Dean v. Lacey

437 S.W.2d 433, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2350
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1969
Docket7017
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 437 S.W.2d 433 (Dean v. Lacey) 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
Dean v. Lacey, 437 S.W.2d 433, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2350 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

PARKER, Chief Justice.

H. E. Lacey, as Lessor, sued Appellant, Max T. Dean, as Lessee, for rentals alleged to be due under their lease contract. The trial court denied Appellant’s Motion for Instructed Verdict, granted Appellee’s Motion for Instructed Verdict, and rendered Judgment against the Appellant for $6,-444.35. The Appellant will be called Appellant or Dean. The Appellee will be called Appellee or Lacey.

Lacey leased a service station to Dean effective February 15, 1958, for a ten year term. The lease provided for a monthly rental of a minimum of $125.00 per month, payable monthly in advance. Dean, as Les *434 see, occupied the premises and paid all rent until February IS, 1959. On that date, he assigned the lease to Taylor. Lacey, as Lessor, consented to this assignment in an instrument which provided that Dean should be “subject, however, to the payment and performance of all the agreements and covenants on the part of said Max T. Dean, in said indenture of lease contained, and all the terms thereof; it being understood that the said Max T. Dean shall answer-to me for any default made in the performance of such lease by the said Jim Dale Taylor.” Such consent agreement further provided that Dean in no manner would be connected with any gasoline service station other than an authorized Texas Company service station in Dib-oll or within a radius of two miles of Dib-oll during the term of such lease from Lacey to Dean and assigned to Taylor.

Diboll Development Company was the owner of the property and had leased it to Lacey on February IS, 19S8, and had consented to the lease of the same by Lacey to Dean. Diboll Development Company, by instrument dated February 1, 1959, consented that H. E. Lacey assign the lease to Jim Dale Taylor, or consent to the assignment by Dean to Jim Dale Taylor of the lease.

On February 12, 1959, Lacey discovered that Dean had left the gasoline service station. The place was closed and everything moved out. Lacey admitted that Dean had paid him the rental through the time Dean actually occupied the station, amounting to $1,500.00 for a full year’s rental. Thereafter, Dean paid no rental. Dean made the arrangement for Taylor to take over the station. Then Dean moved to Beaumont and went to work for Ideco. Before leaving, he sold his stock of goods to Jim Dale Taylor. After moving to Beaumont, Dean continued to reside in Beaumont and never learned that Taylor had made any default in the lease until he received a letter from Lacey dated September 30, 1959. He testified that Lacey never told him that Taylor was leaving the station.

Lacey received payment for rental from Jim D. Taylor of $270.00 from March 15, 1959, to June 15, 1959. On that date, the rent was in arrears $130.00. After Jim Dale Taylor ceased to occupy the premises, H. E. Lacey secured or obtained each tenant of such premises and the rental was paid to Lacey; the tenants were secured by Lacey to occupy the premises and pay the rental as stated, each leaving voluntarily; Lacey advertised in papers, by posters on premises, and personal solicitation to obtain tenants to occupy and pay rental on the premises. Each occupant paid rent to Lacey during the time he occupied the premises, the total rent received from them being $3,055.65.

Lacey testified that Jim Dale Taylor ceased occupying the premises on June 15, 1959. That on that date, Lacey rented the station to A. D. Redfearn, who ceased to rent December 15, 1959. He then rented to 5. J. DuBose from December 15, 1959, to December 31, 1959; O. E. Rose rented January 28, 1960, and ceased to rent June 6, 1960; J. C. Rose rented June 6, 1960, and ceased to rent October 10, 1961; John Ferguson rented October 10, 1961, and ceased to rent December 31, 1961; S. J. Smith rented October 1, 1962, and ceased to rent December 31, 1962. Each occupant paid rent to Lacey during the time he occupied the premises.

After Taylor ceased to occupy the premises, Lacey admitted he had not talked in person or by telephone with Max T. Dean. In Paragraph 15 of the Lease between Lacey and Dean, it is provided:

“ * * * upon the termination of the lease between Diboll Development Company and H. E. Lacey, regardless of the cause thereof, this lease shall also, ipso facto, cease, terminate and be of no further force and effect.”

*435 Appellee pleaded:

“That after defendant abandoned the aforesaid leased premises plaintiff made efforts and contacted various persons to rent said premises and minimize or eliminate the amount due from defendant to plaintiff. Plaintiff received the sum of $3,055.65 from his efforts which he applied to the amount accruing and owing to him by defendant under the lease contract and its provisions. Plaintiff, in accordance with his rights under said lease contract, declared all the remaining rental installments past due and payable, and the amount now due and payable by defendant to plaintiff is $6,444.35 for which he now sues.
VIII.
“Plaintiff has made demand that defendant pay rentals due under said lease contract and pay the sum due under the terms of said lease contract, but defendant has refused to pay same, or any part thereof. Plaintiff would further show that he has duly performed all of the conditions of said lease contract with the defendant and on plaintiff’s part by him to be performed.”

In Appellant’s First Amended Original Answer, the pleading consisted of a general denial and:

“II.
“On or about June 15, 1959, contending and asserting that the defendant was in arrears as to payment of rent under the lease referred to in plaintiff’s petition, the plaintiff entered into and upon the premises described in said lease and repossessed said premises and evicted the defendant therefrom. The plaintiff procured other tenants as of June 15, 1959 and thereafter at all times maintained possession of the leased premises himself, either in person or by tenants of his own choosing and selection. Thereby the plaintiff chose and elected the first prerogative given to him in Paragraph 8 of the lease, and upon plaintiff’s re-entry into possession of the leased premises on June 15, 1959, the lease referred to in plaintiff’s petition ceased and ended as provided for in Paragraph 8 of such lease.”

The lease of February 15, 1958, provides:

“8. REPOSSESSION BY LANDLORD

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
437 S.W.2d 433, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-lacey-texapp-1969.