Marcuse v. Shapiro

1 La. App. 135 | La. Ct. App. | 1924

BELL, J.

This is an appeal taken by defendant from a judgment rendered against him on the answer filed by him. The judgment was predicated upon a rule for judgment, filed by plaintiffs, wherein it was set forth that defendant’s answer did not show any valid or legal defense, was insufficient in law and entitled plaintiffs to a judgment on the face of the pleadings.

We have not been favored by any brief from appellant. The facts of this case, as shown by all pleadings, we find to be accurately stated in plaintiff’s brief, as follows:

“The plaintiffs claimed $1,080.00 rent for leased premises, Apartment B of 2724 Napoleon Avénue, a portion of an apartment house in this city, for the 12 months’ unexpired portion of- a 23-month lease, that is from October 1, 1923, to September 30, 1924, at $90.00 per month, on the ground that the unpaid notes had, by the terms of the lease, become exigible through the lessee’s refusal to pay the note which fell due on October 31, 1923.
“The lease was dated November 16, 1922, was for 21 months beginning January 1, *1361923, and ending September 30, 1924, at $90.00 per month (with privilege to occupy the premises beginning December 1, 1922); and the lease provided that if any one note was not paid at maturity, all should become due with 10% attorney's fees.
“The answer of the defendant was that at the time he signed the lease, his family consisted of himself, his wife and a child of about one and a half years of age, which had already started to walk; ‘but that he and his family never occupied the said leased premises’; that on the contrary, he sub-leased the premises, ‘with the consent of plaintiffs’, to one G. C. Carveth for the period commencing January 15, 1923, and ending September 30, 1923, at $70.00 per month.
“That said Carveth attempted from time to time during the term of said sub-lease to cancel the same and vacated the premises on September 30, 1923.
“That defendant attempted to get another sub-tenant and caused a number of ‘prospective’ sub-tenants to be ‘tendered to plaintiffs’, all of whom were refused unreasonably and without just cause.
“That, on or about August 27, 1923, ‘there was tendered; to plaintiffs as a sub-tenant, one E. C. Slaughter, a respectable, refined, responsible person, who signed a written ‘offer’ to sub-lease said premises from October 1, 1923, to September 30, 1924, at $70.00 per month; that the family of said Slaughter consisted of himself, his wife, and one child, but that plaintiffs unreasonably and without just cause rejected the said Slaughter ‘as a sub-tenant’ solely and because of his having a child of about five years, of age, although his offer of sublease ' has been accepted by defendant.
“He averred that there was no provision in the original lease that no child or children should be permitted in said premises; that the defendant had a child of -about one and a half years of age /in his family’ at the time said lease was entered into and that the action of the plaintiffs in rejecting the numerous sub-tenants ‘tendered by defendant’ merely because there was a child or childrn in the family was unwarranted, unjust and unreasonable and the cause of great damage and injury to respondent.
“The answer then proceeds to aver that on account of the actions of plaintiffs, respondent, in order to minimize his damages, ‘was finally compelled’ to sub-lease the premises from November 15,' 1923, to September 30, 1924, at $55.00 per month, whereby he lost the rent for October, amounting to $90.00, lost $62.50 on the November rent, and ‘will lose’ $35.00 per month for the other ten months, or a total of $502.50, whereas, had said sub-tenant Slaughter ‘been accepted by the plaintiffs as he should have been’, respondent’s loss would have been only $240.00, ‘which he was willing to assume and bear,’
“The answer also alleged that defendant denied that he had refused to pay the tenth note, but, on the contrary, he avers that in payment thereof he tendered ‘his check’ for $90.00, which was refused; but this is subsequently stated in the answer to be that in order to avoid trouble and litigation, he had ‘as a matter of compromise’ offered to pay the rent at the rate of $90.00 per month, but that ‘his cheek’ for $90.00, covering the rent of October, 1923, was rejected. When this tender was made he does not state.
“Assuming the position of plaintiff in re-convention, he claimed he had been injured and damaged by the unwarranted and unjust actions of plaintiff in the sum of $262.50; wherefore he prayed for judgment in his favor against plaintiffs, in solido, in the sum of $262.50.
“The lease contained the following provision inserted in handwriting: ‘Privilege to sub-lease providing tenant is suitable to owners’, and the following printed provision: ‘Lessee binds himself « * * to make no sub-lease without written consent of lessor.’ ”

The merits of this case are not before us for consideration, the sole question being whether the allegations in defendant’s answer and reconventional demand sufficiently set forth any valid or legal defense or plea within the provisions of the pleadings and practice Acts — 157 of 1912 and 130 of 1914. We think they do not and that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed for the following reasons:

1. Defendant does not deny any of the material allegation of plaintiff’s petition.

2. Defendant admits the existence of the lease sued upon, and that he has purposely *137withheld the rent for which he is in arrears after making an alleged tender of one month’s rent in an alleged manner plainly insufficient in law and only in the spirit of a compromise, to which plaintiffs are not shown to have ever agreed.

3. That defendant, as plaintiff in re-convention, does not pray that plaintiff’s demand be rejected, but that only he, in turn, be given judgment for damages, actual and anticipatory, and which he suffered under facts not supporting a legal and sufficient cause of actio'n.

The clause in the lease granting “privilege to sub-lease providing tenant is suitable to owner”, must be strictly construed against the lessee. (Montecon vs. Faures et al., 3 La. Ann. 43; Cordeviolle vs. Ridon, 4 La. Ann. 40.)

The right to sub-lease, even though it be termed a “privilege”, is, when coupled with a proviso that the sub-tenant be acceptable to owner, naught else but a stipulation wholly in favor of the lessor. (Henderson vs. A. Meyers & Bro., 45 La. Ann. 797, 13 South. 191; 24 Cyc., 967.)

The withholding of such a privilege from the lessee can never justify him in withholding the payment of rent as accrued. His remedy, if any, is by direct action for enforcement of what may be shown to have been a specific right, wholly exercisable at the will of the lessee. No such facts are shown to exist from the pleadings before us.

In the case of Bailey vs. Walker & Co., Inc., 290 Fed. 285, the Appellate Federal Court of the District of Columbia, affirming a judgment dissolving a lease because of tenant’s violation of the covenant not to sub-lease, held:

“There can be no question, and the authorities are ample on this subject, that a covenant against sub-letting is for the benefit of the landlord, because it is regarded as for his interest to determine who shall be a tenant of his property.”

When defendant accepted the lease here sued upon and subscribed particularly to the clause relating to the condition of a sub-lease, viz.: ’ that the party sub-leasing the property must be suitable to the lessor, he yielded to the lessor the right o'f being the sole judge of whether the sub-tenant was suitable. Such a contract, however ill advised and however pregnant with possible obstacles regarding a sub-lease, was made with the eyes of the defendant wide open, and he cannot be heard to complain against a legal stipulation which might result to him disastrously; His opinion that the refusal of the lessor’s consent was unreasonable, does not give him a legal right to so plead in avoidance of the main obligation to pay the rent. Similar reasoning was expressed in the case of McCarren vs. McNulty, 7 Gray 139, 141:

“It may be that the plaintiff was injudicious or indiscreet in undertaking to labor and furnish materials for a compensation, the payment of which Was made dependent upon a contingency so hazardous or doubtful as the approval or satisfaction of a party particularly in interest. But of that, he was the sole judge. Against the consequences resulting from his own bargain, the law can afford him no relief.” (See also 9 Cyc., 620; Campbell Printing Press vs. Thorpe, 36 Fed. 414, 418; 1 L. R. A. 645.)

A careful examination of defendant’s pleadings made in this suit in form of an answer, convinces us that the defense to this suit is wholly insufficient in law, and that the relief granted to plaintiffs on the rule for judgment, in conformity with Acts 157 of 1912 and 300 of 1914, was well founded.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from herein be and the same is hereby affirmed, at defendant’s costs in both courts.