Ashland Auto Sales Co. v. Stock

290 S.W. 487, 217 Ky. 594, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 18, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 487 (Ashland Auto Sales Co. v. Stock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashland Auto Sales Co. v. Stock, 290 S.W. 487, 217 Ky. 594, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 35 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge—

Affirming.

Appellee, Max H. Stock, formerly owned a garage building in Ashland, Boyd county, Kentucky. By writing’ dated May 26, 1922, he leased the building to appellant, Ashland Auto Sales Company, incorporated, for a term of one year beginning June 1, 1922, the latter agreeing to pay him as rental therefor the sum of $200.00 per month from June 1, .1922, to January 1, 1923, and the sum1 of $225.00 per month from January 1,1923, to the end of the term. The lease granted to appellant the option to extend it for an additional year and for yet another additional year at the rental of $225.00 pdr month “provided and conditioned that the said second party, Ashland Auto Sales Company, shall give to said first party ten days’ written notice of the exercise of the option or options herein given to extend said lease. ’ ’ Appellant did not give appellee ten days’ written notice of its intention to extend the lease. On the day the lease expired appellee in writing notified appellant that possession of the premises was demanded and that it would be held responsible for double rent until possession should he surrendered, and that unless possession should be delivered immediately proceedings for possession would be instituted. Appellant did not deliver possession of the leased premises, and -on June 13, 1923, appellee instituted forcible detainer proceedings against it. The magistrate before whom that proceeding was had found appellant guilty of *596 forcible detainer. It executed a traverse bond and carried tbe proceedings to tbe circuit court. On August 12, 1923, the building was destroyed by fire, and thereupon appellant surrendered possession to appellee and the forcible detainer proceeding was discontinued. This action was then instituted by appellee to recover from appellant double rent for the time the building was held by it from June 1st to August 12, 1923, under the provisions of section 2292, Kentucky Statutes. By the answer appellant admitted that it was liable to appellee for rental of the building in question from June 1st until August 12,1923, at the rate of $225.00 per month, but denied that is was liable for double rent under the statute, supra. It pleaded that it held over in the good faith belief that it had the right to do so under the contract and facts surrounding the parties, and in that connection that it exhibited the lease in question and related all the! facts pertaining thereto to a competent, regular, practicing attorney and was advised by him that under the lease and the facts it had the right to retain possession of the leased premises for another year. On the issues thus made the case was tried by a jury which found in favor of appellee the full amount sued for, including double rent. Judgment was entered accordingly, and hence the appeal.

Section 2293, so far as pertinent, provides that:

“A tenant whose term expires at a time certain who shall refuse to deliver possession, . . . shall pay to the landlord double the rent he would have otherwise been bound to pay, to be computed from the time he should have surrendered possession, recoverable in same manner as original rent. If, by the contract, the term is to expire at a time certain or notice to quit is dispensed with, none need be given.”

By the pleading herein the parties agree that under the contract the term of the lease began June 1,1922, and was for one year beginning with that date. An effort was made by appellant by its evidence to so construe the contract as to establish that the term did not begin until some time later than that date. This effort grew out of rather ambiguous language contained in the contract with reference to when certain additions to the 'building should be completed and when the rate of the rental would be in *597 creased from $200.00 to $225.00 per month. The only fair interpretation of the contract, however, is that placed upon it by the parties in the pleadings- herein, which is that the building in question was leased to appellant for the term of one year beginning June 1, 1922, at a rental of $200.00 per month from June 1, 1922, to January 1, 1923, and at $225.00 per month thereafter until the end of the term.

The officers and agents of the corporation who had the management of its affairs testified that they in good faith believed they had the right to hold the building for another year under the contract,.and that they submitted it and disclosed the facts with reference thereto- fully to a competent, regular, practicing attorney and were advised by him that they had the right to do so. The attorney was not introduced as a witness herein. The testimony by appellant’s officers that they disclosed fully all the facts to the attorney was merely their conclusive statement that they had so done. None of them testified what the facts were that they disclosed to the attorney. The only testimony found in the record offered by appellant as tending to establish waiver upon the part of appellee of the stipulation of the contract that the option to extend the lease could be exercised only by giving ten days ’ written notice, is the testimony of three witnesses for appellant as to what was said by appellee the day the lease expired when he collected the last month’s rental. One of them testified: “He asked us} if we was -going to stay longer and we told him we was, and that was about the substance of what was said. ” Another testified: ‘ ‘All I remember he came in thdre and he asked us if we were going to stay and we told him we was, and he says that is all I wanted to know about it.” The third testified: “I remember Mr. Stock asking Simpson and Cogan what they were going to do about it, and they said they were going to stay and he replied that that was what he wanted to know, and I think he left then. That is all 'the conversation pertaining to the lease.” The day these -conversations occurred appellee served on appellants the written notice to vacate under penalty of paying double rent, and upon their refusal to do so instituted forcible detainer proceedings. No one for appellant claims to have complied with the stipulation of the lease that ten days’ written notice of the election to extend it must be given.

*598 Construing the section of the statutes, supra, in Aull v. Bowling Green Opera House Company, 130 Ky. 789, this court said:

“As we construe this section, it means that if a tenant, knowingly and wrongfully, .remains in the possession of property, not believing "nor having any reason to believe that he has a right to remain in possession thereof, and refuses to deliver to his landlord possession of the property, then he may be adjudged to pay double rent.”

The same construction has been placed upon it in Jones, etc. v. Taylor, etc., 136 Ky. 39, and Pullum v. Rhea, 198 Ky. 294. In Jones, etc. v. Taylor, etc., supra, it was said: ‘ ‘ The question of whether his right to hold over was bona fide or mere pretense was for the jury.” Wood’s Landlord and Tenant, section 485; Woodfall’s Landlord and Tenant, page 584. In that opinion it was further said:

“The tenant can not relieve himself from the statutory penalty by the mere statement that he believed he had a right to hold the premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 487, 217 Ky. 594, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-auto-sales-co-v-stock-kyctapphigh-1927.