6 Or. 316 | Or. | 1877
The numerous assignments of error in the notice of appeal, present but one question. Do the facts admitted by the pleadings or found by the court amount to a surrender of the lease set up in the complaint? If they do, the findings of law and the judgment are erroneous and the judgment ought to be reversed. If they do not, the defendant remained liable on his covenant to pay rent on the lease, and the conclusions and judgment of the court below are correct, and the judgment ought to be affirmed.
“If a tenant for life or for years yields up his estate to him who has the immediate estate in reversion or remainder, it is called by the law a surrender, the effect of which is to extinguish all claim for rent not due at the time. The estate for years in such ease is drowned by mutual agreement ‘between them.’” (1 Wash on Real Prop., 1 ed., 359.) Surrender may be by express agreement of the parties or by operation of law. It is not claimed in this case that there was any express agreement of the parties for the surrender of the lease. The surrender, if any, was by operation of law.
Whether the delivery of the keys of the premises by the defendant to the plaintiffs, and their acceptance by them and their resumption of the possession of the premises was a surrender of the lease, depends upon the intention of the parties. The acts of the defendant are so inconsistent with any other intention than that of surrendering his lease, that if the surrender was accepted by the plaintiffs, defendant would be estopped to deny it. Those of the plaintiffs, so far as the receipt of the keys and their taking the possession of the premises are concerned, are consistent with their intention not to accept the surrender, but to hold defendant upon his covenant to pay rent on his lease. They allege in the reply that they expressed this intention to him at the time, and the court below found this allegation true. Under the circumstances, they had the right to accept the keys and take possession of the premises, in order to protect ¡them from waste. The law does not infer an acceptance of jthe surrender from such acts. (Bloom v. Merrill, 1 Daily,
Defendant was estopped by his unequivocal acts to deny that he had surrendered the premises and his estate therein; and plaintiffs were estopped by their commission of an act inconsistent with the continuance of a term to deny that they had accepted its surrender.
We think that according to the weight of the authorities cited here was a surrender by the operation of law. (Matthews ad. v. Tobener, 39 Mo. 115; Smith v. Nion, 2 Barb. 180; Randall v. Rich, 11 Mass. 493; Walls v. Atcheson, 13 Eng. C. L. 52; Gunie v. Legge, 15 C. L. Eng. 229.)
We think the acts of the parties alleged in the pleadings, and found by the court, are so inconsistent with the continuance of the lease, that no evidence of the intention of the parties could well remove the presumption of a surrender. It certainly cannot be claimed that after the lease was made to Mathews, defendant could have resumed the possession of the demised premises, or that if plaintiffs had received from Mathews a larger amount for the rent of the premises than defendant was to pay, that he would have been entitled to the excess.
It was suggested in the argument that the presumption of the acceptance of the surrender of the lease might be avoided upon the theory that in making the lease to Mathews, plaintiffs acted as the agents and for the benefit of defendant. This theory is not supported by the allegations in the proceedings, or by the findings of the court. The reply, it is true, alleges that at the time of the surrender of the keys, plaintiff told 'defendant, among other things, that “if they re-let the
The court below evidently regarded the allegation in the reply just quoted, as immaterial, for it did not find upon it. 'We are of the opinion that if it had been found for plaintiffs, it would not have entitled them to recover.
From these views it follows that the judgment of the court below should be reversed and a new trial ordered.