91 Ala. 458 | Ala. | 1890
The main question in this case arises under section 3391 of the Code of 1886. By that section it is enacted, that “any person who, having entered into the possession of lands and tenements under a contract of lease, forcibly or unlawfully retains the possession thereof after the expiration of his term, or refuses to surrender the same on the written demand of the lessor, his agent, or attorney, or legal representative, is liable for double the amount of the rent agreed to be paid under such contract.” The statute then declares that such tenant holding over is liable “for such other special damages as may be thereby sustained by the party thus unlawfully kept out of the possession.”
The term of the lease of Ullman & Co. expired September 1, 1887, and the rental was four hundred dollars per year, payable monthly. They were erecting a store-house of their oavii, but it Avas not completed when their lease from Herzberg expired. Herzberg, who was preparing to go into business in the same house, informed Ullman c% Co. that he Avould allow them two AAreeks Avithin which to vacate the store, but that he must have it at the end of that time. It is shown that no compensation Avas agreed on, exacted, or paid; for these extra two weeks. At the expiration of the two weeks, Ullman & Oo. were still in possession, and on the 15th September Herzberg had written notice served on them that he demanded possession. Failing to obtain it, he instituted proceedings in unlawful detainer before a justice of the peace, and obtained a judgment evicting Ullman & Co., on September 23, 1887. He obtained the possession about the 3d day of October, 1887; so that, after demanding possession, he was kept out about seventeen days.
The premises alleged to have been detained, or held over,
Another ground of demurrer claims that, inasmuch as the complaint shows that a former suit — the unlawful detainer— was prosecuted by the present plaintiff against the present defendants, the penalty sued for in this action ought to have been claimed in that suit, and can not be the ground of a separate, second action. There are two answers to this: First-, the statute confers the right to sue separately in an action at law; second, the amount sued for in this case is in excess of a justice’s jurisdiction, and can not be recovered in an action of unlawful detainer.- — Constitution of Alabama, Article VI, § 26, and note.
There is nothing in the other grounds of demurrer to the counts on which the case was tried. Counts 2 and 3 of the original complaint were abandoned, and we need not consider the rulings on them.
It is contended for the appellants that the proper interpretation of the statute — section 3391 of the Code of 1886 — fixes the penalty in cases like the present, not at double the amount of the rent for a year, but at double the rent for the time the landlord is kept out of possession. The following authorities are cited in support of tiffs contention: 2 Taylor’s Landlord & Tenant, §§ 523 to 530, 622; 2 Wood’s L. & T. § 482; 1 B. & Had. Blacks. 598; Cobbs v. Stokes, 8 East, 358; Lloyd v. Rosbee, 2 Camp. 453. The authorities cited rest on English statutes, and on American statutes which follow them. The English statutes, 4 and 11 George Second, fixed the penalty at double the rent, “so long as the tenant continued to hold over.” Under this language, the penalty or forfeiture ceased whenever the possession was restored to the landlord; and so the courts determined.
Our statute is different, and we must suppose the difference
It may be contended that our interpretion works a hardship, and doubtless in many cases it does. Possibly, the legislature intended to deter tenants from holding over, the result of which, sometimes, is to pass the renting season by, and leave the landlord without a tenant. The clause of the statute, however, which secures to the landlord the right to recover “such other special damages as may be thereby sustained,” would seem to be framed with special reference to such a contingency. But we must deal with the statute as it is. If the statute presents a case which calls for relief, the legislature alone can grant it.
The written demand of possession was sufficient. The law fixes the penalty for disregarding such demand. It is never necessary to aver, prove, or give notice of what is declared in a public statute, unless, perchance, such notice is required by statute. — 1 Brick. Big. 806, §£ 28, 29; 3 lb. 408, §§ 23, 24.
We find no evidence in the record of any waiver of damages, or of the statutory penalty, further than a voluntary agreement by plaintiff not to claim the same, if defendants vacated the store by the 15th of September. Charge 6, asked by defendants, had no evidence to support it, and it was rightly refused on that account.
Under the rules we have declared, the rulings of the trial court, alike in giving and refusing charges, were free from error.
The judgment is affirmed.