Chattanooga Brewing Co. v. Smith

58 So. 63, 3 Ala. App. 551, 1911 Ala. App. LEXIS 175
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 18, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 So. 63 (Chattanooga Brewing Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chattanooga Brewing Co. v. Smith, 58 So. 63, 3 Ala. App. 551, 1911 Ala. App. LEXIS 175 (Ala. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

WALKER, P. J.

The following is a summary of the allegations of count 9 of the complaint, as amended: [556]*556On January 17, 1907, the plaintiff was the owner of the reversion in and to a described storehouse in the city of Birmingahm, which was then occupied by the Shindler Saloon Company, as tenant thereof under the plaintiff, under a lease contract for the term of five years from October 1, 1905, to September 30, 1910. The defendant obtained possession of the leased premises from plaintiff’s tenant, and, on the date first mentioned, represented to. the plaintiff that it had bought out said tenant, and requested the plaintiff to accept the defendant as her tenant for the leased premises for the unexpired term of the lease, and to indorse on the written contract of lease held by the plaintiff her written consent to the transfer of the leased premises to the defendant. The plaintiff agreed to this proposition of the defendant if the latter would assume to pay plaintiff the rent reserved in and by the lease contract of $300 per month, and evidence this assumption of the rent to fall due thereafter by signing its name on the back of the 44 monthly rent notes then held by the plaintiff, which defendant then and there did; and in consideration thereof, and at the same time and place and as a part of the transaction, the plaintiff- made and signed the following indorsement on the lease contrast: “I hereby consent to. the transfer of the lease to the Chattanooga Brewing Co., they being bound by all the provisions and obligations of this lease so transferred, this 18th day of Jan., 1907.” And the defendant accepted this transfer of the lease as evidenced by its indorsement of the rent notes, and by using and occupying the leased premises thereunder from that time, and by paying the rent according to the terms of the lease for the succeeding 11 months, but failed to pay the installment of rent which was evidenced by the note which fell due on February 1, 1908. The plaintiff claimed the amount evidenced by that rent [557]*557note, with interest thereon, and a reasonable attorney’s fee under a provision on that subject contained in the note. Count 10 of the complaint, as amended, sets out the same state of facts, except that it seeks recovery on a similar note which fell due on March 1, 1908. The defendant demurred to each of these counts of the complaint upon a number of grounds, and assigns as error the action of the court in overruling these demurrers. What will be said in reference to that ruling is applicable to each of the two counts.

There is an assumption on the part of the defendant in the grounds of demurrer assigned, and in the argument of counsel made in support of them, that the plaintiff’s right to recover on either of those counts must rest upon what is alleged to have occurred between the defendant and the tenant, who' surrendered possession to it, and much stress is laid upon the claim that the averments do not show that the effect of t-he transaction between the tenant and the defendant was to impose upon the latter, in favor of the plaintiff, the obligations which the rental contract imposed upon the tenant. To indulge such an assumption, it is necessary to ignore material features of the state of facts set out. It is patent" from the plaintiff’s averments that her claim upon the defendant may be rested, not alone upon the transaction with the tenant who had been in possession, as claimed to have the effect of creating a privity of estate-without a privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant (Bonetti v. Treat, 14 L. R. A. 151, note), but also upon a contract entered into by the defendant directly with the plaintiff, and possession by the defendant under that contract. The real ground of the liability asserted is that the defendant itself entered into a contract with the plaintiff which had the effect, upon its superseding the former tenant under an arrange[558]*558ment with him, of making the defendant the plaintiff’s tenant under the lease, as a substitute for the tenant who held under the lease before that contract was entered into. That, with the consent or acquiescence of the former tenant, the defendant could by contract become the plaintiff’s tenant under the lease, with all the obligations it imposed upon the original tenant, is clear in principle and from the authorities. .

In the case of Morgan v. McCollister, 110 Ala. 319, 20 South. 54, the facts were that McCollister, who was a tenant in possession under a written lease for 20 years, made a parol sale of the remainder of his term to one Morgan, surrendered possession to him, and told-Moses, his landlord, that thereafter he must look to Morgan for the rent, and thereupon Moses made a new lease of the premises to Morgan. The court held that the acts of McCollister in making the parol sale of his lease and consenting to the landlord’s accepting Morgan as his tenant constituted a surrender by McCollister of his lease, and terminated his interest in the leased premises. This was a plain recognition of the right of an original tenant under a written lease, by acts resting in parol, to extinguish his intex’est under the lease, without any written or formal assignxnent of it.

Differences between that, case and the present one are that in that case a new lease was made to the person who acquired possession from the original tenant, while in this case the landlord consented to a continuance of the old lease, upon the assumption by the party in whose favor the possession was surrendered of the obligations of the tenant who had been holding under the lease; and that in that case the former tenant notified the landlord to look thereafter to the party in possession for the rent, while here the termination of the former tenant’s interest under the lease was evidenced by [559]*559his surrender of the possssion and thereafter asserting no further claim to the possession or to any interest under the lease. But the differences are not material, certainly so far as concerns the relations of the landlord with the party who so acquired possession of the leased' premises and assumed the obligations of the tenant under the lease. “Where a landlord grants a new lease to a stranger, with the assent of the tenant, during the existence of an outstanding lease, and the tenant gives up his own possession to the stranger, who thereafter pays rent, or where, in any other way, a new tenant is, by agreement of the tenant and the landlord, substituted and accepted in place of the old, there is a surrender by operation of law. It is immaterial that the old lease is not canceled, or that the original lessee signs the new lease as surety.” — (24) Oye. 1370. It is equally immaterial that the lessor in his pleading mistakenly asserts or assumes that the legal effect of the transaction between the original and the substituted tenant was a transfer of the lease. The court determines the nature of that transaction from the facts averred, not from the pleaders’ statement of his conclusion on the subject.

This case involves .no question as to the effect of the'acts set forth in the complaint upon any claim of the landlord against the tenant who relinquished the possession. The averments of the count showing that the defendant agreed with the plaintiff, the lessor, to assume the lease and pay the rent, and that it has had the possession and enjoyment of the premises pursuant to that agreement, it is in no position in this, suit by the lessor to raise a question as to whether the'former tenant made an effectual assignment of the lease to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 So. 63, 3 Ala. App. 551, 1911 Ala. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chattanooga-brewing-co-v-smith-alactapp-1911.