Buttner v. Kasser

127 P. 811, 19 Cal. App. 755, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1039.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 127 P. 811 (Buttner v. Kasser) 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
Buttner v. Kasser, 127 P. 811, 19 Cal. App. 755, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 162 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

HALL, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered against defendants upon thgir refusal to answer plaintiff’s complaint after an order overruling their general demurrer to said complaint.

The action is one to recover for the reasonable value of the use and occupation of certain premises used as a cigar-stand by defendants during the period for which a recovery was sought.

It appears from the complaint that on the ninth day of December, 1907, one M. A. Lang was in possession of certain premises including said cigar-stand, under a lease from the City Front Improvement Company, a corporation, who were the tenants under a lease of the entire premises, duly deraigned from the owner' of the premises. The lease to Lang was for a period of fifteen years from April 1, 1907, and the lease held by the City Front Improvement Company was for a period of twenty-five years from September 15, 1906.

*757 On the said ninth day of December, 1907, said Lang sublet the premises included) in his lease (which included the cigar-stand) to the Bay Front Improvement Company, a corporation, for a period of fifteen years from the first day of April, 1907, who entered into possession on said ninth day of December, 1907.

Under date of June 1, 1907, the said Bay Front Improvement Company sublet a portion of the premises, to wit, the cigar-stand, to defendants for a period of two years from June 15, 1907, by virtue of which lease defendants went into possession of said cigar-stand, and, as appears from subsequent allegations in the complaint, so continued until June 25, 1909.

On the seventeenth day of June, 1908, and while defendants were in possession of the cigar-stand and premises, sublet to them by the Bay Front Improvement Company, the lease from said Lang to said company was by mutual consent of said Lang and said company canceled. Though requested so to do by said Lang, said defendants refused to remove from said premises, and, as appears from the complaint, retained possession of the premises sublet to them by said Bay Front Improvement Company until the twenty-fifth day of June, 1909. The claim of plaintiff is split into two causes of action because of subsequent transfers and retransfers flowing from said Lang, which have finally resulted in vesting in plaintiff whatever claim Lang might have had to recover against defendants for the value of the use and occupation of the premises sublet to them if he had made no transfer of his rights after the surrender and cancellation of the lease made by him to defendants’ lessor.

None of the leases, subleases or assignments pleaded in the complaint contained any inhibition or limitation upon the right to sublet the premises leased or any part thereof. At the time that the City Front Improvement Company surrendered to Lang and the lease from Lang to said company was by their mutual consent canceled, defendants were in possession under a valid sublease from said company to them.

Defendants did not consent to the surrender or cancellation of the lease to their lessor. Plaintiff, in framing his cause of action against defendants, has ignored the terms of their sublease, and has sued for the reasonable value of the use and occupation of the premises sublet to them by the Bay *758 Front Improvement Company, for the period during which they were in possession under the sublease subsequent to the surrender.

By the demurrer to the complaint the question is thus presented : May a lessor, to whom his lessee has surrendered his term, ignore the conditions of a valid'sublease, under which a subtenant is in possession, at the time of the surrender, to which he does not consent, and compel him to pay the reasonable value of the use and occupation of his tenement regardless of the conditions of his sublease ?

We say that this is the question presented by the demurrer. Before discussing it, however, it is convenient to dispose of a contention made by respondent in his brief that appellants by their demurrer admitted certain allegations of the complaint to the effect that defendants were wrongfully in possession of the premises during the period for which a recovery is sought.

These allegations were preceded by the allegations which deraign the title of defendants, showing that defendants were in possession under a valid sublease, and are mere conclusions of law. As we shall show in this opinion, a tenant, who has made a valid sublease, may not by a voluntary surrender of his term defeat or affect the term of his subtenant, who has not consented to such surrender. It appearing by the specific allegations of the complaint that defendants were in possession under a valid sublease, the allegations that they were wrongfully in possession were conclusions of law and were worse than useless. Conclusions of law are not admitted by a demurrer. (Ohm v. San Francisco, 92 Cal. 437, [28 Pac. 580]; Callahan v. Broderick, 124 Cal. 80, [56 Pac. 782].)

We now take up the real question presented by the demurrer to the complaint.

It is contended by appellant that a lessor, who accepts from his lessee a voluntary surrender of his term and consents to a voluntary cancellation of the lease, cannot ignore the rights of a subtenant under a valid sublease, and compel him to pay the reasonable value of the use and occupation of his sub-tenement regardless of the terms of his sublease. Applying these general contentions to the facts alleged, defendants state their position in these words: “Defendants contend that under these facts assumpsit will not liej that their lease from Bay *759 Front Improvement Company has never been terminated and was in full force at all times mentioned in the complaint, and that any claim against the defendants with reference to their occupancy of the premises must flow from and be measured by the provisions of the lease between Bay Front Improvement Company and the defendants, and not otherwise. The action should have been based upon the lease, and not for rental value of the premises.”

Respondent on the other hand contends that the surrenderee cannot sue the subtenant on his lease for want of either privity of estate or contract, and that therefore he must have the right to sue for the reasonable value of the premises occupied and held under the sublease.

We have examined with care the authorities relied upon by plaintiff as supporting his contention that the surrenderee may sue the subtenant in possession under a valid sublease for the reasonable value of the use and occupation. None of them in our opinion supports his contention.

Indeed the full text of what the court said in Bailey v. Richardson, 66 Cal. 416, [5 Pac. 910], cited by respondent, is to the effect that in such a case the subtenant may hold without paying any rent at all.

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Bluebook (online)
127 P. 811, 19 Cal. App. 755, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buttner-v-kasser-calctapp-1912.