10 Haw. 289 | Haw. | 1896
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
• This is an action of debt to recover rent on a written lease for a'term.
Several natives living at Waialna, Oahu, claiming to own various separate parcels of land, joined in making a lease of the-same to a number of Chinese. The rent was to be at a certain sum per acre of land, to be cultivated and used as a rice plantation. ■ Among the lessors was one Kaaiulaula, claiming some nine anres of the land described in Royal Patent Yo. 333. The lease is.dated July 7, 1890, and is for the term of twenty years. Ka-aiulaula, shortly before his death in 1894, made a conveyance of this land to the plaintiffs. The Chinese tenants paid rent to Kaaiulaula, and after'.his conveyance continued to pay some to Poloaieaj one 'of the -plaintiffs. The suit is to recover rent to date of the action. It was claimed by, the defendants, and evidence was introduced tending to prove the same, that, .on receiv
The trial court held that the evidence of the defendants did not prove a legal surrender, and that the defendants as lessees of the plaintiffs were estopped to deny their title, and refused to admit the evidence offered as to the title. The bill of exceptions disputes the correctness of these rulings. The position of defendants is this: If they can show that Kaaiulaula and his grantees are estopped to deny the title of the real owner, the heirs of Kaanaana, plaintiffs being tenants at will and not having asserted title in themselves, this estoppel now inures to the benefit of defendants under their lease from the true owners; also they do not seek to deny the plaintiffs’ title, but to show an affirmative title in themselves, from which any title the plaintiffs had was derived; also they claim that the title that Kaaiulaula had, as a tenant at will, was terminated by the lease of the true owners to defendants. The interesting question as to whether this evidence was properly excluded is raised for the first time in our courts.
It is a general and well settled rule of law that a tenant cannot dispute his landlord’s title. Disputing the landlord’s title means
In People v. Howlett, 76 N. Y. 574, a tenant successfully plead that his lease was made to cover usury. “A tenant is not estopped to set up that his landlord’s title is legally extinguished or terminated so that it no longer exists.” Ryder v. Marshall, 66 Me. 170.
Lamson v. Clarkson, 113 Mass. 348, is authority that a tenant is not estopped to show that his landlord’s title was only an estate for the life of another, which expired during the term, and thereby to justify his not paying rent to the landlord subsequently accrued.
Hillbourn v. Fogg et al., 99 Mass. 11, is to a similar effect. It is there held that a tenant is not estopped to deny that since his own entry into possession his lessor’s title has expired, either by its own limitation, by the act of the lessor or by eviction by title paramount, and that when the estoppel is set up by one claiming as assignee of the lessor, the tenant may show that such assignment was ineffectual to pass the lessor’s title. In this case Mrs. Hillbourn occupied her room as a tenant at will of Mrs. McGrath. McGrath made a written lease of the room to Pogg, who expelled Mrs. Hillbourn from the room. But Mrs. McGrath did not own the estate and was herself a tenant at will of the owner, and the court, per Gray, J., held that she (Mrs. McGrath) could not mate a valid alienation which would give Fogg a better title than she had previously given to Mrs. Hillbourn. Mrs. Hillbourn was held not estopped to deny the validity of Mrs. McGrath’s derivative title. This is followed in Palmer v. Bowker, 106 Mass. 317. Bigelow on Estoppel, p. 403, maintains the doctrine that a tenant is not estopped to
To apply these principles to our case. On the defendants’ statement Kaaiulaula was a tenant at will of the heirs of Ka-anaana (the true owners of the land) when he made the lease to the defendants. The lease of the true owners to defendants terminated the tenancy at will of Kaaiulaula, and defendants may be permitted to show an affirmative title in themselves from the persons from Avhom their lessor, Kaaiulaula, derived his title. See also Doe, Id.; Higginbotham v. Barton, 11 Ad. & E. 307, and Holbrook v. Young, 108 Mass. 83.
We think the defendants should have been allowed to prove the facts tendered.
The defendants also claim that they notified the plaintiffs that they had ascertained that plaintiffs had no title, and offered the possession of the land to them and abandoned the possession, exercising no act of ownership thereon until they resumed possession under their new lease from the real owners. This was held by the court to be insufficient to show a surrender, the court holding that “a surrender must be by mutual agreement.”
This is not accurate. An eviction to justify attornment may be actual or constructive. And a constructive eviction is when a lessee in order to prevent being actually expelled from the demised premises, yields the possession thereof, in good faith, to one who has a title paramount to that of the lessee and his lessor, and also a right to the immediate possession, and this is a good.defense to an action for rent brought by the lessor. Morse v. Goddard, 13 Met. 177. In such case, says Shaw, O.J., where a tenant thus relies upon an ouster in pais, without judgment, he has the burden of proving the validity of the elder title, the actual entry under it, and that he acted in good faith and without collusion with the party entering. Of .course a mere volun
2 Herman, Estoppel, Secs. 869-871.
On this misdirection we think the defendants are entitled to a new trial.
At the close of plaintiffs’ case the defendants moved for a non-suit on the ground that it was not shown who were the partners in Ohin Wo Company. This motion was denied and exception taken. The action was brought upon a written lease against Ohin Wo Company and others under the very names in which the lease was made, executed and acknowledged; and the defendants, including Ohin Wo Company, answered under the same names. The lease was in evidence. Under these circumstances the motion was properly refused.
Hew trial ordered.