Fratt v. Hunt

41 P. 12, 108 Cal. 288, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 857
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1895
DocketNo. 18442
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 P. 12 (Fratt v. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fratt v. Hunt, 41 P. 12, 108 Cal. 288, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 857 (Cal. 1895).

Opinion

Garoutte, J.

Francis W. Fratt, as the owner of certain hotel property situated in the city of Sacramento, leased the same, including furniture, etc., to one Sherwood for the term of five years, at a stipulated rental per month. This contract of lease contains the following provision: “And it is agreed by the party of the second part that, at the expiration of said term, or the sooner termination thereof, he will return to the party of the first part all the furniture, fixtures, bedding, gas fixtures, and all other articles described in said inventory A, according to the inventory therein mentioned, in as good condition as said articles now are. Any window glass that may be broken must be replaced by said second party, with glass of equal quality, at his expense, and at the expiration of said term the said party of the second part will quit and surrender the said premises in as good state and condition as reasonable use and wear thereof will permit, damages by the elements excepted.” Inventory “A” contained a statement in detail of the personal property aforesaid.

Hunt, the defendant’s testator, in writing, guaranteed the faithful performance of the covenants of the lease upon the part of Sherwood. Prior to the expiration of the five-year term, Hunt, the guarantor, died, and thereupon Fratt presented a claim, to the defendant as executrix of his estate, for: 1. Balance due for rent already accrued; 2. Amount of rent hereafter to become due prior to the expiration of the lease; 3. A contingent liability, to wit, “For any damage claimant may sustain by reason of any injury which may be done to any of the personal property described in said inventory or schedule B, hereto attached, and also for any damage which claimant may sustain by reason of the nondelivery or return to him of any of the property described in said schedule B, but the amount of such damage this claimant is at this time unable to state.” The aforesaid claim set out the guaranty of Hunt and the facts in detail concerning the transaction. Both the absolute and contingent claim for rent were allowed by the exec[291]*291utrix, but the contingent claim for damages for loss and injury to furniture, etc., was rejected. Thereupon this action was brought upon the claim as presented, and a general demurrer to the complaint was interposed, and sustained by the trial court. The sole purpose of this appeal appears to be to test the ruling of the court in sustaining that demurrer.

In so far as the claim was for rent due and to become due it was approved by the executrix; hence, no cause of action could be based upon it in those particulars; and that portion of the complaint wherein it is sought to recover a judgment for rents was clearly susceptible to a general demurrer. Plaintiff also sued to recover a sum of money as damages for broken panes of glass, but, inasmuch as Sherwood agreed to replace all such glass upon the expiration of the lease, an action for such damage prior to that time was clearly premature. The complaint contains the following allegation: “Plaintiff alleges that, before the filing of the complaint to which this is amendatory, the said T. J. Sherwood had carelessly and negligently permitted a large amount of personal property, furniture, and fixtures leased with said hotel, and described in exhibit B, attached to said complaint, to become utterly lost and destroyed; that said personal property, furniture, and fixtures, so lost and destroyed, was, at the time of said loss and destruction, of the value of $1,0U0, as this plaintiff is informed and believes; that, by reason of said loss and destruction of said personal property, this plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $1,000, as he is informed and believes. The plaintiff further alleges that the personal property, furniture, and fixtures described in said exhibit B, which was at the date of filing said complaint and still is in the said Union Hotel, and which consists of all of said personal property, furniture, and fixtures in said exhibit described, except such as has been lost or destroyed as aforesaid, was during the continuance of said lease, and while the same was in the possession of said T. J. She wood, by his carelessness and negligence greatly injui [292]*292and damaged; that is to say, the same was damaged and injured to the extent of $2,174.45.” It'is upon these two allegations of the complaint that plaintiff must rest his cause of action, if the pleading states one, and our consideration will now be addressed to their sufficiency.

The claim presented to the executrix, upon which the allegations of the complaint just quoted are based, is in its nature essentially a contingent claim. Section 1498 of the Code of Civil Procedure declares when actions must be brought upon claims due and claims not due at the date of rejection. The claim here presented cannot be classed in either category, and the declaration of this principle finds full support in the case of Verdier v. Roach, 96 Cal. 474. We find no other provision in the statute prescribing the time within which suit must be brought upon rejected claims; hence, as to rejected contingent claims, the matter may be said to be enveloped in some doubt. As was said in Verdier v. Roach, supra: “ The allowance of such a claim would have admitted and established the validity of the obligation, and would have entitled it to be filed in court,” etc. And, while it is possible that an action upon a rejected contingent claim may be brought to secure a judgment, giving the claim the same status as would come to it by its allowance, still we find upon examination of the complaint in this case, and especially of the allegations previously quoted, that no such judgment is here sought, but a money judgment for damages pure and simple is asked for. These allegations of the complaint have a twofold character. They lay a claim, for damages in the sum of $1,000 for furniture, etc., lost and destroyed by the lessee, and also a claim of $2,174.45 for furniture, etc., injured and damaged. As to the damage for injury to the personal property leased by plaintiff, we are clear that any action for such damages will be premature until the expiration of the lease term. The lessor under his contract agreed to return this personal property “in as good condition as said articles now are,” and no cause of action for a breach of that covenant [293]*293could arise until the time came for a return of the property. The mere fact that it was injured and damaged at some time during the life of the lease would not show that it could not be returned subsequently in substantially its original condition. It would not show but that repairs would place it in the same condition as when leased. As to the claim of $1,000 for property destroyed and lost, it must be assumed that such property not only was placed beyond repair, but could not be returned, and, such being the fact, it may be conceded, for present purposes, that a cause of action in damages for its loss would arise at the date of its destruction, regardless of the time of the expiration of the lease; for, even though the lessee’s stated time for performance had not yet arrived, if he voluntarily placed it out of his power to perform he committed a breach of the contract and was liable at once. It may also be conceded that the covenants of his contract as to returning this property could not be satisfied by a return of other property of a similar kind and character. But for other reasons we think this claim of $1,000 for damages does not state a cause of action, and those reasons also furnish additional grounds for defeating the plaintiff’s claim of damages for property injured and damaged.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 P. 12, 108 Cal. 288, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fratt-v-hunt-cal-1895.