18 Utah 464 | Utah | 1899
This is an action for the recovery of damages alleged to have been received by the plaintiff on account of having been unlawfully evicted by the defendants from a certain
In the prayer of the complaint damage is claimed: First. For the value of plaintiff’s leasehold estate. Second. For the destruction .of certain, personal property. Third. For injury to plaintiff’s special business. Fourth. For loss of plaintiff’s income. Fifth. For exemplary damages. The whole amount of the damages claimed was $16,400.00.
The answer denied that the plaintiff was a corporation, or ever was lawfully in possession or lawfully entitled to the possession of the premises described in the complaint, and after many other specific denials, in justification of the acts charged, alleged, in substance, that on and ever since the 28th day of February, 1895, the defendants have been, and still are the owners of, and in possession of lot 8, block 58, plat “A”, Salt Lake City Survey; that on the date aforesaid, there was on said lot an old dilapidated building; that No. 230 mentioned in the complaint, was the entrance to a room in said dilapidated building, and that on said last mentioned date the defendant leased said room in said building to J. W. Houston, for a term of two years from the 1st day of March, 1895; that on the 19th day of October, 1895, the inspector of buildings, and the chief of the fire department, and the committee on fire department of said Salt Lake City, in pursuance of the provisions of said ordinance, made an examination of said building and found the same to be dangerous and unsafe to property in the vicinity of said building, and on the date last aforesaid, and after said examination, the said inspector of buildings notified these defendants to make, and required them to make, extensive and expensive repairs in and upon said said building in order to render
■ From the record it appears that the plaintiff was not incorporated until the 15th day of March, 1895, although -on the first of that month the articles of the corporation
M. J. Mitchell, a witness for plaintiff, was asked by plaintiff’s counsel, “whether he had had any conversation with J. W. Houston concerning the subletting of said room No. 230,” and over the objection of the defendant’s counsel, was allowed to answer. The witness answered “that the plaintiff through him as manager, leased one-half of said No. 230 Main street on the first day of March, 1895, from said Houston by parol lease for the period of two years and until March 1st, 1897,” and defendant’s counsel moved the court 'to strike out the answer of the witness upon the ground ” that the said answer was irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent for the reasons stated in the objection to the question.”
The following were among the reasons stated, to wit: That the plaintiff, at the date mentioned, not being then incorporated, had no legal existence, and that no one could be authorized to act for it, or in its behalf; that the lease being by parol, and for two years, was absolutely void, under the statutes of Utah. The motion was overruled, and exceptions taken.
The witness Mitchell, was also asked whether the said J. W. Houston, ever gave him or the plaintiff any notice to quit and surrender one-half of said room No. 230. To this question defendants, by their counsel, objected upon the ground that same was irrelevant and immaterial, and
The first objection to this testimony is well taken if the plaintiff did not lease one-half of room No. 230, as alleged by witness Mitchell, on March 1st, 1895. We think it is clear that it did not, for two reasons: 1st. Because the plaintiff not being incorporated at that time had no capacity to take or hold á leasehold estate, or to perform any act; nor could any one perform any act for it as agent or otherwise. Mitchell states that the lease was made to plaintiff through him as manager. He does not pretend that it was made to him in trust for the corporation thereafter to be formed. It is very doubtful whether an anticipated corporation could be a cestui que trust. But as there is no claim that the lease was made to Mitchell, or that he acted in any other capacity than that pf manager, in procuring it, that question is not involved.
One of the essential requisites of a lease, and in the absence of which no leasehold estate can be passed from the lessor, is the existence of some one being capable of taking an<I holding as lessee. This essential element was lacking in this case, and therefore no lease was made or could have been made to the plaintiff on the 1st day of March, 1895. 2d. The alleged lease, being by parol for two years, was void under the statute of frauds, and therefore had no force or effect whatever. It passed no lease-
It follows that the declarations of the witness Mitchell, . that plaintiff and Houston had continued their relations under said sub-lease, and that the same had never been terminated, but their relations as tenant and landlord thereunder continued during the whole of said term, of two years, was untrue and misleading. These statements were untrue for another reason. It is alleged in the complaint that the defendants on the 18th day of December, 1895, tore down and utterly demolished said store building, and afterwards erected another building in its place. In the answer the defendants admit that they did destroy said store room by tearing down and removing from the premises a dilapidated building in which said room was located, and do not deny that they afterwards erected another building on the lot on .which the former building stood.
To assert that the plaintiff continued to have a leasehold estate in said store room after the building, in which it was located, was demolished, is the same as to assert that the plaintiff was possessed of an estate in nothing. “Ex nihilo nihil fit.” To say that the relation of landlord and tenant continued between the said Houston the lessor and the plaintiff, after the destruction of said store room, is the same as to say that something may spring from and be maintained by nothing. It makes no difference how or by whom the destruction was accomplished, the result is the same. When the subject-matter of the alleged lease was destroyed, the estate of both the lessor and lessee ended, and the relation of landlord and tenant could not thereafter survive. The following cases support this view: Kerr et al. v. The Merchants Exchange Co., 3 Edwards, Ch. 333; Graves v. Berdan, 26 N. Y.
The demolition by the defendants, ended the leasehold estate of the plaintiff (what that estate was will hereafter be considered) and the plaintiff’s only remedy for this wrong is an action to recover the value of the estate so destroyed.
The statement of the witness Mitchell, that no notice to quit was ever given is wholly immaterial, because, under the circumstances, such a notice could not have had any •effect, as it was physically impossible for the plaintiff to quit, or for the lessor to re-enter. We think that both of the exceptions to the testimony, objected to by defendant’s counsel are well taken. That the defendants were prejudiced by the admission of this testimony, is made more apparent by those instructions of the court, which are based upon the same. At the request of the plaintiff the court gave the following instructions:
“ In this case the court instructs the jury that the plaintiff relies upon a sub-lease from Houston, who was a tenant of the defendants under a written lease for two years from March 1, 1895, to March 1, 1897, and that the terms of the sub-lease to the plaintiff gave the plaintiff the right to enjoy the premises leased to him during Houston’s term until Houston terminated the lease, and it being an uncontradicted fact that Houston never, at any time, terminated the sub-lease, the plaintiff was entitled to the premises sub-leased to it for the remainder of the term from November 17, 1895, to March 1, 1897.”
This instruction, in effect, is a repetition of what the witness Mitqhell testified to, and informed the jury that the leasehold estate of the plaintiff, and his term under the
It is too self-evident to require further argument, that such was not the case. It has already been shown that the alleged parol lease was ineffective, and conferred no rights whatever upon plaintiff; however, after the plaintiff became incorporated and capable of taking and holding a lease estate, it entered into possession of said .store room and continued to occupy one-half thereof up to the time the store was destroyed, and while it’ is not alleged that the plaintiff ever paid any rent, nor does the evidence disclose any such fact, yet as the bill of exceptions does-not purport to contain all of the evidence, from the circumstances of the case disclosed by the record it is fair to presume that rent was paid up to the date of the destruction of said store room.
1 Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, Sec. 19, states that “The law will, in general, imply the existence of a tenancy whenever there is an ownership of land on one hand,, and an occupation by permission on the other; for in such cases it will be presumed that the occupant intended to-pay for the use of the premises.”
Counsel, for both parties, have treated the tenancy in this case, as one at will, and we are of the opinion that it is such, not by virtue, however, of any positive arrangement entered into between the plaintiff and his lessor, but by virtue of an implication of law arising from the voluntary acts and relations of these parties.
The leasehold estate of the plaintiff which was destroyed by the destruction of said store room, was therefore simply a tenancy at will, and the measure of damages for such destruction is the value of the thing destroyed. "We do-not intend to assert that there cannot be a recovery by the
The court instructed the jury on this branch of the case as follows: “In considering the actual loss of the plaintiff, if you find it has sustained any, you should take into consideration the value of the leasehold estate for the time plaintiff was evicted therefrom. The value of the lease to plaintiff would be what it was actually worth, less the rental to be paid for the term which plaintiff was entitled to hold the same.”
This instruction, in connection with the one before quoted, in which the jury was told that the plaintiff was entitled to the premises sub-leased to it for the remainder of the term from November 17, 1895, to March 1, 1897, left it to the jury to return a verdict for the value of a leasehold estate for a definite term, when no such term ever existed. A tenancy at will was the only leasehold estate which the plaintiff had under the sub-lease. The injury to the plaintiff was the destruction of that estate. The jury therefore should have been instructed that such was the fact, and that the value of that estate, less the rent to be paid by plaintiff, should be allowed as an item off plaintiff’s damages.
The instructions given seem to have been predicated upon the idea that because no notice to quit was given, the term continued after the destruction of the subject-matter of the lease. If this were so, the tenancy being one at will, then the time is not yet ended, and will not be until notice to quit shall have been given. It is improbable that such notice will ever be given.
If this case had been brought to trial on the day that suit was instituted would the damages then have been measured by the value of the leasehold estate for over
We are of the opinion that these instructions, considered together, are erroneous.
The court further instructed the jury, at the request of the plaintiff, in substance, that the justification set up by defendants, was no defense to the plaintiff’s right to recover, but that it might be considered as effecting the question of punitive or exemplary damages.
We do not think the exception to this instruction is tenable. The city authorities did not require defendants’ building to be torn down. They only required the defendants to make certain repairs, and notified them that if they failed to make the repairs that they would tear down the building. The defendants chose to destroy the building, rather than incur the expense, of making the improvements which they claim would have cost more than the building would have been worth after the required improvements were made.
The defendants were, certainly, not justified in inflicting an injury upon the plaintiff in order to relieve themselves from an expenditure of money, which they deemed onerous.
See. 3147, subdivision 4, of the Rev. Stat. is as follows: “When the evidence is concluded, the court shall instruct the jury in writing upon the law applicable to the case, and if it state the testimony of the case, it must inform the jury that they are the exclusive judges of all questions of fact; Provided, that with the consent of both parties entered in the minutes of the court the court may instruct the jury orally, in which case the instructions shall be taken down by the court stenographer.”
Sec. 3151, provides that, “All instructions requested or given shall be filed by the clerk and become a part of the judgment roll.”
Under Sec. 3147, subdivision 4, the court is required to instruct the jury in writing, except when both parties consent to an oral charge. In the absence of any showing that the charge was given in pursuance of the exception, the court will presume that it was in writing. However, in this case the instructions appear among (and we are of the opinion that they constituted part of the judgment roll, under the sections of the statute before quoted) the other papers in the transcript, which constitute the judgment roll, under said sections, and the clerk certified that said transcript contains the charge of the court to the jury.
As the judgment roll always constitutes a part of the record on appeal from the final judgment, the instructions of the lower court in this case were properly before the court for review.
We are of the opinion that the judgment should be reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
It is so ordered by the court.