Automobile, Truck, Tractor & Implement Co. v. Salladay

203 P. 163, 55 Cal. App. 219, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2252.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 203 P. 163 (Automobile, Truck, Tractor & Implement Co. v. Salladay) 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
Automobile, Truck, Tractor & Implement Co. v. Salladay, 203 P. 163, 55 Cal. App. 219, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 49 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

PREWETT, J., pro tem.

This case involves an alleged forfeiture of a lease of a Nash touring- car. The respondents, by an instrument in writing, on March 18, 1919, leased to appellant the car in question for an agreed rental of $1,720, payable as follows: $270 in cash, $700 in two months and the balance in monthly installments of $62.50. It is provided in the lease that there should .be a monthly payment of $62.50 on May 18th, making the payment for that date $762.50; but both the complaint and answer show that this provision is a mistake and that only $700 was to be paid on that date. It is expressly provided that the lease shall terminate on May 18, 1920. An important provision of the lease reads: “Lessee acquires no interest or title to said property, it being distinctly understood that this is a lease.” (The italics are ours.) A further provision reads': “If the lessee fails to make any payments herein provided . . . then this lease shall ipso facto become immediately terminated, without any notice whatsoever to the lessee, and the lessors may take immediate possession, of said property without legal proceedings, etc.” Time is declared to be of the essence of the contract.

The respondents received from the appellant a certain Grant car on the $700 payment and credited appellant with about $475 on account thereof. A ‘further credit for gasoline used by appellant in his work for the respondents and a further sum of $100 due him as salary, brought the entire credits up to $624.87, leaving due, according to the claims of the respondents, a balance of $75.13 on the $700 payment, which, as above set out, became due on May 18, 1919. The action was commenced on June 8, 1919, and before any other or further defaults had accrued. Hence, the entire cause of action turns upon the existence of this alleged default. It is admitted that the appellant has never paid this balance of $75.13 in cash. He claims, however, that it was fully and more than compensated by certain counter-demands for salary, gasoline, hotel bills, use of his car, and *221 extra commissions earned by the sale by him of certain pleasure cars, all aggregating several hundred dollars in excess of the amount due at the time of the alleged default. The court, on motion, struck out his defenses founded thereon, and the alleged error of the court in so doing will be noticed further along.

[1] On June 10, 1919, two days after the commencement of this action, the respondents caused the property in question to be seized by the sheriff and delivered to them, and thence hitherto have held and possessed the same. On May 8, 1920, about eleven months after filing the original complaint, the respondents filed a supplemental complaint, wherein they allege a succession of defaults covering all the eleven payments that were provided to be made in the interval from June 18, 1919, to April, 18, 1920, both dates inclusive, and aggregating $687.50. Upon these eleven alleged defaults, the respondents base additional claims of forfeiture. It is expressly averred in the supplemental complaint that these additional sums became due “as rental for the use of the automobile.” The appellant moved the court to strike out the supplemental complaint on the grounds that the complaint showed that the lease had been terminated on June 8, 1919, and that he was not liable for rent while deprived by the owners of the use of the car. The court denied the motion and overruled a demurrer urging the same grounds. The court, over objection, admitted evidence to sustain the allegations of the supplemental complaint and instructed the jury, in its third and seventh instructions,, that they must find for the respondents if said sum of $687.50, or any part thereof, was unpaid at the time of trial.

In these rulings and instructions prejudicial error was committed. It is settled law in this state that a plaintiff in replevin on commencing his action must show a present right of recovery. Of a large number of authorities in support of this principle, attention may be directed to Afferbach v. McGovern, 79 Cal. 268 [21 Pac. 837], Fredericks v. Tracy, 98 Cal. 658 [33 Pac. 750], and Holly v. Heiskell, 112 Cal. 174 [44 Pac. 466]. If the original complaint in this action did not show in respondents a present right of possession, the action was premature and there was nothing to supplement. On the other hand, if the complaint did show *222 such right of possession by reason of the alleged default, no subsequent defaults could show that fact in any greater degree. If their right to the property had then vested, it was because of the election by them, under the terms of the lease, to terminate the right of the appellant and, in fact, to terminate the lease itself. The lease is especially strong in its provisions that a default by the appellant terminates both his right and the lease itself.

It is thus seen that, although the respondents by their own act deprived the appellant of the use of the property, they nevertheless attempt, by this supplemental complaint, to charge him for the use of the auto for the many months during which they withheld such use from him. And they have sought to predicate still further forfeitures upon his default in failing to pay for such deprived use. The trial court in its instructions has gone even further and has, in effect, charged the jury that, although they may find that the original default as to the $75.13 never occurred, still, if they find that some or any of these eleven later defaults occurred, they must find for the respondents.

[2] It needs no citation of authorities to show that a lessor cannot collect rent for the use of a chattel after he has repossessed himself of the chattel and terminated the lease. He cannot, at least in the absence of an express covenant to the contrary, withhold the chattel and still collect rent money for its use. If the respondents were not entitled to collect rent for this eleven months’ period, it follows that they cannot assign the nonpayment thereof as a basis for a forfeiture. Our attention has not been drawn to any California case wherein personal property was involved which fully covers this principle. No difference, however, in this regard can be discovered between leases involving real property and those involving chattels. Each party is estopped to claim both the possession of the leased property and compensation for its use. Each, when he voluntarily terminates the lease, and, by regaining the property, places it out of the power of the lessee to use it, terminates the lease for all purposes.

In Morse v. Tochterman, 21 Cal. App. 726 [132 Pac. 1055], this court uses the following language: “The neglect of the landlord to keep the premises in a condition suitable for the purpose for which they were rented may be treated *223 by the tenant as an eviction and he may refuse to-pay rent.” Skaggs v. Emerson, 50 Cal. 3, is referred to with approval in many of the later cases.

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203 P. 163, 55 Cal. App. 219, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/automobile-truck-tractor-implement-co-v-salladay-calctapp-1921.