127 Mo. App. 300 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
The action is for rent and was commenced before a justice of the peace, where plaintiff recovered judgment. Defendant appealed to the circuit court. On a trial de novo in said court, after the close
If the evidence shows, or tends to show, that plaintiff by her agents, after they learned defendant had abandoned the premises, took such possession of them and exercised siuch dominion over them as to indicate an intent on their part to accept and treat defendant’s abandonment of the premises as a surrender thereof, then the case should have been sent to the jury. In Livermore & Cooley v. Eddy’s Admr., 33 Mo. 547, it was ruled: “The quitting of the premises occupied by a tenant during the term, and sending the key to the landlord, who proceeds to repair and use the house, does not discharge the tenant from his liability to pay rent, unless the landlord consent to acquit the rent.” And in Sander v. Commission Co., 121 Mo. App. l. c. 297, 99 S. W. 12, we said: “A landlord may enter the vacated premises for the purpose of guarding and protecting them from a threatened injury or to prevent waste, to abate a nuisance, or to make such repairs as would not interfere with the occupancy of the absent tenant, if he should return.” At page 298, in passing on a motion for rehearing, Goons, J., said: “When the tenant vacates without the landlord’s consent, it is usually held the latter may relet without working a surrender, though the old tenant will'be entitled to an abatement from the rent in proportion to what is collected from the new one. [Jones, Landlord and Tenant, sec. 549.]” Now if, in the circumstances related, the landlord may relet the premises without releasing the tenant who vacated, it cannot be said that putting up a “For Rent” sign by