117 Ark. 272 | Ark. | 1915
Appellees instituted this action against appellant in the circuit court to recover $175 alleged to be due under a written contract of lease. The facts are undisputed and are substantially as follows:
On the 25th day of September, 1912, appellees by a contract in writing leased to appellant a house in the city of Mena, for a period of seventeen months from the first day of August, 1913. Under the lease appellant agreed to pay as rent the sum of $40 per month in the case the building was used for the purpose of selling liquor; otherwise the rent was to be $25 per month.
Appellant opened np a saloon-in the city of Mena on the 13th day of June, 1913, but in a different portion of the town from that in which the leased premises are 'Situated. On the 1st day of August, 1913, some one else was in possession of the premises and appellant made no attempt whatever to occupy the premises. The person who occupied the premises at that date had been a former tenant of appellee’s and stated that he would have given up possession of the premises on the 1st day of August, 1913, if possession had been demanded of him, that he simply stayed on in the building for a while because no one asked him to give up possession. Appellant never did move into the building and refused to pay appellees any rent. This suit was brought to recover rent for seven months. The court directed a verdict for appellees and the case is here on appeal.
Appellant relies -for a reversal of the judgment upon the cases of Thomas v. Croom, 102 Ark. 108, and Rose v. Wynn, 42 Ark. 257. We do not think 'either of these cases is 'an authority for the position assumed by appellant. In each of them the lessee endeavored to take possession of the leased premises and was prevented from doing so by a former tenant asserting a right to hold over under a prior lease from the landlord. In the case of Thomas v. Croom, the court said that by virtue of a lease contract there is an implied covenant that the demised premises shall be open to entry to the lessee at the time fixed in the lease for the beginning of the term and that if the lessee is prevented from obtaining possession by some one holding the premises, then such covenant is violated.