Fanta v. Maddex

252 P. 630, 80 Cal. App. 513, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 33
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 1926
DocketDocket No. 5329.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 252 P. 630 (Fanta v. Maddex) 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
Fanta v. Maddex, 252 P. 630, 80 Cal. App. 513, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 33 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of respondent and against appellant in the sum of $5,000, with interest thereon from February 1, 1923.

In the month of September, 1912, B. Fanta, now deceased, was constructing an apartment house on the corner of Union and Tenth Streets in the city of Los Angeles. On September 20, 1912, he entered into a lease of the apartment house then under construction and known as the “Fanta Apartments,” leasing the same to Louettie A. Zuber for a term of ten years “commencing on the day said building shall be completed and ready for occupancy for the purpose of an apartment house,” and providing that the first month which the lessee should occupy the premises should be free and that the lessee should not be required to pay any rental for such month. The rental provided to be paid by the lease was $47,600 for the ten-year term in installments as follows: $400 on the execution of the lease, for which the lessor was to give a receipt for the rental for the month of January, 1913, and $400 on the first of each and every month thereafter during the term of the lease until the whole sum of $47,600 was paid to the lessor by the lessee. Thé lease further pro *515 vided that should the lessee hold over after the expiration of the term with the consent of the lessor expressed or implied, said tenancy should be deemed a tenancy from month to month at the rental of $400 per month.

At the time the lease was entered into it was expected that the building would be completed and ready for occupancy by the first day of December, 1912, and that the lessee should have the use of the building, rent free, during that month, and that her rent should commence on January 1, 1913. The contractor of the building abandoned his contract, and plaintiff completed it on force account. The building, as found by the court, "was completed and ready for occupancy, for all purposes for which the same was leased, namely, an apartment house, by the first day of February, 1913.”

During the year 1913 Louettie A. Zuber was making claim against the lessor for damages because she did not get into the premises in the month of December, 1912. She paid rent at the rate of $400 per month for the twelve months of the year 1913. In December of that year she desired to assign the lease to appellant. This assignment the lessor, B. Fanta, declined to consent to unless Louettie A. Zuber would waive her claim for damages. On December 30, 1913, Louettie A. Zuber and B. Fanta adjusted their controversy, and Fanta delivered to Mrs. Zuber, appellant’s assignor, a receipt acknowledging one year’s rent from January, 1913, to January, 1914. In consideration thereof appellant’s assignor released B. Fanta from all claims and demands growing out of the latter’s failure to complete the building on time, and at the same time appellant’s assignor delivered to appellant the following instrument:

"For valuable consideration, I hereby assign, set over and transfer all my right, title and interest to the within lease to W. T. Maddex, subject to the same terms of said lease and all the conditions therein set out, which the said assignee hereby assumes, and subject to the mortgage of B. Fanta, now of record, covering the furniture in said building in accordance with the terms of said lease and said mortgage. "Dated December 30, 1913.
"Mrs. L. A. Zuber "W. T. Maddex
*516 “I hereby accept the above assignee as tenant under the terms of said lease subject to all the terms of said lease and said mortgage.
“B. Fanta
“Dated December 30, 1913.”
The receipt given to Mrs. Zuber by B. Fanta is as follows:
“Received of Mrs. L. A. Zuber $4800.00 in full for rent on lease Sept. 20, 1912, on Aptmt. building Union Ave. and 10th str. from Jany. 1st, 1913, to Jany. 1st, 1914. Balance of $42,800.00 to be paid by W. T. Maddex, her assignee.
“B. Fanta.”

Upon the execution of the assignment of .the lease appellant entered into the possession of the premises, occupying them until the last day of February, 1923, when he surrendered the possession and moved out. On February 1, 1923, he tendered the lessor $400 as rent for such month of February, which the lessor refused.

By said assignment and assent respondent accepted appellant as tenant under the terms of said lease and subject to all provisions thereof. A privity of contract in addition to a privity of estate was created thereby between the lessor and appellant (Realty & Rebuilding Co. v. Rea, 184 Cal. 565 [194 Pac. 1024]), and appellant acquired a leasehold estate for the remainder of the term, that is to say, for the time remaining from the date, of the completion of the building as provided in said lease. The receipt given by respondent to appellant’s assignor could not operate to shorten the term of the lease, hut was a mere acknowledgment by way of compromise of the receipt of rent for the premises up to January 1, 1914.

It was an adjustment of a difference between B. Fanta and Louettie A. Zuber and not binding on appellant, who was not a party to it, and could not operate to change the terms of the written assignment executed by Louettie A. Zuber.and appellant, and which was accepted in writing by B. Fanta, now deceased, but formerly the plaintiff in the action and for whom respondent as executrix of his will has been substituted.

Respondent urges that while there is a conflict in the evidence as to whether appellant knew of the receipt given by B. Fanta to his assignor, Julia Fanta testified that *517 all the papers were executed at the same time and as one transaction and that appellant was shown the receipt and agreed thereto. His agreement thereto is at best but an oral agreement which preceded or accompanied the written assignment of the lease executed by Louettie A. Zuber and himself and which written assignment superseded such oral negotiations (Civ. Code, sec. 1625). This principle is so well established that it does not require the citation of authorities.

The intention of the parties to retain all the terms of the lease is evidenced beyond any doubt by this assignment to appellant executed at the same time, wherein it was expressly stipulated that the terms of the lease remained in force and that the assignment was made subject to all of its terms. The contention of respondent, accepted by the trial court in its findings, that by means of a mathematical calculation of the total rental to be paid under the lease and the recitals of the receipt, the amount of rent was fully paid up by November 30, 1922, is irreconcilable with the fact that the building was not completed or ready for occupancy on the 30th of November, 1912, and the court found that the building* was not completed for some two months later. The time of the completion of the building is controlling under the lease as to the commencement of the term thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 630, 80 Cal. App. 513, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fanta-v-maddex-calctapp-1926.