17 Ga. App. 93 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
Ferrell sued the Yaldes Hotel Company, a corporation, for certain amounts "which he alleged he had expended in necessary repairs upon the Yaldes Hotel. The amounts expended consisted of a number of items set out in an exhibit to the plaintiff's petition, aggregating about $1,100. The list of the expenditures was itemized, and, so far as appears from the petition, the repairs were necessary and the expenditures were reasonable in amount. The defendant demurred to the petition, and,
From the allegations of the petition, it appears that on February 12, 1907, the plaintiff leased from the Valdosta Hotel Company, for a period of five years, the Valdes Hotel in the city of Valdosta. The lease was in writing, and by its terms the. lessor agreed to make all necessary repairs, except such as might result from the neglect of the lessee, and to keep the building in good repair. At the time the lease was executed, Jones & Eoberts, a partnership, held a mortgage for several thousand dollars on the building, and it is now conceded by counsel that the lien of the mortgage was superior to the rights of the lessee. The mortgage was foreclosed in January, 1910, and the hotel building was levied upon and sold under the mortgage fi. fa. It was bid off by D. C. Ashley- and C. E. Ashley, who thereafter sold to J. M. Ashley a third interest in the property. Some time subsequent to this the owners were incorporated under the name of the Valdes Hotel Company, the corporation against which the present action is brought. The plaintiff remained in possession of the hotel, and, after the property was sold, paid the rent to the purchasers until they were incorporated as the Valdes Hotel Company, and thereafter the rents were paid to the corporation. After the expiration of the lease the plaintiff-brought the present action, which, as above stated, embraced various expenditures made in repairing the hotel property during the term of the lease. The plaintiff contends that the defendant is liable under the terms of the original contract, which is alleged to have been adopted by the defendant, acting through its president as its duly authorized agent. In the lower court the defendant, by demurrer, insisted that the plaintiff could not recover upon the covenant contained in the lease, because it was not a covenant running with the land, but a purely personal covenant, and that even if the covenant were binding on the defendant, the defendant would not in any event be liable for a breach of the covenant to repair which occurred before the sale; that the petition did not show that the repairs which the plaintiff claimed to have made became necessary after the sale and after the Valdes Hotel Company was incorporated, and that if they did not become necessary after the corporation was formed, the plaintiff’s right of 'action, if any, would
In view of the amendments, the petition can no longer be said to be duplicitous or ambiguous in its statement of the ground of the defendant’s liability. The intimation that the rights of the plaintiff under its contract of lease were superior to those of the purchaser under the mortgage ñ. fa., and the conclusion that the purchaser at the mortgage sale bought subject to the terms of the lease and thereby became bound by its terms and stipulations, were withdrawn by the striking of the allegations of paragraph 3 and the substitution in lieu thereof of the mere statement that the hotel property was sold under a named mortgage and purchased by certain named persons. By another amendment, allowed at the same time as that to which we have just referred, the petitioner struck those allegations in the petition in which it was alleged that the defendant obligated itself to make all necessary repairs, by recognizing the petitioner as its tenant and accepting rents under the terms of the lease, with full knowledge of its
In view of the amendments which were allowed, the rulings upon the demurrers were not erroneous. Judgment affirmed.