Dennis v. Wood

139 N.E. 187, 79 Ind. App. 565, 1923 Ind. App. LEXIS 60
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 1923
DocketNo. 11,542
StatusPublished

This text of 139 N.E. 187 (Dennis v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis v. Wood, 139 N.E. 187, 79 Ind. App. 565, 1923 Ind. App. LEXIS 60 (Ind. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

McMahan, J.

Appellant and appellee on November 30, 1917, and for many years prior thereto were equal owners as tenants in common of certain lots in Windfall City, Tipton county, on which there was a brick building. November 15, 1917, they entered into a written contract, wherein, after describing the real estate and reciting their ownership thereof, that appellant had had the use and possession of the same without paying any rent to appellee and had received all the rents from other tenants for a period of ten years and eleven months ending November 30,. 1917, without paying or accounting to appellee for any rent or income, and that appellant during that time had paid the taxes, it was agreed that appellee should have possession of said property for a period of ten years and eleven months beginning December 1, 1917, upon the same terms and conditions as appellant had occupied the same. Under the terms of this contract appellee was authorized to take possession of the property November 15, for the purpose of “putting same in as good condition at joint expense as same was in at the time second party (appellant) took possession, natural wear and tear excepted,” and it was further agreed that “future expense of repairs as to roofing and shelving shall be borne equally to the amount of $133.28, this amount being borne equally between the first and second party in their settlement. All permanent repairs such as new roof shall be borne equally between first and second party.” Street, sewer or gravel road assessments, if [567]*567any, were to be borne equally. The usual local and state taxes were adjusted on the basis that appellant should pay them for a period of ten years and eleven months and falling due prior to December 1, 1917, and appellee paying them for a like period next ensuing.

The contract also provided that appellee should “keep said premises in good repair, natural wear and tear excepted, and at the expiration of said ten years and eleven months period the same shall be put in as good condition at joint expense, as same shall be placed in at expiration of said first period, natural wear and tear excepted:”

Appellee took possession of said property under said contract and later filed his complaint for partition. Such proceedings were had therein as resulted in a decree that the real estate was indivisible and ordering the same sold, subject to the rights of appellee under said contract. Appellant became the purchaser of said property at the partition sale.

. After appellee had taken possession under said contract and after the execution of the deed on partition to appellant and while the latter was the owner in fee of the whole of said real estate, appellee in order to keep said premises in good repair and to make good the wear and tear on said building, expended $83.15 for paint and painting which was necessary, proper and reasonable. After the execution of said deed to appellant, it also became necessary that a new roof be placed on the said building and appellant put a new roof on such building, the reasonable cost thereof being $152.05.

Appellee commenced this action to recover from appellant said sum of $83.15 and appellant filed a counterclaim against appellee asking for a judgment for one-half of said sum of $152.05 expended for the new roof.

The court found the facts as above stated and concluded as a matter of law that appellee was entitled to [568]*568recover from appellant $83.15 and that appellant was not entitled to recover anything on his counterclaim. A judgment having been rendered in accordance with the conclusions of law appellant appeals, and assigns as error the overruling of his demurrer to the complaint and that the court erred in its several conclusions of law.

The questions presented by the several errors assigned will be considered together.

The contract was dated November 15, .1917, and by its terms appellee was given the use of the property for a period of ten years and eleven months beginning December 1,1917. Appellee'under this contract was given the right to the possession of the property November 15, 1917, for “the purpose of putting same in as good condition at joint expense as same was when second party (appellant) took possession, natural wear and tear excepted.” There is no allegation in the complaint nor does the court find that the repairs which appellee made were for the purpose of putting the property in as good condition as it was at the.time appellant took possession. We must therefore conclude that such repairs were not made for that purpose. They were made more than a year after appellee had taken possession under his contract, and, as it would seem, under that provision of the contract which provided that appellee should “keep said premises in good repair, natural wear and tear excepted.” It was the duty of appellee, not as a cotenant with appellant, but under the terms of the contract to keep the premises in good repair. The finding of the court is that “after the execution of said contract and after plaintiff had taken possession thereunder, and after the execution of said deed and while defendant was the owner in fee simple of the whole of the fee of said lands, and in order to keep said premises in good repair and to make good the wear and tear [569]*569on said buildings” appellee expended said sum of $83.15, all of which was necessary, proper and reasonable. As heretofore stated appellee under this contract was required at his own expense to keep the premises in good repair during the time he occupied it, and at the expiration of the ten years and eleven months, the premises were then to be put in “as good condition at joint expense as same shall be placed in at expiration of said first period, natural wear and tear excepted.” The first period referred to means the period during which appellant occupied the property. While the provisions of the contract are somewhat ambiguous in so far as it relates to putting the premises in good condition at the expiration of appellee’s occupancy under the contract, it cannot be held that the repairs made by appellee were made for that purpose, as the time to make the necessary expenditures for that purpose was ten years in the future.

Appellant contends that appellee under the terms of the contract is liable for one-half of the cost of putting on the new roof.

We can get a better idea of the intentions of the parties when they entered into this contract if we will place ourselves in the situation of the parties when the contract was executed and consider it in the light of the circumstances under which it was made. At that time and for many years prior thereto appellant and appellee owned the property as tenants in common, each owning a one-half interest therein. Appellant had been in possession of the property for ten years and eleven months paying no rent, collecting all rents from tenants and making no accounting to appellee for any part of the rents.

There is nothing in the contract or in the special finding to show that appellant occupied the property under any contract. The contract made by the parties in No[570]

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Bluebook (online)
139 N.E. 187, 79 Ind. App. 565, 1923 Ind. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-v-wood-indctapp-1923.