146 N.Y. 317 | NY | 1895
James Lamb died in January, 1885, leaving him surviving the defendant, his widow, and the plaintiffs, being his three infant children, of the ages of five years, three years and one year respectively. The deceased left property, real and personal, of the amount of about $75,000. At the time of his death he was living in his own house in Cohoes with his wife and children. Some time in the summer of 1885 James White was, upon the petition of the defendant, appointed the general guardian of the infants by the surrogate of Albany county. Soon after his appointment as guardian he and the defendant had a conversation, the particulars of which, in some respects, they do not agree upon in their testimony in this case, but they do agree in the statement that the guardian was to allow Mrs. Lamb, the defendant, a total of $1,000 a year for the three children for their maintenance and clothing. The defendant and her children continued to live in the house from the time of the death of Mr. Lamb, and no demand had ever been made upon the defendant for the payment of any rent for the occupation thereof until the writing of a letter a few days before the commencement of this action. The defendant has in the meantime taken care of the children and acted towards them as their natural guardian. On or about January 29, 1891, Mr. White wrote Mrs. Lamb a letter, in which he said that recent events had *321 led him to make an investigation as to the defendant and the estate of Mr. Lamb, and of his rights and duties as general guardian of the property of his children, and he said that he was advised, and that it appeared to be his imperative duty as such guardian, to charge and collect from her a reasonable rent for the house and grounds belonging to the estate and occupied by the defendant since the death of her husband. The defendant refused to pay any rent for the time during which she with her children had occupied the house, and Mr. White then, by order of the county judge, was appointed guardian ad litem of the infants, and commenced this action in their name by himself as such guardian ad litem.
The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs since January 18, 1885, have been the joint owners of the premises which, since the last of February, 1885, had been used and occupied by the defendant as a residence, and that such use and occupation was reasonably worth the sum of $600 per year, no part of which had been paid although the defendant had been requested so to do by the general guardian of the property and of the plaintiffs. The complaint further alleged that the plaintiffs were under the age of fourteen years and that James White had been duly appointed their guardian ad litem by the county judge of Albany county before the commencement of this action. Judgment was demanded that plaintiffs recover of the defendant the sum of $3,575, with interest as stated. The defendant answered, and after alleging the general facts which have been above stated alleged, further, that the general guardian, James White, advised this defendant to continue to reside in the dwelling house with her children, and consented to such residence on her part, and that he had never asked or required the defendant to pay any rent, and that she had occupied the premises since the death of the intestate, her husband, in pursuance of an agreement with the general guardian by which she was not to pay rent, but was to provide a home for the plaintiffs and pay one-third of the taxes and assessments and one-third of the repairs to be made upon the house; and she denied that she had occupied *322 the house under or in pursuance of an agreement with the general guardian by which she was to pay any rent.
Upon these pleadings the parties went to trial. It will be seen that the suit is somewhat extraordinary in character. The three children of the defendant living with her in the house in which their father and the defendant's husband died, the children being still very young (all of them under the age of fourteen years) are yet in form suing their mother to obtain the payment of rent for her use and occupation of this house, where the plaintiffs have been cared for and nourished by the defendant, their mother. The trial of the case developed the reason for its existence. It appeared that the general guardian a short time before the writing of the letter above alluded to had a personal misunderstanding with the defendant in relation to matters having no connection with this subject in dispute, and immediately thereafter he receives this light in regard to his duty as guardian and writes the letter above mentioned making demand for rent, and upon the refusal of the defendant to pay it he procures himself to be appointed guardian ad litem and commences this action in the names of these infant daughters of the defendant. There can be no doubt as to the real motive for the action. While it may have no bearing upon the questions of law which are involved herein, it is proper to state the fact because of the exception taken by the plaintiff to the ruling of the court which allowed the defendant to prove a quarrel and the remarks that were made by the general guardian to the defendant at that time. It will be seen that the action, so far as it is shown by the complaint, is one for use and occupation, although there is no allegation therein of any agreement on the part of the defendant to pay rent. The fact is alleged that the plaintiffs are infants under the age of fourteen years, and that James White has been appointed their guardian ad litem. Upon the facts which have been stated, and which are substantially all the material ones which were proved, the learned trial judge held that there must be some agreement, either expressed or implied from the circumstances, to pay *323
rent on the part of the defendant, and if there were no such agreement no recovery could be had. The court submitted to the jury the question whether or not such an agreement had been proved, and it permitted them to infer an agreement to pay rent from the circumstances proved in the case, if they thought such inference were a proper and natural one. The jury found for the defendant, thus negativing the existence of any agreement to pay rent, either expressed or implied. So far as the complaint should be held to be one to recover rent for the use and occupation of these premises in the technical sense of that expression founded on the statute, the action cannot be maintained without proof of some agreement to pay rent, either expressed, or implied from the possession of the lands and other circumstances, so that the conventional relation of landlord and tenant may be said to have existed between the parties. (Collyer v. Collyer,
The plaintiffs, however, argue that there is stated in the complaint enough to allow of a recovery in the nature of one for use and occupation founded upon the fact of an entry upon the lands of the infants by one who had not the legal right to occupy as against them, and who, therefore, was to be regarded as entering in the character of a guardian or bailiff of the infants, and liable to account for the rents and profits of the land while so in possession. We assume that if the plaintiffs proved a state of facts from which an illegal entry or intrusion upon the lands of the infants would follow, an action might be maintained by the infants upon their arrival at age, or by their guardian before such time, against the person thus intruding, for the recovery of the rents and profits, or, in other words, for the value of the use and occupation of the lands thus intruded upon.
The cases cited in the very learned and exhaustive brief of the plaintiffs' counsel, would seem to prove this beyond all controversy, and indeed we should say that it was quite a plain proposition. It might be questionable whether the complaint set forth any such cause of action. Aside from the *324 question of pleading, however, we do not think the facts proved and found show any such case. Upon the death of James Lamb, the intestate, these infant plaintiffs and their mother, the defendant, continued living in the house where they had all resided up to his death. The mother was entitled to dower. They were helpless infants; their mother was their natural guardian. She remained in the house after her husband's death, protecting, caring for and supervising them. Upon such facts we might well hold there was no wrongful, illegal or improper intrusion or entry upon the lands of these infants. They were themselves in actual occupancy of the house, having the benefit thereof and the title thereto; the defendant caring for and protecting them in such occupancy, and not in fact converting any profits to her own use, or receiving any thing as profits of an adverse occupation and possession. There are other facts, however, and it is unnecessary to decide upon the legal effect of the above in the absence of any agreement whatever.
Upon defendant's petition Mr. White was appointed the general guardian of the infants, and in that petition the fact was stated that they were residing in this house and that no rent arose therefrom. This fact was known by the proposed guardian, and from the time of his appointment he had acquiesced in the defendant's residence in that house while taking care of and maintaining the children, and such acquiescence continued until a short time subsequent to the quarrel above mentioned, when the demand for rent was for the first time made. The guardian during this time not only acquiesced in but consented to and advised such residence, and by the finding of the jury, taking into consideration the issues made by the answer of the defendant and the testimony of Mr. White and the defendant, and the manner in which the question was submitted to the jury, it can be stated and maintained that he not only consented to such occupation, but that he agreed affirmatively that no rent should be charged and that the $1,000 allowed, taken in connection with the occupation of the house, should be the allowance to the defendant *325 out of the property of the infants for their care, clothing and board. The plaintiffs' counsel alleges that the question whether such agreement existed was not submitted to the jury, and that the only question submitted was whether there was an affirmative agreement on the part of the defendant to pay rent, or whether from the circumstances proved in the case the jury should imply one. I think such is not the limitation to be given to the charge of the court. The affirmative agreement was set up in the answer. The guardian and the defendant were both sworn upon the trial. They both testified to a certain conversation taking place in regard to these children and to the amount which should be allowed for their maintenance and upon the subject of rent. The guardian testified distinctly that in that conversation there was no agreement to pay any specified sum for rent, but he alleges that from the course of the conversation it was assumed and stated that the question of rent was one to be submitted to or decided by the surrogate, and that the defendant would pay whatever the surrogate decided was proper. The defendant, in testifying in regard to that conversation, and assuming to give its substantial import, stated that the agreement was that she was to have $1,000 annually for the support of the three children, and that she should keep the children and should have the use of the house until the youngest child came of age, on payment by her of the taxes, insurance and repairs, and he advised her to stay there on those terms. While the learned court charged that there must be found either an express agreement to pay rent or an implied agreement arising from the circumstances submitted to the jury, he left it to the jury to say which of these stories, as given by the guardian and the defendant, they believed. The testimony of the defendant was not a mere denial of that of the guardian, but it was a positive statement as to what the agreement was, and as defendant stated it her evidence was not alone totally inconsistent with and contradictory to that given by the guardian, but it stated an affirmative agreement as to the rent. So, when the testimony of the *326 guardian and of the defendant on this point was submitted to the jury, and it was left to them to say which of the two witnesses they were to believe, it was in substance and effect a submission of the question as to what was the agreement, and a verdict for the defendant involves a finding, not only that there was no expressed agreement to pay rent, and that there was no implication of an agreement arising out of the circumstances, but a finding that the defendant's evidence was true, and that evidence proved the agreement relied on by defendant. The agreement, as testified to by the defendant and found by the jury, was inconsistent with the idea of any unlawful intrusion upon the lands of the infants or any liability to pay rent therefor. We think the plaintiffs' claim that the testimony was contradictory as to the agreement to pay rent, and that the question of the agreement as sworn to by defendant had not been submitted to the jury, is not justified by the charge of the judge, and the argument of plaintiffs, which is based upon such claim, must fail. Under such circumstances, the continuation of the mother in the house furnishes no basis of a claim for use and occupation. It is further urged that this agreement, even if made, was one which would not bind the infants, unless it were a reasonable one, and that evidence addressed to the question of the reasonable character of the agreement offered by the plaintiffs was excluded by the court upon the objection of the defendant. The evidence which the counsel for plaintiffs claims should have been admitted upon this point was that which he offered for the purpose of showing that the defendant had, on some occasions, taken these children with her to the country and obtained board for them at rates of $3, and even as low as $2.50 per week for each of them. It appeared that the mother upon all these occasions, with one exception, accompanied her children for the purpose of taking care of them. We think the fact if proved was wholly immaterial, and had no bearing whatever upon the question of the reasonable character of the agreement which the defendant alleges was made between herself and this guardian. That she was enabled for *327 a short time in each summer to obtain board for herself and her children at a small rate in the country had no proper bearing upon the question.
The court permitted the defendant, under the plaintiffs' objection, to testify to a quarrel between the defendant and the guardian just prior to the time when he wrote the letter making his demand for rent. The defendant testified that in that quarrel the guardian made threats against her, and said that where he as guardian had saved her cents he would make her pay out dollars in more ways than one. It was objected to on the ground that the quarrel and dispute between these parties had no relation to his guardianship or administratorship of the estate. We think the evidence was admissible upon the well-grounded principle that it is always proper to show the feeling of a witness towards the party against whom he testifies, and for the purpose of thereby affecting the credibility of his testimony. It was particularly proper in this case. His evidence and that of the defendant were diametrically opposed, and to such an extent that it was quite plain neither could be honestly mistaken. It has frequently been held that such evidence is proper. (Starkes v. People, 5 Den. 106; Schultz v. Railroad Co.,
On the whole, we think the judgment is right, and it should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.