27 Mich. 110 | Mich. | 1873
Ryan, /who was landlord of McSloy in respect to certain premises in the township of Ham tram ck, took proceedings before a circuit court commissioner to dispossess her, on the ground of neglect and refusal to pay rent which had become due, or to surrender possession for fourteen days after demand thereof. The case was tried with a jury, January 18th, 1871, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty, and that there was due for rent from December 1st, 1870, to the day of trial, the sum of eighty dollars. McSloy appealed to the circuit court, giving the usual security.
On the trial in the circuit court the lease was put in evidence. The term was four years from the first day of May, 1870, at an annual rent of six hundred dollars, the rent for the first four months to be paid in advance, and after that monthly in advance. Ryan by the lease covenanted to make certain repairs and improvements.
The notice to pay the rent or surrender possession was not served on the defendant personally, but the witness who served it testified to going to the premises for the purpose, and to seeing the defendant in the hall, who closed the door before he reached it, and that he then went into a bar-room, which would appear to have been under the same roof, and there delivered the written notice to defendant’s sister, who was then a member of the family, and asked her to deliver it to defendant. No question is made but that this sister was of suitable age and discretion, and we find no error in the action of the court in holding the service sufficient, or in any of its rulings in respect thereto.
The defendant offered evidence to show that complainant had not performed his covenants in the lease in regard
The defendant put in evidence the proceedings on a prior complaint by Ryan to obtain from defendant the possession of the same premises on the same ground of nonpayment of rent, which case was tried by jury, on December 3, 1870, twenty-seven days before the present suit was commenced, and resulted in a verdict for defendant. And she claimed that, as no rent fell due between the day of that trial and the day of the commencement of this suit, the verdict-and judgment in that case were conclusive in-her favor, that no rent was over-due at the time last named, or at-least that none was due when the first proceeding was commenced. The circuit court held otherwise, and wé- think correctly. That rent is over-due, is not the only question involved in these cases; a proper written demand of payment or possession must be made the requisite time before complaint is made; and we cannot know from -any thing that appears in the record whether the jury in the first case based their verdict upon a conclusion that no rent was due, or on a failure of complainant to prove' the proper demand. Besides, the rent over due for which proceedings are taken is that due when the demand is made; and any subsequent case that is tried on a new demand is for a cause which • originates with that demand, and which, therefore, is necessarily a different cause from any before passed upon.
The principal question in the case -whs whether, under the statute, it was requisite that the jury in the circuit court should make a finding of the amount of rent due. The circuit judge held it not needful, and they returned merely the general verdict of guilty.
The statute which prescribes the proceedings before- the
These are the provisions of statute on which the question arises, and it must be confessed that it is not very clear whether it is intended that in the circuit court the amount due shall be found by the judgment. Generally it is true, that an appeal takes a case up to be tried on the same issues and to the same purposes and end that a trial was had below; and perhaps in any case it is to be presumed that such a trial in the appellate court is intended, unless specific provisions to the contrary are made. But there may be cases in which reasons exist for varying the proceedings in the appellate court; and it is possible that proceedings under this statute may have been considered by the legislature as cases of this nature. Before the commissioner these'proceedings are very summary, and may generally be pushed to a very speedy conclusion; and as cases will sometimes occur in which honest differences will exist as to whether any thing is due, the permission to defendant to pay what is found against him, but under a penalty of double costs, would seem, in view of the summary character of the proceedings, to be not unjust to either party. When, however, the case is appealed to the
An examination of these provisions will show that we are not at liberty to infer that those which apply to the proceedings before the commissioner were to regulate wholly the action of the circuit court also. On the contrary, express provision is made for judgment, costs, execution and writ of possession in that court; and the omission to make reference to any finding upon the amount due is consequently very significant, and affords very strong evidence of the legislative intent that the privilege which, was given the tenant in the court below, of being left in possession on payment merely of what was due when proceedings were commenced, could not justly be left open to his acceptance after such lapse of time as' must necessarily attend an appeal, and when other instalments may have fallen due and been left unpaid. And this evidence is particularly strong in view of the unqualified terms in which authority is given the circuit court to issue writ of possession to the complainant obtaining judgment, and' which is made subject to no restriction or qualification whatever. It is probably the view of the legislature that the delays of the appeal would of themselves to some extent answer the purpose of the privilege given before the com
It follows from what has been said that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.