, but presumably having faith in that discharge forthcoming, claim to have hired Miller to raze the walls of the old and excavate and haul away the dirt and debris for the new building — all this by virtue of the terms of the second lease. At that time they had been adjudicated bankrupts, but were still in court in that proceeding. Nevertheless, though ground bare and dean of property by a bankrupt-mill, they seek performance of an onerous lease which contemplated a heavy outlay of ready cash. To that end they demand possession. As we grasp the run of the argument, counsel doubt the good faith of the tender of performance; they doubt present ability to perform; they suspect the tender of performance to be a cloak for the real purpose of pressing a •thorn in defendants’ side, thereby spurring them to a compromise settlement; they suspect the offer to perform was merely intended to impale defendants on the horns of a dilemma, viz., a lawsuit with them, for one horn, or the destruction of the one-story part of their building for a season and the consequent loss of rent from their then tenant and damages for ousting him from possession, for the other. But whatever substance there may be in that line of argument, it was for the jury and not for us. Respondents took the issue of good faith from the jury where it belonged, and may not bring it here where it does not belong. Whether there was a bona fide offer to perform was for the triers of fact.
(b) But there is a larger and deeper phase of the matter of performance, fairly arising on this record, which seems an impassable obstacle to recovery. That phase is this: Plaintiffs sue at law for damages for non-performance, of a contract. Defendants were not
In contracts the subject-matter and the object to be attained should be looked to. In other words, the scope, purview and intendment of the contract have to be kept in mind as. prerequisites to its interpretation and to ascertain and settle rights thereunder. Now, the broad fact is that when plaintiffs made the second lease, they were already (and were to continue) in possession of the premises under the first. It was not intended that in order to perform the contract to rebuild they should intrude on the rightful possession of another. Per contra, their own rightful possession under the first lease was contemplated during the whole time they were to perform that part of the contract requiring the walls of the one-story part of the building to be razed and a new building built. During that time their rent under the first lease was to accrue from month to month to defendants. It is obvious, then, that under the contract the burdens of not only all expense and outlay in remodeling, but of detriment to the possession in making the existing building' unfit for business purposes, were on the shoulders of plaintiffs. They carried it all, ex necessitate rei. But there had been a vital change in that regard when plaintiffs sought to perform in July, 1905'. They had then long
(c) Learned counsel well and ingeniously argue nice propositions of bankrupt law. For instance:
It is argued for plaintiffs that as defendants plead in their answer that the second lease was listed as an asset in bankruptcy, passed to the trustee and from him under the hammer to the purchaser at the bankrupt sale, the burden was assumed by defendants of proving those facts. They say defendants did not well carry that burden. Contra, defendants’ counsel argue that there is inferential proof of the allegations, but they rely mainly on the proposition that since the trustee is presumed to do his duty the presumption is that it was listed and was dealt with as an asset. They argue, further, that it makes no difference whether it was listed or not, that the title to the lease passed by operation of the bankrupt law to the trustee and either remains in him or passed off to a stranger. On the other side it is argued that under the peculiar phraseology of this lease it could not pass by operation of law to the trustee. To this, defendants ’ counsel say that the title passed to the trustee cum-onere, that is, burdened with contractual conditions, such as obtaining the consent of the lessors to a transfer. Other contentions are made; for example: By plaintiffs’ counsel that the trustee had the right to elect whether he.would take over an onerous lease as an asset, and he had the further right to abandon it as an asset, in either of which events the title would remain in the bankrupts. Counsel for defendants concede as much, but they say the burden is upon the plaintiffs to show such election o.r abandonment — in other words, the presumption is that the trustee performed his full duty in the first instance, and, as plaintiffs testify that the leasehold was of great prospective value, the burden rests on them to
The administration and exposition of tbe Bankrupt Act is tbe peculiar province of Federal courts, and tbe appellate courts of a State bave no call to expound that law, except where it becomes necessary to determine a bankruptcy question in a case witbin its own jurisdiction. As tbe instant case bas been allowed to break on a previous paragraph of tbe opinion, therefore it is not one of that sort. Accordingly we reserve tbe questions discussed. It will be time enough to decide them when they arise in a case turning on them,
Tbe views expressed also preclude tbe need of passing on tbe assigned error relating to tbe exclusion of tbe testimony of Mr. White.
Let the judgment be affirmed.