46 Colo. 584 | Colo. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellant, who was defendant below, occupied certain premises of the appellee for two years, paid the rent therefor, and moved out. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff let to the defendant the premises, so occupied by the latter, for a term of five years, at $60.00 a year; that a mistake was made in the written lease, in describing the premises intended to be leased, and that entirely different premises were therein described; that defendant failed to pay the rent for the last three years of the term, and judgment was asked for the amount of the unpaid rent.- The answer of the defendant’ denies the allegations of the complaint, afid alleges that the premises occupied by the defendant were leased from the plaintiff by verbal lease at $5.00 a month, for as long a time as defendant might desire; that the defendant occupied the premises for two years, and paid all the rent therefor. The evidence of the plaintiff tended to show that there was a written lease executed, demising, for the term of five years, premises entirely different from those occupied by defendant; that two years after the lease was executed, the plaintiff learned of the mistake in describing the premises, sought for his duplicate copy of the lease, could not find it, and was unable to find the copy up to the time of the trial. Notice to produce the lease was given to the defendant. Oral testimony was given of the contents of the lease as executed, which showed that the premises described therein were altogether different from those which had been occupied by the defendant, while it was intended to describe the premises so occupied. The defendant, by his testimony, denied that a written lease had ever been executed. There was no
This action is for rent of premises for a time when they were not occupied by the defendant and seeks to hold him liable, under the covenants of a written lease. The lease in evidence, and as executed, is not a lease of the premises for which it is sought to recover rent, nor a lease of the premises alleged in the complaint to have been leased to defendant. Until the lease executed is reformed in equity, it must stand as the agreement of the parties.—Randolph v. Helps, 9 Colo. 29. There has been no decree or judgment of any court correcting or reforming the lease, as made. The mere allegation and testimony of a mistake in an action at law upon the covenants does not reform a contract. A contract is reformed by a judgment of court reforming it. The lease, as made, is still the only lease in existence. True, a written contract can often be reformed, and as reformed, be enforced in the same suit; but even then a reformation must be adjudged before it is reformed. The reformation of a lease is a question exclusively for a court, while the question of rent due on a lease is primarily for a jury. Under proper pleadings, if a court has jurisdiction to retain the matter for complete adjustment, or the parties consent thereto, the court may smoothly try the whole matter without a jury, and in one decree adjudge the lease reformed, and .follow this with a judgment for the rent unpaid, upon the covenants of the lease as reformed. If the allegations of the complaint are sufficient, and the parties consent thereto, the trial of the question of reformation by the court and the trial of the question of rent due by a jury might, with
The judgment is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded for such proceedings as may be in accordance with law. Reversed and remanded.