160 P. 803 | Or. | 1916
Opinion by
It is maintained that an error was committed in denying a request to direct a verdict for the plaintiff on the ground that no testimony had been received tending to support the averments of the answer. It is insisted by defendant’s counsel, however, that since the complaint did not particularly describe the premises alleged to have been leased, the primary pleading did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which defect was not waived or remedied by answering over after a demurrer to the complaint interposed on that ground was overruled, and, this being so, no error „ can be predicated upon any action of the court occurring at the trial.
“The declaration or complaint in an action for arrears of rent should allege a lease of described premises for a given term at a certain rent which defendant promised to pay and which has become due and remains unpaid”: 24 Cyc. 1210.
See, also, Kiernan v. Terry, 26 Or. 494 (38 Pac. 671).
“If a necessary allegation is omitted from a pleading, and the missing allegation is either alleged or admitted by the pleading of the adverse party the defect is cured.”
So, too, in Dice v. McCauley, 25 Or. 471 (36 Pac. 530), in referring to an ambiguity in the delineation of a border to real property, set forth in an initiatory pleading, Mr. Justice Bean observes:
“The only uncertainty in the description contained in the complaint is the north boundary, and that is obviated by the answer.”
To the effect that omitted averments may be supplied by the allegations of an adverse party, see, also, Turner v. Corbett, 9 Or. 79; Ferrera v. Parke, 19 Or. 141 (23 Pac. 883); State ex rel. v. Downing, 40 Or. 309 (58 Pac. 863, 66 Pac. 917); Catlin v. Jones, 48 Or. 158 (85 Pac. 515); Hornefius v. Wilkinson, 51 Or. 45 (93 Pac. 474).
Reviewing the refusal to direct a verdict for the plaintiff, the testimony shows that the Walker Warehouse Company, a corporation, claiming to be the owner of the tide-land in front of and abutting upon the north end of the lot described in the lease, built on such shoals a wharf the outer or north line of which extended to navigable water in the Coquille River. Chris Rasmussen, the owner of such' lot, commenced a suit against the corporation to quiet his title to the premises, alleging in his complaint that the tide-land abutting thereon was a part thereof, and on November 16, 1912, he secured a decree enjoining those defendants and all persons claiming or to claim by, through, or under them, or either of them, from driving any piles between the north line of such lot and the ship channel in that river, and also restraining any interference with that plaintiff’s rights or privileges in or to the tide-land, from which decree those defendants appealed. The corporation thereafter, and on May 6, 1913, leased to Willard the premises so described for the use of which he paid the first installment of rent in advance. The defendant made a small log raft, which, floating with the tides, rested against the north line of piling of the wharf, though the raft was fastened to a wharf immediately east of the one mentioned. The latter wharf and a warehouse thereon were also built by the corporation in front of and abutting upon lot 1 in block 3 of Woodland Addition to Bandon, which real property was owned by Mr. Kronenberg. From the raft to the west wharf the
G-. T. Treadgold testified that on May 6, 1913, when the lease was made, the Walker Warehouse Company was, and ever since the year 1911 had been, in possession of the wharf and the wharfage right in front of lots 1 and 2 in block 3 in the addition specified; that in the eight months during which the defendant occupied the demised premises pursuant to the terms of the written agreement he never denied his liability to the corporation or offered to surrender to it the possession of the property.
Chris Easmussen, the party who secured the decree against the Walker Warehouse Company, testified that about May 6,1913, the defendant herein applied to him for permission to use the wharfage right in front of lot 2, and was informed by the witness that the property was in litigation, and until a final decree was rendered nothing could be done by him in the matter. On cross-examination Mr. Easmussen stated he did not tell the defendant he could not use the property, nor did the witness object to the steamboat being tied by Willard at that place.
*667 “The landlord may not have any interest in the title to the demised premises, hut whether he has or not cannot be questioned by the tenant before the expiration of his lease, and whilst in possession under it, unless based upon some distinct and independent claim to the land.”
A tenant who enters into possession of demised premises pursuant to the terms of a lease can escape liability for rent thereunder only by being evicted by the holder of the paramount title or by compulsory attornment to him, or, when notified of the assertion of such superior right, by surrendering possession to his landlord: Jones, Land. & Ten., § 701. This author in that section of his work remarks:
“For a tenant who admits the execution of a lease to defend an action for rent, it is necessary for him to allege either that he had not entered under the lease, or that he had been evicted by a paramount title or that possession had been surrendered. ’ ’
In George v. Putney, 4 Cush. (Mass.) 351, 354 (50 Am. Dec. 788), Mr. Justice Wilde, speaking for the court, says:
“In an action for the recovery of rent reserved in a lease by the lessor against the lessee, the defendant is not allowed to plead nil hobuit in tenementis; for he is estopped to deny the lessor’s title, by whose permission he has entered upon and occupied the premises. And this is not a mere technical rule, but is conformable to the contract between the parties; for so long as the lessee is not disturbed in his occupation he is bound by the contract to pay the rent, whether the lessor’s title be defective or not. But it is equally well settled that, if the lessee is disturbed in his occupation by a party having a title paramount to that of his lessor, so that he cannot legally continue his occupation under the lessor, without rendering himself liable as a trespasser to the other party, he may yield the possession, and take a new lease under him, or he*668 may abandon the possession; and in either case he will thereafter not be liable to pay rent to the original lessor. Such an entry and disturbance are equivalent to an ouster. ’ ’
See, also, the notes to the case of Hodges v. Waters, 4 Ann. Cas. 106.
“When there is no conflict in the evidence, and no dispute as to the material facts of the case, the question for decision is for the court, and under such a state of facts the court should direct the jury as to the particular verdict that they should find in accordance with the undisputed evidence.”
See, also, the cases there cited in support of the language used.
A request having been made at the proper time for a directed verdict for the plaintiff, to which command the evidence shows he was unquestionably entitled, as a matter of law, an error was committed in denying such solicitation.