110 Cal. 590 | Cal. | 1895
A demurrer to the amended complaint was sustained; plaintiff declined to further amend; and judgment was rendered for defendants. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
The action is to recover possession of land leased by the plaintiff, upon the ground that certain covenants of the lessees have not been kept—substantially a bill to declare the forfeiture of a lease. The provision for the forfeiture is that “ if default shall be made in any of the covenants herein contained, then it shall be lawful for the lessor to re-enter the said premises.”
The term of the lease was ten years from the first day of October, 1890. The lessees were Eugene B. Scott and W. W. Cozzens. The land leased was four hundred and nineteen acres of uncultivated land. By the terms of the lease the lessees were to lay out and divide four hundred acres of this land into eight convenient parts as nearly equal as may be, “having regard to separate facility of access, and subject to the approval of the lessor”; they were to “thoroughly prepare” this four hundred acres for planting, and to plant the whole thereof with trees of French prunes and peaches of certain specified varieties, and to complete the planting in the winter of the year 1890; they were to properly tend, cultivate, prune, and care for these trees during the whole. term of the lease, and to protect them from disease and insects by the most improved methods; and they were to gather the fruit (of course, after the trees should have commenced to bear) each year in boxes and deliver one-
One of the covenants alleged to have been broken is ■as follows: “And the said lessees do hereby covenant .....not to assign this lease, or permit any assignment thereof to be made by bankruptcy or otherwise, without the written consent of the lessor.” And the alleged breach of this covenant is based upon the alleged facts that in September, 1891, said Cozzens filed his petition in insolvency in the proper court, and included in the schedule of his property “an undivided one-half interest” in said lease; that he was subsequently adjudged by said court to be an insolvent debtor; that in October, 1891, one Burkholder duly became his assignee; that in due course all of said Cozzens’ property was assigned to said assignee; that in March, 1892, said assignee was empowered by said court to sell all the property of said insolvent; that he threatens to sell the same, including the said half-interest in said lease; and that said Scott and said Burkholder are in possession of said demised premises, and withheld the same from •plaintiff.
These averments do not show an assignment of the lease by the lessees within the meaning of said covenant —waiving other points made by respondents in support of the judgment, as, for instance, that under the strict construction applicable to forfeitures “ bankruptcy” does not include insolvency; that the assignment to the assignee in insolvency was by operation of law and was not the act of Cozzens; that Scott did not “permit” the bankruptcy; and that the covenant is against public policy and in express contravention of the insolvent law. Bcott and Cozzens were tenants in common of the land leased; this is admitted and declared by appellant. Neither could, therefore, dispose of the interest of the other; nor could either prevent the other from disposing
2. A mere statement of the second ground for a forfeiture is sufficient to show its insufficiency. The covenant, for the violation of which the forfeiture is sought in the second count of the complaint, is as follows: “ The land to be continuously cultivated in a good and husbandlike manner, and kept clear of other growth, except that the lessees may raise squash and pumpkins between the peach trees during the first two years of their growth, and between the prune trees during the first three years of their growth”; and the averment upon which forfeiture is sought is that the cultivation was not in a good and husbandlike manner “ in this, that the defendants have planted, and now maintain, four rows of corn between every two rows of the said fruit trees over a space of about twelve acres, and four rows of beans between every two rows of the said fruit trees over a space of about twenty acres, and a nursery of young trees between the rows of the fruit trees in the said land described over a space of two acres.” Whatever other remedies appellant may have had, the planting of corn, beans, and nursery trees over a very small part of the four hundred acres, instead of squash and pumpkins over the whole of it, is entirely too trivial a matter, under the principles above stated, to warrant a forfeiture—particularly as the lessor had the right, under
Harrison, J., and Temple, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.