Davidge v. Simmons
This text of 266 F. 1018 (Davidge v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Davidge occupied an apartment belonging to Simmons under a lease which reserved a rental of $1,260 a year, payable monthly in installments of $105, and which expired September 30, 1918. After the expiration of the lease Davidge became a tenant at sufferance for a month. Simmons refused to permit him to remain longer,, unless he paid a rental of $1,386 a year, payable in installments of $115.50 a month. Davidge declined to pay the additional rent, and, after due notice to quit, refused to vacate the premises, but, resting on the Saulsbury Resolution (40 Stat. 593), sent to Simmons each month his check for $105, the old rent. The check for November had written upon it these words, “Rent Apt. 42, 2139 [1019]*1019Wyo. Ave. Nov. ’18,” and each check thereafter had a similar state-ilient, except the name of the month and the year’ which were changed to correspond with the period for which the rent was offered. Simmons refused to receive the checks and returned them to the sender. 1 )avidge insists that the checks constituted a good tender, and that,_ in consequence, he is entitled to the protection of the Saulsbury Resolution.
“The tender,” says the court in the Elderkin Case, quoting Green-leaf on Evidence, § 602, “must be understood as a tender, and be absolute and unconditional.” In the Henderson Case it was held:
“A tender, to bo of any avail, must be unconditional. The debtor cannot insist that the creditor shall admit that no more is due in respect of thfe debt for which the tender is made.”
According to the-Supreme Court of Nebraska in Tompkins v. Batie:
“There must not be anything raising the implication that the debtor intended to cut oil or bar a claim for any amount beyond the sum tendered.”
Bowen v. Owen, 63 Eng. C. L. R. 130, 135, when considered in the light of its facts, may seem to be in conflict with the views expressed in the American decisions from which we have quoted, although the principle announced therein is in harmony with them. Mr. Justice Erie said that if the person who makes the tender “requires the other party to accept it as all that is due, that is imposing a condition; and, when the offer is so made, the creditor may refuse to consider it as a tender.” Davidge required Simmons to accept the checks in payment of “all that was due,” and this constituted a condition which, according to the Bowen Case, rendered the tender ineffective. If Simmons [1020]*1020had accepted the checks and cashed them, it might, in the language of the Tompkins Case, have compromised “his rights in seeking to recover more”; and the law did not require him, in the circumstances, to do anything which would have that effect. The rent not having been paid, and a sufficient tender thereof not having been made, Da-vidge is not entitled to the shield of the Saulsbury Resolution, even if it were valid.
The judgment is affirmed, at the cost of the appellant.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
266 F. 1018, 49 App. D.C. 398, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidge-v-simmons-cadc-1920.