Corson v. Berson

25 P. 7, 86 Cal. 433, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 1049
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1890
DocketNo. 12604
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 P. 7 (Corson v. Berson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corson v. Berson, 25 P. 7, 86 Cal. 433, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 1049 (Cal. 1890).

Opinion

Gibson, C.

— This action was brought by plaintiff, Corson, as assignee, to recover from the firm of A. Berson & Son the sum of $1,050, due for rent, for three and one half months, on a lease made and delivered to them by the firm of Ewing, Plum & O’Brien, plaintiff’s assignors. A. Berson & Son admitted, by their answer, that they occupied the leased premises during the period [435]*435above mentioned, but denied that such occupation was under or pursuant to the lease relied upon by plaintiff, and averred that during that time they held under a verbal agreement with Ewing, Plum & O’Brien, by which they, A. Berson & Son, were to hold and pay rent for the premises, and did hold and pay for the same, at the rate of $150 per month.- With their answer, they filed a cross-complaint, bringing in, as parties to the action, Ewing and Plum, and Flood and Coleman, the executors of O’Brien, the deceased partner of Ewing and Plum.

By this cross-complaint, they alleged that on or about March 1, 1884, Ewing, Plum & O’Brien let the premises to A. Berson & Son, from month to month, upon the same rental that the lessors might get for an adjoining store which they, from and after said date, and up to June 1, 1885, rented for the sum of $150 per month, but fraudulently concealed the true amount of the rent thereof from A. Berson & Son, and fraudulently represented to them that the true rental of the adjoining store was $300 per month, and thereby fraudulently induced A. Berson & Son to pay a greater amount of rent than they had agreed to pay, by reason of which, Ewing, Plum & O’Brien became indebted to A. Berson & Son in the sum of $150 per month for every month’s rent paid by the latter from March 1, 1884, to February 15, 1885, with interest thereon from the last day of each month, less three and one half months’ rent from the latter date, at $150 per month. After the commencement of the action, A. Berson died, and it was continued in the name of G. Berson, as the surviving partner of the firm of A. Berson & Son.

The case was tried without a jury, and the court found the facts in favor of G. Berson, as the said surviving partner, in accordance with the allegations of the cross-complaint, except .that the rental of the adjoining store was found to be $200 per month for one year from June 1, 1884, instead of $150 per month from [436]*436March 1, 1884; and that the rent due from A. Berson & Son for three and one half months from February 15, 1885, was at the rate of $200, instead of $150, per month. Judgment followed for the cross-complainant, G. Berson, as surviving partner of A. Berson & Son, for $178.50, overplus paid by the firm from June 1, 1884, to February 15, 1885, after deducting $700 for rent due from the latter date until June 1,1885, together with interest on the overplus from the date last mentioned. From this judgment, and an order denying a new trial, the plaintiff, Corson, and Ewing and Plum, and O’Brien’s executors, viz., Flood and Coleman, appeal.

In order that the points made by appellants may be fully understood, it is necessary to state the leading facts as shown by the evidence. A. Berson & Son, by a lease in writing, leased a store from Ewing, Plum & O’Brien for two years from May 15,1881, at the monthly rental of three hundred dollars per month, payable in advance each month, with the privilege of an extension of the term at the same rental up to the date of the expiration of the lease of Ewing, Plum & O’Brien, from J. G. Brooks. The lense also provided that if the lessees should hold over after the expiration of the term of two years with the expressed or implied consent of their lessors, such holding should be construed as a tenancy from month to month. On the expiration of the term, on May 15,1885, the lease was not extended, but the lessees continued to hold the premises as tenants from month to month at the same rate specified in the lease. While they were thus holding, the adjoining store, which also belonged to the lessors, became vacant in February, 1884, and Ewing, for his firm, in answer to the repeated solicitations of A. Berson, of the firm of A. Berson & Son, agreed with the latter, as an inducement for them to remain as tenants, that if the vacant store should be rented for less than three hundred dollars per month, A. Berson & Son should have their store [437]*437•at the same rental. In May of the same year, the lessors leased the adjoining store for one year from June 1, 1884, at a monthly rental, expressed in the lease, of three hundred dollars per month, and gave the lessee a separate paper, in which the lessors stipulated«to allow the lessee one hundred dollars per month on the rent of three hundred dollars per month during the term. This stipulation was concealed from A. Berson & Son, to whom it was represented by their lessors that the tenants of the adjoining store were paying three hundred dollars per month therefor. Believing this representation to be true, A. Berson & Son continued to pay three hundred dollars per month until February 15, 1885, about which time they discovered that the tenants of the adjoining store were and had been paying only two hundred dollars per month, instead of three hundred dollars, but continued to hold the premises until June 1, 1885.

Appellants’ first point is, that the court erred in overruling their objection to the following question put to Gr. Berson by his counsel: “ What took place when the lease expired?—I mean the original two years, or the first term, of the lease,” — on the ground that it called for testimony that would tend to vary the terms of the written lease. It is obvious that, as the question related to matters that occurred after the lease had expired, the question was not designed to, and in fact did not, elicit anything that tended to vary its terms, and the objection thereto was properly overruled. Appellants’ exception to the court’s refusal to strike out the testimony of the same witness as to what was said relative to the reduction of rent, upon the same ground upon which the said objection was placed, cannot be sustained, because, when the verbal agreement was made with them regarding the reduction of rent upon the contingency, which happened, viz., of not obtaining three hundred dollars per month for the adjoining store, they were holding as ten[438]*438ants from month to month, as provided for in the original lease, which had expired; and it was competent for them to make any parol agreement as to the continuation of their tenancy for any period not exceeding one year. Besides, the testimony was relevant, and tended strongly to support the agreement for the reduction of rent, which constituted the gist of the cross-action.

Appellants’ third objection is, that the court erred in receiving in evidence the paper that had been given to the tenants who leased the adjoining store at the time they obtained a lease of it from Ewing, Plum & O’Brien, by which paper it was provided that such tenants should receive a rebate of one hundred dollars on each month’s rent, on the ground that the paper was signed by Ewing alone, and could not bind his firm. The fact that the paper was given with the written lease to the tenants of the adjoining store, and formed a part of it, is sufficient to show that it was properly received in evidence; and the cases cited by us in support of our disposition of the next point of the appellants conclusively establishes that the trial court was right in its ruling in this respect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 P. 7, 86 Cal. 433, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 1049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corson-v-berson-cal-1890.