Brown v. Music Incorporated

359 P.2d 295, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 70
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1961
Docket26
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 359 P.2d 295 (Brown v. Music Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Music Incorporated, 359 P.2d 295, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 70 (Ala. 1961).

Opinion

DIMOND, Justice.

The principal question here is whether, after termination of a lease by *296 reason of the tenant’s breach, the landlord may recover rental for the time that the tenant’s personal property remains on the leased premises.

On May 1, 1955 a building near Fairbanks known as The Idle Hour was leased by Nehrbas to Thompson for a term of five years at a monthly rental of $650. Thompson assigned his interest in the lease to the corporation, Music Incorporated, of which he was president. On November 29, 1955, Music sublet a portion of The Idle Hour to Brown for use as a restaurant. This sublease was on a month-to-month basis with rental at the rate of $650 a month retroactive to October 1, 1955.

Brown placed on the premises certain restaurant equipment which he had agreed to purchase from Music for $10,000 under the terms of a written conditional sales contract dated November 29, 1955. Early in Janu-uary 1956 he discontinued the operation of his restaurant business and ceased paying rent.

!' On March 29, 1956 Music wrote to Brown notifying him, because of non-payment of rent, to quit and vacate the premises and to remove all of his personal things. In addition, a demand was made for rent past due in the amount of $1,650. In response to this notice Brown went to The Idle Hour and removed some things which he described as “A-l Sauce and a few little odds and ends that were left there.” He did not remove the restaurant fixtures and equipment which he was purchasing from Music under the conditional sales agreement.

Music wrote to Brown again on April 17, 1956. He was notified that rent in the amount of $650 a month was due from January 1 of that year, and that within five days Brown would have to move “certain personal property” or else rent for storage space would be charged in the amount of $325 a month. The letter went on to say that in order to mitigate damages Music assumed that Brown had abandoned his lease, and that it was Music’s intent to rent one-half of the building at the rate of $325 a month and to charge Brown the same amount each month to maintain his personal property in the other half of the building. Music rented one-half of the building to a third party at the rate of $325 a month from April 20 to November 30, 1956. Brown took no action to remove the restaurant equipment. Finally, on September 4, 1957 Music notified Brown that it was removing the property to the Sig Wold Storage & Transfer where Brown could claim the property by paying the hauling and storage charges.

In May 1959 Music commenced this action against Brown to recover rent in the total sum of $10,406.67 for the period January 1, 1956 to September 4, 1957. After a trial without a jury the court found that Brown owed rent to Music at the rate of $550 1 a month from January 1 to April 20, 1956. In addition, the court held that the lease was terminated on April 20, that Brown continued to occupy a portion of the leased premises from that date to September 4, 1957 by reason of his failure to remove from the premises the property being purchased under the conditional sales contract, and that Music was entitled to recover a reasonable rental for that period at the rate of $325 a month.

The lease agreement was in effect from January 1 to April 20, 1956, when it was terminated by Music’s notice to Brown. Thus, the court below was correct in holding that Brown owed Music rent at the rate of $550 a month for that period of time.

But the effect of Music’s action in terminating the lease was to end the relationship of landlord and tenant. There was no agreement making the tenant’s liability for rent survive a forfeiture of the lease. Therefore, after April 20 Brown was no *297 longer liable for rent; at the most he would be liable for damages if he had thereafter unlawfully withheld possession of the premises from his former landlord. 2

Music argues, however, that when a lease is terminated it is optional with the landlord to treat the person continuing in possession as a trespasser or as a tenant. It contends that by notifying Brown on April 17 that if his personal property were not moved within five days he would be assessed rent for storage space, Music elected to treat Brown as a tenant and was, therefore, entitled to recover rent during the time that Brown’s property remained in the building.

It is true that when a tenant continues in possession, or holds over, beyond the term of a lease, the landlord has the election of treating him as a trespasser or permitting him to remain in possession. 3 If the landlord chooses the latter course, the one holding over again becomes a tenant, on the theory of an agreement arising by implication of law from the conduct of the parties, 4 or by reason of the general principle that where an act may be rightfully done with a certain effect, one may not, in order to avoid that effect, assert that the act was done wrongfully. 5

An election, however, must be made by the landlord. He may not treat the one in possession both as a tenant and as a trespasser, and once the choice is made it cannot be altered. 6 Thus, if the landlord’s actions are more consistent with the concept of trespass than with a continuing tenancy, the one retaining possession of the premises is a trespasser and cannot thereafter be considered as a lessee for an additional term.

That is the situation here. On March 29 Brown was notified to quit and vacate the premises because of non-payment of rent. On April 17 Music sent a second notice which both parties admit constituted a termination of the lease. On April 20 Music rented one-half of the premises to a third party who paid rent from then until November 30. These facts plainly indicate that Music did not treat Brown as a lessee holding over from month to month beyond the termination of the lease. Its actions are inconsistent with the idea of a continuing tenancy. The lease was clearly terminated by Music, and at that moment the relationship of landlord and tenant with its attendant obligations ceased. 7 It could not be revived by Music’s unilateral action, as expressed in its notice to Brown of April 17, that it would charge Brown “rent for storage space” if he did not move certain personal property within the specified time. If Music were deprived of the use of a portion of its building by reason of Brown’s failure to move the property, then Brown was a trespasser, possibly liable for damages suffered by the landlord. 8 The court below was mistaken in holding that Music was entitled to recover rental at the rate of $325 a month from April 20, 1956 to September 4, 1957 — the *298 period that the restaurant equipment remained in its building.

Damages resulting from the former tenant’s failure to surrender possession of the leased premises normally would be the reasonable value of the use of the premises, i.

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Bluebook (online)
359 P.2d 295, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-music-incorporated-alaska-1961.