159 Mo. App. 388 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit on a promissory note given for rent of a farm. The plaintiff leased to defendant Dunlap 160 acres of land in Livingston county, for the term of one year, commencing March 1, 1909, at a rental of three dollars per acre or $480 for the term. For payment of the rent the defendant Dunlap with defendant Cotter executed to plaintiff promissory notes as follows: One note for $100 to be paid February 25, 1909, one note for $100 to be paid December 1, 1909, and one for $280 to be paid January 1, 1910. All were dated February 16, 1909. On the same day plaintiff executed a written lease to defendant Dunlap. The lease provided that plaintiff should put the dwelling house on the premises in good repair; put. a new roof on the hen house; put the outside fences in good repair, and repair the garden fence. Defendants paid the first two notes but refused to pay the one in suit. The defendants in their answer pleaded failure of consideration as to the note sued on, and for further defense and counterclaim, alleged that plaintiff neglected and faded to make the repairs specified in the lease she agreed to make in each and all of them to the damage of defendant Dunlap; that plaintiff did not give Dunlap possession of the leased premises until
The plaintiff replied denying the allegations of the answer and that Dunlap waived the provisions in the lease as to covering the henhouse. The defendants introduced evidence tending to support all the allegations of their answer. Plaintiff introduced evidence tending to support the allegations of her reply; and that she repaired the house but made little or no repairs on the fencing, but claimed that it was in good repair. She introduced evidence tending to show that thirty-five acres of the bottom land never overflowed and that she told defendant Dunlap that the other overflowed during high water; that the land was very wet at the time defendants were at the place; that the outside fencing was as good as ordinary in the neighborhood; and that Dunlap did not complain at any time during the term of the lease about the condition of any of the fencing or of the condition of any of the buildings.
The court gave all the instructions asked for by ■defendants except the one numbered six which the court modified. It reads as follows: “If the jury believe and find from the evidence that as an inducement for said defendant Dunlap to enter into said contract of lease with plaintiff she represented to him
We are of the opinion that ordinarily notice to repair is not necessary where the landlord has actual knowledge that the repairs are needed. And this must be so where the contract provides for repairs for a condition existing at the time of making the contract which expressly requires certain repairs be made by the landlord. [Schenk v. Forrester, 102 Mo. App. 124; Riley v. Pettis County, 96 Mo. 318; Underhill on Landlord and Tenant, vol, 2, pp. 860-861.] ’ Plaintiff undertook to put the buildings in good repair but made but little repairs on the fencing. We are of the opinion that notwithstanding under the terms of the lease providing for certain repairs of the buildings and that certain fences be repaired and that it was incumbent on plaintiff to make such repairs without notice or demand from* defendant Dunlap, yet, if plaintiff did make certain repairs and they were not complete and to the satisfaction of defendant he should have so notified plaintiff during the term of the lease and have given her an opportunity to make such further repairs as were necessary to comply .with ■ the contract. The obligation of plaintiff was to put the buildings
The court was justified in modifying defendant’s sixth instruction. The representation that the land would produce a good crop if properly cultivated was not in the nature of a warranty. If it was, however, a representation made for the purpose of inducing the defendant Dunlap to enter into the written lease and was relied upon by him, and that plaintiff knowing the representation to be untrue, the defendant would be entitled to recover. Therefore, if under ordinary conditions good and bad the land would not produce a good crop, the defendant made out his case. But if the condition of the land for the year covered by the lease was not its usual and ordinary condition, but one that was caused by unusual rains, it should not be' said that the representations were false, for it is reasonable to assume that the parties did not contemplate that the land would produce a good crop if the rains were so unusual and excessive that no crop could be planted and cultivated during the cropping season. This was the view the court took of the question and modified the instruction accordingly. If the representations could be construed as a warranty the vis major or excessive and unusual rains would be no defense to defendant’s claim for damages for a breach of such warranty, as in such cases a party must expressly excuse himself from such a visitation by having it-inserted in his contract. But as we have said there
Other objections made to the action of the court in the trial of the case we do not think of sufficient importance for comment. We believe defendant had a fair trial and that the judgment is for the right party. Affirmed.