Burke v. Norton

184 P. 45, 42 Cal. App. 705, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 822
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 15, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2965.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 184 P. 45 (Burke v. Norton) 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
Burke v. Norton, 184 P. 45, 42 Cal. App. 705, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 822 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

This is an action brought to recover rent, attorney’s fees, damages, and restoration of the premises held by the defendants, I. H. Norton, H. Joe Isaacs, and M. M. Norton, under a certain lease entered into by them with the plaintiff: on July 12, 1912, for a period of seven years and *707 three months, commencing October 1, 1912, and ending December 31, 1919, at a total rental of $179,925, payable in certain installments. The defendants entered into possession of the premises, and either themselves, or by subtenant, remained in possession thereof until the filing of the suit.

Rent for the months of June, July, and August, 1915, amounting in all to $5,520, was not paid when due, or at all. On July 27, 1915, the plaintiff caused to be served on defendants a notice requiring that within twenty days they pay said rent or surrender the possession of the premises; and also caused to be served upon defendant another notice, in similar terms, except that it was required that within three days they pay said rent or surrender possession of the premises. The defendants did neither. Thereafter, and on August 20, 1915, this action was filed. Default of all the defendants, except the three above named, with whom the lease was made, having been regularly entered, and said defendants having answered, trial was had, and judgment rendered for plaintiff in the sum of $5,770, including $250 attorney’s fees. The judgment also provided that “the said judgment is subject to a credit of five thousand dollars, and subject to another credit of $175.” It also contained the further provision, “that the agreement of lease entered into between the plaintiff and the defendants I. H. Norton, H. Joe Isaacs and M. M. Norton on the fifth day of July, 1912, be forfeited by the defendants and terminated as of date of August 31, 1915.” With the two last-quoted provisions plaintiff is dissatisfied, and because thereof appeals from the said judgment and the whole thereof.

Appellant urges two points for reversal of the judgment here: (1) That “the court erred in declaring a forfeiture of the lease”; and (2) that “the court erred in ordering that the sum of five thousand dollars (held by plaintiff as security for the performance of the conditions of the lease, and to be applied in payment of rent reserved for the last two months of the lease) should be applied in satisfaction of the judgment.” The appeal is by the alternative method. The record consists only of the transcriptions of the clerk and reporter, and appellant’s opening brief. The points submitted to us, therefore, are purely questions of law. Did the trial court err ?

Appellant concedes that in certain cases such forfeiture of the term is properly declared as part of the judgment, bat *708 insists that, under the terms of the lease here involved, no forfeiture was worked by the bringing of the unlawful detainer suit; and that in the absence of an election by plaintiff to declare a forfeiture, and a prayer for a decree to that effect, none occurred or could properly be adjudged. In this action the complaint did not demand a forfeiture of the lease, nor was the question of forfeiture at all within the issues as made by the pleadings.

By the lease it was provided that “it is further expressly understood and agreed that each and all of the provisions of the lease are conditions precedent, to be faithfully and fully performed by said lessees to entitle them, or any of them to continue in possession of said premises; and if the said lessees shall fail to pay the rental aforesaid when the same becomes due and payable, or if they fail to keep, observe or perform any other covenant, condition or obligation of this lease on their part to be kept or performed, the lessor shall have the right to enter into possession of the demised premises and to remove all persons and property therefrom, and, at Ms option, to terminate tMs lease. It is further understood that each and all of the remedies given to the lessor hereunder are cumulative; and that the exercise of one right or remedy by the lessor shall not impair his right to any other remedy; and the lessees hereby waive all claim for damages that may be caused by the lessor in re-entering and taking possession of said premises as herein provided, and all claims for damages that may result from the destruction or injury of or to said premises or buildings thereby, and all claims for damages to, or loss of such property belonging to the lessees or any of them, or any other person, firm or corporation as may be in or upon the premises at the time of such re-entering.”

Did the trial court treat the phrases we have italicized in the provisions of the lease quoted above as having no force or effect ? If so, what was the reason ? Confronted with these provisions in the lease, can it be successfully maintained that the entry into possession and the removal of all persons and property from the leased premises—assuming such to have been done—would terminate the lease, without some other act on the part of the lessor indicating his election to avail himself of “his option to terminate the lease” 1 Do the provisions of section 791 of the Civil Code, under which this action was brought, manifest any intention to affect, limit,.. *709 or control in any respect the terms or provisions o£ such a lease as the one involved in the case at har? Is it not a question of construction to be arrived at from the language of the lease, as to whether it was the intention of the parties that a re-entry, by virtue of legal proceedings or otherwise, should of itself constitute an election to declare a forfeiture of the term ? The answers to the foregoing questions are, we think, obvious.

To affirm the judgment of the trial court would, it seems to us, be tantamount to saying that the bringing of such an action as this constitutes a conclusive election to declare a forfeiture, and hence, that the provisions of the lease involved here, which are quoted above, are rendered nugatory for the reason that the landlord is deprived of any expeditious or efficacious remedy for carrying out the terms of the lease as written. This we do not understand to be the law. Are the provisions referred to obnoxious to equity or to public policy ? We think not. We are of the opinion that the construction placed upon the lease by the trial court converts the lease into something other and different than the parties themselves intended. The entry by plaintiff here was an entry “by virtue of the expressed provisions of said lease,” and is perfectly good, unless such entry is prohibited by some law to which our attention has not been called.

[1] As we understand it, the rule is that “the retaking of the premises by the lessor releases the lessee from subsequently accruing rents, unless the lease expressly provides otherwise.” (Watson v. Merrill, 136 Fed. 359, [69 L. R. A. 719, 69 C. C. A. 185]; Grommes v. St. Paul Trust Co., 147 Ill. 634, [37 Am. St. Rep. 248, 35 N. E. 820]; 1 Taylor on Landlord and Tenant, 8th ed., secs. 377, 378; 2 Wood on Landlord and Tenant, 2d ed., sec. 477.) [2] A very complete and, we think, a fair discussion of the subject is contained in the second ease just cited.

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Bluebook (online)
184 P. 45, 42 Cal. App. 705, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-norton-calctapp-1919.