Brewster-Greene v. Robinson

273 P. 538, 34 Ariz. 547, 1929 Ariz. LEXIS 180
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1929
DocketCivil No. 2738.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 273 P. 538 (Brewster-Greene v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewster-Greene v. Robinson, 273 P. 538, 34 Ariz. 547, 1929 Ariz. LEXIS 180 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

This is the summary action of forcible detainer, brought by M. E. Brewster-Greene against O. E. Robinson for the possession of Hotel Holbrook, situated in the town of Holbrook, Arizona.

The defendant went into possession of the premises under a lease dated May 13, 1926, from the owner, M. A. Scott, who subsequently, on March 24, 1927, sold the premises to plaintiff, who bought with notice of the terms of the lease. The lease was for a term of five years from June 1, 1926, at a monthly rental of $200, payable on the first day of each and every month. Under the terms of the lease . defendant agreed to purchase and did purchase from the lessor, Scott, for $3,500, “everything in the way of furniture, equipment, beds, bedding, and in fact all personal property therein,” except certain articles selected therefrom by the lessor. In the lease was this stipulation :

“This lease is agreed to be subject to sale of the said premises at any and all times during the term thereof after the first year, . . . and if sale should be *550 made as hereinabove set forth, the first party agrees to repurchase personal property (furniture, equipment, etc.) herein sold to second party, at the price hereinafter set forth therefor, less a reasonable depreciation on the same.”

The lease also provided that the premises should be surrendered by lessee at the expiration of lease, ‘ ‘ and that in case of sale, she will also quit and surrender the said premises as hereinabove provided.”

The contract of sale of premises by Scott to plaintiff was dated March 24, 1927, and was for a consid7 eration of $26,000, $2,500 payable on or before April 1 and $7,500 on or before August 1, 1927, and the balance on or before two years. The first two installments were promptly paid, this fact and others disclosing that the sale was a good-faith sale. The contract of sale from Scott to plaintiff provided that the latter should be entitled to the rent of premises beginning April 1, 1927, and the plaintiff accordingly demanded of defendant such rent and was paid the rent by defendant for April and May, 1927. Ten days, or more, before the first day of June, 1927, plaintiff made written demand for possession of premises on June 1st. The defendant refused to surrender possession, contending, as we understand, that she was entitled to remain in possession until the lessor or plaintiff repurchased from her the furniture and equipment, “at the price hereinafter set forth therefor ($3,500), less a reasonable depreciation on the same.”

The plaintiff in his complaint, filed July 22, 1927, predicated his right to recover possession of premises upon two grounds: (1) The termination of the lease at the end of the first year, or on June 1, 1927, by reason of sale of the premises by the lessor, Scott, to the plaintiff, and defendant’s agreement to quit and surrender premises “in case of a sale”; and *551 (2) for failure to pay rent for the months of June and July.

While' the present suit was pending, on, to wit, July 29, 1927, plaintiff and defendant met and undertook to compose their differences and accordingly entered into a written agreement stipulating, in effect, that plaintiff would waive all claim for damages by reason of defendant’s holding over after June 1st, and dismiss suit, on condition that defendant would pay him rental for June and July, fixed at $360, said rental to be paid to the First National Bank of Holbrook to the credit of plaintiff, “to await further decision as to who is the lawful owner thereof.” Then follows this provision:

“It being the intention of the parties hereto, upon the performance of the conditions hereinabove specially set forth, that no further demand shall exist at the date hereof or that has arisen because of any cause of action, claim or demand on the day hereof or prior hereto, providing the second party vacates the said premises not later than the first day of August, 1927, or upon payment to her on that date or thereafter of the sum of twenty five hundred dollars by the said M. A. Scott. ...”

This agreement was not carried out. The $360 rental was not paid to plaintiff, nor to the First National Bank of Holbrook to his credit, nor did lessor, Scott, pay to defendant $2,500, and the suit was not dismissed.

The defendant in her answer predicated her right to remain in possession after June 1st upon the provisions of the lease, contending that by its terms she was not to surrender possession until she was paid $2,500 for the furniture and equipment; and, further, that under the agreement of July 29th plaintiff agreed that defendant might hold possession until she was paid the $2,500 by lessor Scott.

*552 Upon the issues thus formed the case was tried by the court with a jury, with the result of a verdict in favor of defendant, upon which judgment was entered. The plaintiff has appealed.

The first assignment is that the court erred in granting defendant’s request for a jury trial because the request was not made at the time and in the manner provided by law. In forcible entry and detainer actions the plaintiff may have a jury trial if at the time summons is issued he requests it; if he does not request a jury, the defendant may do so when he appears. Par. 1533, Civ. Code 1913. If neither party asks for a jury, the jury is waived. But in this case plaintiff in his complaint demanded a jury and later waived it, and thereafter defendant requested a jury and was granted it. There was no occasion for the defendant to demand a jury when she originally appeared, because at that time the case stood as a jury case. When plaintiff withdrew his request, the defendant not consenting, the spirit of the law, if not its language, required that her request for a jury be granted. We do not think it was error to grant the request of defendant for a jury. The cases cited by counsel from this jurisdiction and others bear on the refusal of the court to grant the request for a jury when the jury has not been waived, and not upon the granting of the request, even though technically the party was in default in asking it.

But in this case, as we view it, there was nothing for a jury to pass upon. The salient or controlling facts appear from the pleadings, the lease, and the subsequent compromise agreement. The question to be decided was one of law and for the court. It involved the construction of the written evidence in the light of the conduct of the parties and the admitted facts.

One of the assignments is that the verdict and judgment are not supported by the evidence; and we think *553 it is well taken. As we construe the lease, defendant-lessee consented therein that a sale of the premises might be made and agreed to quit and surrender possession if they were sold after one year from the beginning of the lease. Her surrender of possession was not by that instrument made to depend upon the repurchase of the hotel equipment by the lessor, Scott, but upon a sale of the property. That there was a sale in fact the record leaves no doubt, and, at all events, the defendant is in no position to question the sale, because she, by paying rent to plaintiff for the months of April and May, estopped herself from denying plaintiff’s title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P. 538, 34 Ariz. 547, 1929 Ariz. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewster-greene-v-robinson-ariz-1929.