49 N.J.L. 521 | N.J. | 1887
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The first point of attack upon the first count in the declaration is that the sealed agreement upon which the
It is claimed that the failure to pay the rent, as charged in the declaration, put an end to the lease absolutely, and no-action could .be maintained upon that instrument. This result is alleged to spring out of the fact that the clause of forfeiture does not leave the avoidance of the lease to the option of either party, but upon the failure to pay rent at certain times it becomes, by reason of that alone, absolutely void. It is said that after the happening of the event, upon the occurrence of which the vitality of the lease is extinguished, the right to-recover for the occupancy of premises must be asserted in the shape of an action for use and occupation.
If it was possible to accede to this view of the legal force of the clause of forfeiture, I am yet unable to perceive how it would aid the demurrant. Eor a glance at the lease discloses the fact that the covenant to pay rent was broken before the occurrence of the default, upon which the avoidance of the lease is based. The covenant was to pay the rent in quarterly payments, at certain specified dates, but the event upon which the lease was to become void was a failure to pay any such instalment within sixty days thereafter. So a right to an action for some portion of the rent must have accrued before the occurrence of the sixty days’ default.
Rut the plaintiff’s demand is supportable upon a broader ground than this, for it is impossible to yield assent to thedemurrant’s view of the import of the clause of forfeiture.. The law controlling the construction of provisions of this description may be regarded as entirely settled. The rule is that the lessor has the right to take advantage of the forfeiture,, but it is entirely optional with him whether he avails himself
It was once held that there was a distinction between estates of freehold and terms for years, in respect to the effect of a breach of a condition for the non-performance of which the estate or term should become void. It was thought that upon the breach of a condition of absolute avoidance in the first instance, inasmuch as at common law livery of - seizin was necessary to begin the estate, nothing less than an entry could terminate it; while in the case of a lease, as they were originally only contracts, they became void upon breach of the condition without entry or any other act to enforce the forfeiture. Dumpor’s Case, 1 S. L. C., p. *197, notes; Taylor’s L. & T., § 492.
This view may now be regarded as entirely abandoned.
In Hurtshone v. Wetson, 4 Bing. (N. C.) 178, the landlord sued for rent. The lease contained a proviso that if there was a default in the payment for a certain time the lessor was to have the premises again as if the lease had never been made. It was held that the lease was not void, but voidable by the lessor upon the happening of the default, and that the lease .still existed to support his action.
In Arnby v. Woodward, 6 B. & C. 519, the lease contained a proviso that if the rent should be in arrear for twenty-one days after demand made, or if any of the covenants should be broken, then the term thereby granted, or as much thereof as should then be unexpired, to cease, determine and be wholly void, and it should be lawful for the landlord upon the premises to re-enter. This was held to render the lease voidable only upon breach of a condition. The clause of re-entry, which was coupled with the avoidance of the lease, was the subject of remark, as if it might aid in reaching the construction given to the provisos. But the proviso, stripped of any right to re-enter, has received a similar interpretation.
And in the case of Doe, ex dem. Bryan, v. Bancks, 4 B. & Ald. 401, a proviso that upon failure of the tenant to work a coal mine for two years, his lease should be void to all intente' and purposes, received a similar construction. The rule seems firmly established in the English courts, and it may be generally considered well settled that however absolute the words of forfeiture may be they will be construed as having no other object than that of enabling the party in whose favor they are made to treat the lease as void, or to enforce it, as he desires. 1 Sm. L. C. * 98, and cases.
The claim, therefore, that at the time of bringing this action the lease had ceased to exist by reason of the default in payment of rent, cannot be admitted.
The counsel for the demurraut also insists that there is a misjoinder of counts, the first count being framed in covenant and the last count in assumpsit.
This, previous to the adoption of the new rules, would have been fatal, upon general demurrer, to the entire declaration; but now the joinder of covenant with debt, assumpsit or trespass on the case, for injuries arising from breaches of contract, is permissible.
The demurrant insists that the narr. is defective by reason of the non-joinder of parties both as plaintiffs and defendants.
It appears from the sealed agreement that the covenant to pay rent, for the breach of which this action is brought, was made by Miller and Parish to Smith and wife. The first count is apparently against Miller alone, and the action is brought by Smith without joining his wife as a plaintiff.
The non-joinder of a joint covenantee was, at common law, if the defect appeared upon the face of the pleading, fatal upon demurrer. Dicey on Parties, p. 525; 1 Chitty on Plead., p. 13.
The thirty-seventh section of the Practice act (Rev., p. 853)
The interpretation of this provision in the case of Brown v. Fitch, 4 Vroom 418, was that the defendant was precluded from making the objection of the non-joinder of a plaintiff upon the trial, if he had neglected to give the notice. It was held that the defendant could show upon the trial that the contract sued upon was joint, and make any defence under that contract which he might have made if the omitted person had been joined as a plaintiff. But the rule laid down in that case was that the fact alone appearing upon the trial that the contract was joint, would not, without the notice, defeat a recovery by the plaintiff or plaintiffs suing, although others should have been joined as parties. So, if a plea had been interposed in this case, without a notice of non-joinder, and upon the trial the same condition of fact had been proved as now appeal’s upon the face of the first count in the declaration, it would not have presented a defence.
The rule thus established in the above case applies to demurrers as well as pleas. Both a plea and a demurrer are mentioned in the statute as pleadings under which the nonjoinder of a plaintiff cannot be objected to without the statutory notice.
So, upon the trial of the issue of law, raised by a demurrer without notice, if upon the face of the declaration it appears that the contract sued upon by one person was made with him and others, and nothing appears to disclose any defence to such joint contract, the defendant is precluded from objecting to the non-joinder, as he might have done at common law. The objection of the demurrant, aimed at the non-joinder of the wife as a co-plaintiff, is not now sustainable.
The second objection, which goes to the non-joinder of a person who upon the face of the declaration was a joint covenantor with the defendant, stands upon a different footing.
If, however, the non-joinder is apparent from the face of the pleading, the defendant may demur. It must appear that the party omitted is still living as well as that he jointly contracted. 1 Chitty on Plead., p. 46.
Although Sergeant Williams held the view that the omitted defendant was presumed to be living, the better opinion seems to be in favor of the view that it must appear upon the face of the pleading that the omitted party is living. Notes to Rice v. Shute, 1 Sm. L. C. *648.
And the fair inference to be drawn from the commencement of this declaration is that the omitted defendant was, at the time of the commencement of the action, living. It speaks of Miller as impleaded with Parish. The fact so stated, namely, that they were sued together, implies that both were living at the time. The pleader, after so stating, proceeds to declare against one only.
Upon this ground, there must be judgment for the demur-rant.