Brooks v. Rogers

99 Ala. 433
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 Ala. 433 (Brooks v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Rogers, 99 Ala. 433 (Ala. 1892).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

The suit is the statutory action of ejectment. The plaintiff in the court below, Charlotte Thompson Rogers, leased her plantation to defendant Brooks for a term of five years, to begin on the first day of January, 1889. The consideration of the lease was the annual payment of eleven hundred dollars, “to be paid on the first day of October of each year during the continuance of the lease;” and the consideration was further evidenced by the execution of five several promissory notes, in accordance with the stipulation in the lease contract. The lessee covenanted to keep the ditches, drains, fences, and houses in repair; that he would not cut down or destroy any of the wood or timber on the premises, except such as was necessary for plantation purposes, and then only from designated places, and that no land should be cleared except at a specified point. The lease provided “that, in case the party of the second part shall violate'any of the conditions, covenants or stipulations [435]*435imposed on him or agreed to by him, . . the party of the first part, upon first giving ten days notice thereof in writing to the party of the second part, may by themselves or agents re-enter said premises, and enjoy the same in all respects as though the lease had not been made.”

The lessee paid his rental notes at maturity for the years 1889, 1890, and 1891. On the 19th of November, 1891, after the payment of the rental note for-that year, the plaintiff served a written notice of forfeiture upon the defendant. After setting out the covenants of the lease in regard to the cutting of timber and wood and the clearing of land, the notice proceeded as follows: “Aud whereas, you have violated the conditions, covenants, and stipulations above mentioned, contained in said lease, by cutting and destroying wood and timber on said premises, .... and whereas, you have cleared wood or timber lands,” setting out the place, so as to show the clearing was at a different place from that authorized by the lease, then follows the notice, as provided in the lease, that after ten days the plaintiff would re-enter, &c.

It will be observed that, in the notice served upon the defendant, there is no reference to a breach of any of the covenants of the lease in regard to the ditches, fences, and repair of buildings, but the notice places the forfeiture and right to re-enter upon a violation of the covenants in regard to the cutting and destroying of the timber and clearing of land. The suit is ejectment, and was instituted on the 7th of December, 1891, although the rent for the entire year of 1891 was paid and received by the plaintiff on the 1st of October, 1891.

The evidence tended to show that the acts complained of as a violation of the covenants of the lease not to cut or destroy the timber or clear the land occurred in December, 1890, and during the early part of the year 1891.

Under the contract of lease, the lessee held but an estate upon condition. Upon breach of covenants, he forfeited his estate at the option of the lessor, who, upon giving the notice stipulated in the contract, had the right to reenter. The lease was not rendered absolutely void by the act of forfeiture, but upon the election of the lessor. The lessee had no option under the contract. If, after the breach of the condition of the lease, the lessor, with a ful knowledge of the breach of the condition and all the circumstances, demanded and received from the lessee, under the contract of lease, rents which accrued subsequent to the breach, this was a clear recognition that the relation of

[436]*436lessor and lessee continued for the time for which the rent was paid and received. A lessor can not be permitted to get the benefit of his contract of lease after breach of condition, for the purpose of collecting rents which subsequently accrued, and, after collecting the rents, then hold the lessee to be a trespasser on the land during the same period for which he collected rents under the contract of lease. The receipt of the rent, under such circumstances, is an affirmation that the contract of lease was still in force, and subsisting up to the time for which the rent was collected, and that the lessee was not a trespasser during the time for which he paid rent. If the lessor receives rent only for the time prior to the breach of the conditions, or if' the rent is received without notice or knowledge of the breach, payment under such circumstances will not constitute a waiver of his right to elect to decláre the estate of the lessee forfeited, and of the right to re-enter. These principles are sustained by the ■ following authorities : Dendy v. Nichall, Common Bench Rep. 4 Vol. 376, and note on page 387; Jackson v. Allen, 3 Cow. 220; Munston v. Gladwin, 6 Adolph. & Ellis, (N. S.) 952; Stuyvesant v. Davis, 9 Paige, 427; Gomber v. Hatchett, 6 Wis. 324; Sheppard v. Allen, 3 Taunton 77; Bleecker v. Smith, 13 Wend. 530; Taylor on Landlord and Tenant, §§ 497, 438.

In Dahm v. Barboto, 93 Ala. 120, it is said, the landlord’s acceptance of the rent accruing after a forfeiture, with knowledge thereof, operates a waiver in advance of the disclaimer of title, if any.

Receipt of the rent in advance for the three months, beginning Oct. 1, 1891, and ending Jan. 1st, 1892, if received with a full knowledge that the covenants of the lease had been broken prior to that time, Avas a waiver of the forfeiture, and an affirmation that the relation of lessor and lessee continued under the lease, at least for the time for which the lessor received the rent in advance. We do not hold that a waiver of the forfeiture included a waiver of the right to sue and recover for abreach of the covenants. That question is not in this case. The making of a contract by and between the lessor and lessee, by which the lessee released to the lessor a portion of the leased premises, for a consideration which was to be credited upon the two rental notes of the lessee for the years 1892 and 1893, respectively, executed after covenants of the lease were broken, with full knowledge of that fact on the part of the lessor, would be an affirmation of the subsistence of the lease at the time of such contract, and constitute a waiver of the forfeiture a.nd [437]*437right to re-enter for breach of covenants of the lease prior to the execution of such contract.

The plaintiff was allowed to introduce evidence, against the objection of the defendant, to show that defendant had forfeited his estate by failing to keep the premises in repair as covenanted for in the contract. The lease contains such a stipulation, and it provides that for a violation of any of the covenants the lessor may re-enter, upon first giving ten days notice to the lessee. The notice given by the plaintiff to the lessee is, that “Whereas you have violated the conditions, covenants and stipulations • • in said written lease, by cutting and destroying the wood and timber, • • and by clearing lands,” the plaintiff claims the right to rescind the lease and to re-enter the premises. Notice was never given to the defendant that the plaintiff claimed a forfeiture and right to re-enter for a breach of the covenant to make repairs. He placed the forfeiture of the leased estate entirely upon other grounds, which were carefully specified. We think this a waiver to declare a forfeiture for the breach of the covenant to make repairs.

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Bluebook (online)
99 Ala. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-rogers-ala-1892.