C. R. Miller & Bro. v. Nigro

230 S.W. 511, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1921
DocketNo. 1791.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 511 (C. R. Miller & Bro. v. Nigro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. R. Miller & Bro. v. Nigro, 230 S.W. 511, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 213 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

This action was brought by the appellees, Nigro and others, against the appellants, Miller & Bro., to recover damages for breach of a rental contract of certain premises, alleging in effect that they rented said premises to appellants for a term of five years from February 1, 1913, to January 31, 1918, inclusive, for a total rental of *512 $15,000, payable monthly in advance at the rate of $250 per month; that appellants took possession and occupied and paid rent on the premises from the date of the lease to November 30, 1916, when they abandoned the premises and refused to pay further rent. They sue to recover the full amount of the unpaid rent for the unexpired portion of said lease, amounting to $3,500. They further show that they re-leased the premises for a period of three years, beginning February 7, 1917, for a total rental, by computation, amounting to $7,800, to be paid in monthly installments; for the first year $150 per month and for the remaining two years $250 per month. The answer of appellees will be noticed more in detail hereafter. A jury was selected to try the issues of fact, but the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the appellees for the principal sum of $1,750, and $257.75 interest, which was-accordingly done, and judgment rendered thereon in favor of appellees, against appellants, for the sum of $2,007.75.

[1, 2] The first assignment is to the action of the court in overruling special exception No. 3 to the petition, which, in effect, alleged the abandonment of the rental contract and refusal to pay for the balance of the term. That appellees rerented the premises and had been able to obtain on the re-rental the sum of $150 per month for the first year’s rent, up to January 31, 1918, which last date was the expiration of the original rental contract, which would leave by computation the total sum of $1,750 for the balance of the unexpired term, which is the difference between the rental contract and the amount received on the rerental. It is alleged in effect this was the best terms which could be obtained for the unexpired term. The verdict and judgment was for the sum of $1,750, with interest, and it is further alleged after the expiration of the term, January 31, 1918, appellees were to receive $250 per month, but it is alleged that, in order to procure this amount, it was necessary to expend $2,711.18 in repairs on the building for the new tenant, and that appellants left the building in such condition that the property could not be rented without such repairs.

The appellants excepted to the petition because it appears therefrom that appellees, for three years, from February, 1917, which included the unexpired term of appellants, leased the premises for $7,800, or an average monthly rental of $216.66, from which the lessors received for the unexpired term $2,-744.36, which should he rightfully deducted from the alleged liability for the balance due on the lease, as alleged, $3,250, and which would leave a balance only of $505.64 due by appellants on the lease. We see no error in overruling the exception. It presented more a question of fact whether the appellees should recover the difference between $250 per month and $150, or the difference between $250 and $216.66. We think the plead-ingsopresentcd the issue whether $150 was the best terms which could be obtained during the remainder of the original lease term. The petition alleges the original contract of lease, by its terms and duration, and the re-leasing and contract and its terms, and the reason for making the latter contract in the way it was made. It became a question of fact whether the balance of the term was rented for all that could be obtained or whether the entire rental contract for three years should be apportioned equally for each month, or whether $150 per month he applied to January 31, 1918, the expiration of the original lease. The balance of the three-year term, after the expiration of the original lease, was for $250 per month. It seems to be recognized that the landlord may relet the premises upon abandonment by the tenant by taking proper precaution to- relet to another without creating a surrender by operation of law. When he does relet, the measure of his damages.will be the agreed rental less the amount realized on account of such reletting; or he may permit the premises to remain vacant. Goldman v. Broyles, J41 S. W. 283, 286 (5 and 6); Robinson Seed, etc., v. Hexter, 167 S. W. 749; Hickman v. Bradford, 179 Iowa, 827, 162 N. W. 53. We do not think the allegations of the petition show that the tenant was entitled to a credit equal to the apportionment of the entire term per month, but it would be the actual rent received for the unexpired term. If the landlord used due precaution or diligence in making the new rental contract, and it was fairly and honestly made, the tenant has no grounds of complaint. The trial court, we believe, correctly overruled the exception.

[3] The second assignment is to the effect that the trial court erred in sustaining ap-pellees’ general exception to certain parts of the appellants’ answer to the petition. The appellants present a proposition that where the landlord agrees to make necessary repairs, and fails to do so, and the tenant makes the repairs, he is entitled to recover the reasonable cost thereof. At this time we will not set out the effect of the answer filed by appellants, but simply consider the abstract proposition. The plaintiffs below alleged in their petition that one of the terms of the lease is that the tenants would, at their own expense, keep the premises in good repair. The pleadings of both parties are that the lease was in writing. There is no allegation of fraud or mistake in omitting any of its terms. If there was an agreement on the part of the landlords to make certain repairs it should have been entered in the writing, and if such was the agreement, but omitted, then the appellants should have alleged the omission under proper allegations; *513 otherwise, they could not show the agreement and its breach. We are inclined to think a general exception would meet such defect in an answer which failed to make the proper allegations of omission from the rental contract. Lynch v. Ortlieb, 70 Tex. 727, 8 S. W. 515.

[4] There is no implied warranty upon the part of the landlords that the premises are fit for the purposes for which they are leased. If the tenants desire to have the landlords make changes or repairs, and to hold them responsible for failure, the tenants should have had such covenant incorporated in the agreement to lease. Case above cited; Periz v. Rabaud, 76 Tex. 191, 13 S. W. 177, 7 L. R. A. 620; Peticolas v. Thomas, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 442, 29 S. W. 166; Blackwell v. Speer, 98 S. W. 903.

[5] The appellants also, in conjunction with each other, present two propositions. The first is to the effect where misrepresentations are made by the landlord’s agent as to the condition of the premises and that the actual condition was concealed by dirt and rubbish on the floor, and that the floors were unfit for use for the lessee’s purposes, and which, when discovered, necessitated repair, the lessee may make reasonable charge for such cost of repair, and this is so especially where the landlord agreed after entry to make the repairs.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 511, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-r-miller-bro-v-nigro-texapp-1921.