23 Haw. 550 | Haw. | 1916
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an action of ejectment tried in the circuit court of the first circuit, jury waived, the decision and judgment being in favor of the defendant. The facts may be briefly summarized as follows: The plaintiff claims a tract of land designated as lot B at Kahala, leased by L. G. Blackman and James W. Pratt to A. M. Brown, assigned by Brown to W. C. Wilder, and assigned by Wilder to the plaintiff. The defendant claims an adjoining tract designated as lot A, together with a triangle out of the southeast corner of lot B, said triangle designated by lines and corners on a plat annexed to the plaintiff's complaint by the letters “C,” “D” and “E.” The lease to Brown is dated June 14, 1910, and was recorded in the registrar’s office June 30, 1910, and by its terms is not assignable without the written consent of the lessors. The latter part of September, 1910, Mr. Wilder was negotiating with the lessors for their consent to an assignment of the lease by Mr. Brown to him, and at the same time the defendant was negotiating with Blackman and Pratt for a lease of the land covered by lot A and the said triangle out of lot B. The lessors, through Mr., Pratt, agreed with Mr. Wilder that if he would take the land covered by the lease to Brown, less the triangle
The exceptions before us are to the admission of the evidence objected to, to the decision of the court in favor of the defendant, and to the denial of a motion for new trial by the plaintiff. A correct answer to the questions involved by the various exceptions depends upon the determination of the contention of the plaintiff that under the facts proven and found by the trial court the lease under which, the plaintiff claims covers all of the land therein described; that such lease was not affected by the transactions between
In the case in 9 Haw., cited above, it is held that to constitute a surrender of a lease by operation of law there must be a change of possession by consent of the parties inconsistent with the continued existence of the lease, “as where the tenant accepts from his landlord a new lease inconsistent with the old, or where the landlord accepts a new tenant with the consent of the old, or where by mutual consent the tenant yields an,d the landlord resumes possession.” In 24 Cyc., at page 1366, it is said: “A surrender, as the term is used in the law of landlord and tenant, is the yielding up of the estate to the landlord so that the leasehold interest becomes extinct by mutual agreement between the parties. The rescission of a lease, when by express words, is called an express surrender or a surrender in fact; and when by acts so irreconcilable to a continuance of the tenure as to imply the same thing it is called a surrender by operation of law. * * * An express surrender, sometimes called a surrender in fact, as distinguished from a surrender by operation of law, is usually required to be in writing. No particular form of words is necessary, nor is it required that there should be a formal delivery or cancellation of the deed or instrument which created the estate to be surrendered. All that is necessary is the agreement of the proper-parties manifesting such an intent followed by a yielding up of possession to the lessor. There must, however, be a consideration for the surrender.” In 20 Cyc. 218, 219, it is said: “In jurisdictions where the English statute is followed an oral surrender of any lease is inoperative.”
While a surrender of a lease by the lessee to his landlord is not effective per se unless in writing the surrender takes place under an oral agreement by operation of law where the landlord in pursuance of such an agreement takes possession of the demised premises or leases the same to another tenant who takes possession thereof. The agreement of Mr. Wilder to take the premises demised by the Brown lease, less the triangle in dispute, accepted by the lessors, as shown by the change of boundaries, so closely followed by the lease to the defendant, if not a surrender by operation of law, as contended by learned counsel for the defendant (see Beall v. White, 94 U. S. 382, 389), of the triangle in dispute, estopped the plaintiff’s assignor from claiming the same. To permit an intending assignee of a lease to procure and enjoy the benefits of the necessary written consent of his lessor to the assignment to him in consideration of his promise to take only a portion of the demised prem-isés and then repudiate such promise would be abhorrent to the principles of equity. While the facts are different from those in the case of Goo Kim v. Holt, 10 Haw. 653, the principle of estoppel there applied is applicable here. Under the facts established by the evidence, and found by the court, plaintiff’s assignor was estopped from claiming the triangle in controversy. .His assignee, the plaintiff, is in no better position than he was in, and, as the trial court correctly held, is estopped from claiming the triangle in controversy. Parol evidence is admissible to establish acts and declarations made by a party under such circumstances as will in equity estop him from denying such acts and declarations.
• The exceptions are overruled. Costs awarded to the defendant-appellee.
Concurrence Opinion
CONCURRING OPINION OP
There was not an express surrender, and I think the evidence does not show a surrender by operation of law. Wilder did no act as tenant which was inconsistent with the continuance of the tenancy as to the whole lot. But Wilder’s statement to Pratt to the effect that if Blackman and Pratt would consent to the assignment to him of the lease by Brown he would give up that portion of lot B lying westerly of the line D-E was equivalent to a representation that on that being done he would not thereafter make any claim to the strip beyond that line and that Blackman and Pratt could thereafter do what they pleased with it so far as he was concerned. The representation having been acted upon and the consent given, the case presents an equitable estop-pel within the principle of Goo Kim v. Holt, 10 Haw. 653. True, Wilder at that time had no interest in the land, but he acquired an interest by the very transaction of which his representation formed a part. The estoppel affected Wilder’s assignee, the plaintiff, and operated in favor of the as-signee of Blackman and Pratt, the defendant. Dickerson v. Colgrove, 100 U. S. 578.