Armas v. Armas

209 P. 256, 58 Cal. App. 717, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 411
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 8, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 2418.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 209 P. 256 (Armas v. Armas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armas v. Armas, 209 P. 256, 58 Cal. App. 717, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 411 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HART, J.

The parties to this action (brothers), on the twenty-sixth day of December, 1919, entered into a written *718 agreement of lease, whereby the defendant leased to the plaintiff forty acres of land, situated in what is designated in the lease as “Rotterdam Colony,” in Merced County, for the term of five years, for the total rental of $1,250, payable annually in installments of $250, the initial payment of $250 to be made and the same was made on the date of the execution of the lease. Among the covenants or conditions of the lease was the following:

“In the event the lessor shall sell and convey said property to any one other than the lessee during the term of this lease, he shall pay to the lessee at the rate of two hundred and fifty dollars per year for the unexpired term of the lease, in consideration whereof the lessee shall give up and surrender to the lessor, or his assigns, the real property and appurtenances covered by this lease.”

The controversy here revolves around the foregoing provision of the lease.

The complaint alleges that the defendant (lessor), prior to the twenty-second day of September, 1920, and while said agreement of lease was in full force and effect and while the plaintiff was, under the terms of said agreement of lease, in the possession and occupation of the lands therein described, sold and conveyed said land to a person other than the plaintiff; that the latter, on the twenty-second day of September, 1919, surrendered the possession of said real property and appurtenances to the defendant, and thereupon demanded of defendant “that he pay to plaintiff the sum of $250 per year for the unexpired term of said lease; that is to say, from the 22d day of September, 1920, to the expiration of said agreement of lease, to-wit: December 26, 1924, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $1,041; that defendant has failed and refused to pay plaintiff the said sum or any part thereof.”

Answering the complaint, the defendant, after certain denials, alleges that the conveyance of the property described in the lease was made subject to said agreement of lease and that the grantee named in the deed of conveyance took said premises by said conveyance from defendant sub. ject to said lease and to the right of the plaintiff to the possession of the premises therein described, and that at no time has the defendant or the grantee in said convey-

*719 anee “demanded or required of plaintiff herein the surrender of said premises or any portion thereof.”

The defendant also filed a cross-complaint by which he sought the reformation of the agreement of lease, alleging that the agreement of lease set out in the complaint was made and signed by the parties, but “by mistake of the said parties, which was mutual, and of the person who drew said instrument, the said agreement of lease did not, nor does it, correctly contain and set forth the agreement of the parties with reference to the sale of said premises.” Following these averments is the provision of the lease above quoted herein, as to which the cross-complaint proceeds: “That said provision was inserted and made as above set forth by mistake of the person selected by plaintiff and defendant for the drafting of said instrument; that the parties hereto agreed that, in the event that the lessor should sell and convey said property to any one other than the lessee during the term of said lease with the right to the immediate possession thereof, the plaintiff would upon demand of defendant vacate said premises, surrender said lease and that thereupon defendant would pay to plaintiff $1,000.00 for the unexpired term of said lease.” It is further alleged that said property was not sold with the right of immediate possession in the grantee or any right of possession prior to the termination of the lease; that neither defendant nor his grantee of said land ever demanded of plaintiff surrender of such possession; that the conveyance of said land was, as the answer alleges, to a person other than plaintiff subject to all the terms, covenants, and conditions of said lease; that, subsequent to the sale by defendant of said land, “without the consent of defendant and of the purchaser from him and contrary to the wishes of each of them, plaintiff vacated said premises and abandoned said lease.”

The prayer of the cross-complaint is that the said written lease be so reformed.,as to “speak the agreement of the parties ab herein set forth and that plaintiff take nothing by his action,” etc.

The cross-complaint was met by denials.

The court found that the agreement of lease was as it was written and set out in the complaint, and, accordingly, denied the prayer for a reformation thereof; that plaintiff entered into the possession of the said premises under said *720 agreement of lease on the twenty-sixth day of December, 1919; that defendant, prior to the twenty-second day of September, 1920, sold the land to a person other than the plaintiff, and that the deed of conveyance executed by defendant to the grantee of said land contained a provision that said conveyance was “subject to the lease thereon to Manuel Armas, dated December 28, 1919,” but that said provision in said deed of conveyance “was without the consent or knowledge of plaintiff and he refused to recognize it or be bound by it in any way or at all.” It was further found that, after the execution by the defendant of said conveyance, to wit, on the twenty-second day of September, 1920, plaintiff vacated and surrendered possession of said premises, and “did then and there demand of defendant that he pay to plaintiff the sum of $250.00 per year for the unexpired term of said lease—that is to say, from the twenty-second day of September, 1920, to the expiration of said agreement, to-wit: December 26th, 1924, amounting to the sum of $1,041.00; that defendant refused to pay plaintiff said sum, or any part or portion thereof, and that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff in the said sum of $1,041.00, together with interest,” etc.

Judgment was awarded accordingly, and the defendant appeals therefrom under the alternative method.

Under the plea by the defendant in his cross-complaint for a reformation of the provision of the instrument stating the contingency upon the happening of which the lessee was to surrender possession of the premises in question prior to the expiration of the term during which the lease was to run the court allowed parol evidence upon the question of the understanding of the parties as to what they intended the lease should actually say in that particular; and in addressing proof to that inquiry some evidence was developed which sustains the finding of the court that the provision referred to, as written in the lease, and as construed hy the plaintiff, contained the real stipulation of the parties as to the occasion on which the plaintiff would be required to surrender his leasehold interest in the premises and vacate the same. The plaintiff testified that he and the defendant together went to a scrivener in the city of Merced, stated to him the terms of the lease as they appear in the lease which was signed by the parties, and that said *721

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Bluebook (online)
209 P. 256, 58 Cal. App. 717, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armas-v-armas-calctapp-1922.