352 S.W.2d 238 | Tenn. Ct. App. | 1961
This cause involves an appeal by Herman Robinson, who was the defendant in the lower court, from a decree of the Chancery Court overruling his motion to dissolve an injunction. Inasmuch as it was and is conceded by counsel for all parties that the sole relief sought by complainants’ bill was injunctive relief, the decree appealed from was treated,, and we think properly so, as a final decree from which an appeal was properly prayed and perfected to this Court. For convenience, the parties will be referred to, as in the lower court, as complainants and defendant, or called by their respective names.
As of December 1959, Wooldridge was four months in arrears in his rent to Robinson, and on December 28, 1959, owed to Robinson the sum of $1,060. On December 28, 1959, Robinson, the lessor, through his attorney Hon. Frank L. White, wrote to Wooldridge demanding payment of said sum of $1,060 by December 31, 1959, A conference was thereupon requested, which was held December 31, 1959 at the office of Hon. Frank L. White. At this conference, in addition to White, there were present Robinson, Arthur Johnson, an employee of Murdock Acceptance Corp., John E. Murdock, Sr., president of Murdock Acceptance Corp., and Hon. Charles Gr. Black, attorney for complainants. Murdock held a power of attorney from Wooldridge. The conference was inconclusive as to any definite agreement; but, in his opinion, the Chancellor found as a fact that “At the conclusion of the conference on December 31, 1959, he (Robinson) told the complainant that he would give them an answer later, and Mr. White, his lawyer, testified that he told the complainants that they wanted to talk matters over and that he would call them on Monday.” The Chancellor also found as a fact that “The accrued rent was tendered by complainants’ attorney to defendant’s lawyer on January 11, 1960, and was refused. That same date, the defendants wrote a letter addressed to complainant Wooldridge advising that the lease had been cancelled.” Also, on the same day, to wit, January 11, 1960, after refusal of tender of $1,325, which included rent for January 1960, the bill in the instant case was
Tbe motion to dissolve tbe injunction was filed January 22, 1960. Tbe bearing of said motion was beld shortly thereafter, but tbe Chancellor’s opinion denying said motion was not filed until May 6, 1960, and tbe order denying said motion to dissolve was not entered until December 28, 1960. In tbe meantime, on May 24, 1960, defendant filed a motion to dispose of part of tbe funds tendered into court with complainants’ bill, to allow and award fees to defendant’s solicitor, and to increase tbe injunction bond commensurate with tbe anticipatory loss of rentals from January 1960 to November of that year. On June 2,1960, tbe Chancellor entered an order sustaining said motion, which order directs that tbe sum of $1,060, representing the rent from September 1, 1959 through December 31, 1959, be paid to defendant Wooldridge, that $212.00 be paid to Frank L. White, solicitor for defendant for services rendered in collection of said sum of $1,060, as provided for in tbe lease, but. not for services in defending this cause, and increasing tbe injunction bond from $1,000 to $5,000.
Tbe answer of defendant was. not filed until June 14, 1960.
Tbe bond in tbe increased sum of $5,000 was filed in tbe cause. Thereafter, on October 18,1960, complainants filed -a motion, which sets out that since tbe filing of this suit, tbe subtenants of complainant Wooldridge bad been paying their monthly rents by checks made payable to tbe joint order of attorneys for complainants and defendant, and that tbe total of such checks
On December 28, 1960, the order denying defendant’s motion to dissolve the temporary injunction and granting defendant’s appeal was entered. Two days later, on December 30, 1960, based on statement of counsel for the parties that the lease had expired and would not be renewed, an order was entered dissolving the injunction and releasing the surety. Said order provides, however, that it does not affect the order denying defendant’s motion to dissolve the temporary injunction from which defendant had filed notice of appeal. On January 23, 1961, by the filing of his appeal bond, defendant perfected the appeal.
As appellant, the defendant has filed in this Court five assignments of error. Assignments I to IV, inclusive, present the single question of whether or not the Chancellor erred in ruling that the lease from Robinson to Wooldridge had not been cancelled prior to the filing of
No bill of exceptions was filed, although the decree entered December 28,1960 contains the following recital:
“This cause came on to be heard before Chancellor Robert A. Hoffmann on the defendant’s written motion to dissolve a temporary injunction heretofore issued against the defendant in this cause, restraining the defendant from further interfering with the collection of rent by the complainant, D. H. Wooldridge, from Associates Loan & Investment Co., John E. Kelly, and H. G-altelli, on the property located at 3484-3486 Park Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee, upon the original bill and upon the affidavits introduced by the defendant, and upon the testimony of witnesses for complainant and for defendant adduced in open court and upon the statements and arguments of counsel and memorandum briefs submitted by both parties and the entire record of this cause.”
At first blush, it would seem, the lease having expired and the injunction having been dissolved on December 30, 1960, that the question of whether Or not the Chancellor erred in refusing to dissolve the injunction on June 6, 1960 has become moot. This is not true, however, because, on this Court’s ruling on that question depends disposition of the rents paid into the registry of the court by Wooldridge’s subtenants, from January 1960 to November 1960, inclusive. According to the
The particular provision of the lease relied on by defendant, under terms of which he claims to have can-celled the lease, is paragraph 22 of same, which is as follows:
“All covenants and agreements herein made and obligations assumed are to be construed also as conditions and these presents are upon the express condition that if Lessee should fail to pay when due any of the aforesaid rent notes for installments of rent, or should fail to perform or observe any of the covenants, agreements or obligations herein made or assumed by said Lessee, then, and thenceforth, m any of said events, this lease may be forfeited and thereby become null and void at the option of the Lessor, and said Lessor may immediately, or at any time after the breach of any of said covenants, reenter said premises and building or any part thereof in the name of the whole, and repossess and have the same as of Lessor’s former estate and remove therefrom all goods and chattels not thereto properly belonging, and expel said Lessee and all other per*145 sons who may be in possession of said premises and building, and that, too, without demand or notice.” (Emphasis added.)
The Chancellor ruled that the demand for rent, required at common law as a condition precedent to cancellation of a lease for nonpayment of rent, had not been waived by the language contained in the lease here involved, and that the phrase “and that too without demand or notice” contained in paragraph 22 of the lease which is quoted above, refers to the right of reentry only, and does not refer to the common law requirement of demand for payment of the rent. We think the Chancellor ruled correctly.
In Arnold v. Lemond, 192 Tenn. 366, 241 S. W. (2d) 430, 28 A.L.R. (2d) 801, the Supreme Court held that the lease there involved had not been cancelled, where the owner, in the absence of previous demand for the rent, mailed to the tenant a notice that the lease had been cancelled on account of nonpayment of rents, and, where, upon receipt of such notice, the tenant mailed to the landlord a check for the two months rent which was in arrears. The language in that lease which was relied on as giving to the landlord the right of cancellation, was as follows:
“Failure of the Tenant to pay the rent monthly as hereinabove stipulated shall, if such default continues for as much as Thirty (30) Days, shall at the option of Owner by (evidently misprint for “be”) a forfeiture of the lease and the Owner may notify Tenant of the claimed forfeiture and have a right to reenter and take possession of the property. Indul- - gence upon the part of the Owner for any failure*146 to pay the rent promptly will not defeat the Owner’s right to declare a forfeiture, as hereinabove stipulated at Owner’s option, if such default shall obtain at any other time.” Arnold v. Lemond, 192 Tenn. 367, 241 S. W. (2d) 431.
From the Supreme Court’s opinion, written by Mr. Justice Prewitt, now Chief Justice, we quote as follows:
“The common law rule is that to effect a forfeiture of the lease for nonpayment of rent, the landlord must make demand before the close of the day that the rent becomes due. In our recent case of Barnett v. Dooley, 186 Tenn. 611, at pages 615-616, 212 S. W. (2d) 598, 600, this Court said:
“ ‘This State follows the common law rule that, in order to effect a forfeiture of the lease for nonpayment of rent, the landlord must make demand before the close of the day such rent becomes due. Matthews v. Crofford, 129 Tenn. 541, 552, 167 S. W. 695. We find in our cases no departure from this rule.’” Arnold v. Lemond, 192 Tenn. 369, 241 S. W. (2d) 432.
The case of Elder v. Epperson, 173 Tenn. 219, 116 S. W. (2d) 1015, relied on by defendant’s counsel as authority for the proposition that the common law requirement for demand on the premises as a condition precedent to forfeiture, may be obviated by provisions of the lease itself, or by acts of the parties, is distinguished in Arnold v. Lemond, on the ground that in the case of Elder v. Epperson necessity for demand was obviated by the fact that the tenant was bankrupt, and that in such case, demand would have been an idle gesture.
“The lease before us makes no agreement as to place of payment, and it contains none waiving demand. No statute has changed the strict requirements of the common law, which have been regarded as fully in force in this state, in regard to claims of forfeiture under conditions in leases. Levett v. Bickford, 8 Humph. 618; [Planters] Insurance Co. v. Diggs, 8 Baxt. 564; Allen v. Dent, 4 Lea 677. Reverse the judgment, with costs.” Parks v. Hays, 92 Tenn. 163, 22 S. W. 4.
In the case at bar, the landlord, Robinson, had instituted no legal action to recover possession of the premises, and had not even told the tenant, Wooldridge, or his representative, that he had decided to exercise his option of forfeiture set out in paragraph 22 of the lease.' Counsel for Robinson is asking this Court to validate such mental cancellation of the lease. This we cannot do. In our opinion, the defendant, Robinson, did not undertake to exercise his option of cancellation until
The contention asserted by Assignment of Error Y, that the Chancellor erred in allowing attorneys’ fees only for collection of the delinquent rent, and in refusing to allow attorneys’ fees for defense of the injunction suit and other services, is, in our opinion, without merit. The right to attorneys’ fees, at the expense of the lessee, is provided for in paragraph 30 of the lease, which is as follows:
“Lessee agrees to pay all costs of collection, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, if all or any part of the rent reserved herein is collected after maturity with the aid of an attorney; also to pay any reasonable attorneys ’ fees in the event it becomes necessary for the lessor to employ an attorney to enforce the lessee to comply with any of the covenants, obligations, or conditions imposed by this lease.”
Heretofore, in this opinion, we have discussed the issues presented as if all questions of fact, as well as those of law, were properly presented to this Court by the defendant’s appeal. In view of the fact, however, that no bill of exceptions was filed to preserve the testimony heard by the Chancellor on motion to dissolve the injunction, we must conclusively presume that the testimony which was heard amply justified the ruling made by the Chancellor. Murrell v. Murrell, 45 Tenn. App. 309, 323; 323 S. W. (2d) 15, 22; Dept. of Highways & Pub. Works v. Gamble, 18 Tenn.App. 95, 73 S. W. (2d) 175; Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Brown, 1 Tenn.Civ.App. 269; Duane v. Richardson, 106 Tenn. 80, 59 S. W. 135; Union Bank v. Lowe, 19 Tenn. 225. The record does contain affidavits presented at the hearing on the motion to dissolve the injunction; but, in our opinion, these, as well as the testimony then heard, should have been included in a bill of exceptions. Even if the Chancellor erred in construing the language of the lease here
It results that all assignments of error will be overruled, and the decree of the Chancery Court affirmed at the cost of defendant, Herman Eobinson and the surety on his appeal bond, after which the cause will be remanded to the Chancery Court of Shelby County, Tenn. for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.