Eames v. Philpot

236 P. 373, 72 Cal. App. 151, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 380
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2852.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 236 P. 373 (Eames v. Philpot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eames v. Philpot, 236 P. 373, 72 Cal. App. 151, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 380 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HART, J.

The plaintiffs, on the seventh day of July, 1921, by a writing, leased to one Mrs. M. G. Wilson, a widow, for the term of two years, beginning with the first day of July, 1921, and ending on the thirtieth day of July, 1923, a certain specifically described quarter-section of land situated in El Dorado County, and known as the “Silver-thorn Ranch,” at an annual rental of $350, of which, for the first year, the sum of $116.66 was paid on the day of the execution of the indenture, and the balance payable on the first day of November, 1921.. By this lease the second party (Mrs. Wilson) was “granted the privilege of cutting cord-wood on the east 80 acres of said premises,” she agreeing that “she will, during the term of this lease, cut not less than forty acres of all timber standing on either the north or south forty acres of the east eighty acres of said described premises, but not in the center thereof, at her option.” It was further stipulated in the lease that “said cutting is to begin in the wood-cutting season, in the fall of 1921 and 1922, and not later than November 1st, and shall continue during the entire cutting season of each year of said term. Said second party agrees that not less than forty acres shall be cut during the year of 1921 and not less than forty acres cut during the year 1922. The party of the second part agrees ,to pay the parties of the first part seventy-five cents per cord, 4' x 4' x 8', for all pine and other soft wood so cut and one dollar and fifty cents per like cord for all oak and other hard wood so cut. All cord wood to be measured and paid for before being sold or removed from the premises.” The lease proceeds:

“It is understood that the foregoing provisions relating to the cutting and removal of wood on said East eighty (80) acres of the above described premises is one of the material considerations for making of this lease, and any default in the performance of the specified terms and conditions by said second party shall, upon notice to them, give the first parties the right to terminate this lease, and to re-enter all of said premises and to remove all parties therefrom, and all considerations paid hereunder may thereupon, at the option of the first parties, be retained by them as settled and liquidated damages, it being hereby expressly agreed that it is *154 impossible to ascertain the actual damage resulting from any breach hereof, and time is hereby expressly made the essence of this agreement.”

It appears that the lessee failed to pay the rent specified in the lease as required by that instrument, and also failed to pay the lessor for wood cut on the premises as likewise required. After some discussion of and negotiations concerning these defaults on the part of the lessee, the parties, on November 19, 1921, entered into an agreement, reduced to writing, whereby the lessee surrendered her lease to the premises to the lessors. On the same date the lessors executed in' writing a release of the surrender of the lease. These documents were deposited in escrow in a bank in the city of Sacramento, with instructions that,.if the lessee, on or before December 20, 1921, paid the amount of the rent in which she was then in arrears and stumpage, and performed some other acts not pertinent to this inquiry, the surrender of the lease by her was to be canceled or returned to her and she to continue in possession of the premises under the lease as originally drafted and executed. The written release of the lessee from the effect of her surrender of lease set forth the instructions so given the bank. The lessee failed to meet the terms and conditions upon which her surrender of the lease was to cease to be of force. It appears, however, that the lessee and her husband (the former having subsequently to the execution of the lease intermarried with one Myron E. Sage) continued to hold possession of the premises, and that the plaintiffs (lessors) served or caused to be served upon Mrs. Wilson (lessee) a written notice, dated March 28, 1922, stating that rent in the sum of $233.44 was long past due, that the lessee had failed to pay for the wood cut by her on the premises, the sum due lessors for such wood being the sum of $255, and that the lessee in other respects breached the terms and conditions of the lease and demanding that the latter pay the rent due and for the wood cut within three days from the date of the service of said notice upon them, or, in default of such payments being so made, that they deliver to the lessors possession of the premises; that, in case the lessee, within the time stated in said notice, failed to comply with the one or the other of the alternatives so specified, the lessors would institute appropriate legal proceedings to oust them of such possession. A *155 few weeks prior to the time of the service of this notice, an attachment, issued in a case brought against the lessee and her husband by one Keefe, in the superior court of Sacramento County, was levied on the wood cut by the lessee under the terms of her lease of the premises, and which lien still subsisted at the time of the service of said notice. It also appears that on the nineteenth day of March, 1922, the lessee and her husband filed a petition and schedule in bankruptcy in the United States district court for the northern district of California, and on the same day were adjudicated bankrupts; that thereafter, at a meeting of the creditors of the bankrupts, the defendant Prior was appointed trustee of the estates of said bankrupts.

.It further appears that the lessee and her husband had given a chattel mortgage on some stock then on the premises in question to two parties by the names of LeRoy and Bell, to secure a certain loan of money by the latter to the former and evidenced by a promissory note. This note, it seems, had fallen due, and proceedings to foreclose the mortgage instituted. LeRoy and Bell, pending the determination of the foreclosure proceedings, placed one Garvey in charge of the mortgaged stock on said premises. On the eighteenth day of April, 1922, the lessee and her husband packed all their household belongings and departed from the demised premises. On the twentieth day of April, 1922, the plaintiffs put said Garvey in charge of said premises. On the twenty-ninth day of April, 1922, said Prior, as trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of the lessee and her husband, sold to the defendant R. S. Philpot all of the cut wood on the leased premises, the attachment lien on the wood, above spoken of, having been released. Said Philpot thereupon proceeded to remove said wood from said premises and had taken therefrom six cords of wood when the plaintiffs brought the present action for an injunction to prevent the defendants, their agents, and assigns from removing any of said wood from said premises and for judgment for the value of the wood removed therefrom by said Philpot.

The complaint, after stating that the plaintiffs are the owners of the demised premises,. and also of 177 cords of oak wood and 23 cords of pine wood, located on said premises, alleges as follows:

*156

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 P. 373, 72 Cal. App. 151, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eames-v-philpot-calctapp-1925.