Friedman v. Goodman

151 S.E.2d 455, 222 Ga. 613, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 577
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 6, 1966
Docket23539
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 151 S.E.2d 455 (Friedman v. Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Friedman v. Goodman, 151 S.E.2d 455, 222 Ga. 613, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 577 (Ga. 1966).

Opinion

Quillian, Justice.

In the present suit upon a lease or rental contract the plaintiffs had the burden of proving that they performed the contract according to its terms, or for some legal reason such performance on their part was as a matter of law excused. Code § 20-1101; Bennett v. Burkhalter, 128 Ga. 154 (57 SE 231). The plaintiffs recognized this principle and alleged in the petition that they had “duly performed all the conditions of said lease on their part.”

It is further a rudimentary principle that where the plaintiffs contract to perform covenants that are impossible, not because of an act of God or the conduct of the defendants, the failure to perform such covenants is as fatal to the plaintiffs’ right to recover as a breach of the contract for any other reason. In Northington-Munger-Pratt Co. v. Farmers’ Gin &c. Co., 119 Ga. 851 (7) (47 SE 200, 100 ASR 210), this court held: “If the vendor sold to a third person and thereby disabled itself to convey according to the terms of the contract, it would be liable in damages.” Field v. Martin, 49 Ga. 268 (2); Cooley v. Moss, 123 Ga. 707 (1) (51 SE 625); Mobley v. Lott, 127 Ga. 572 (56 SE 637).

The lease contract sued upon contained the provision's: “the leased premises shall be in the exclusive possession of the tenant . . . ; the lessee is hereby granted the privilege of subletting the leased premises in whole or in part . . .”; and that the lessee would have the right to install a whole new front on the building, removing the front that then existed. While the petition as originally drafted contained the averment that the plaintiffs were the owners of the rented building, a later amendment alleged that one of the plaintiffs, Mrs. Harkins, through her executor, Georgia Railroad Bank & Trust Company, acquired her interest in the building subsequent to execution of the lease contract and after the expiration of the period during which the rent sued for accrued. The plaintiffs introduced into evidence a deed dated July 2, 1964, from the Harkins *618 Corporation to Georgia Railroad Bank & Trust Company, which instrument recited that Harkins Corporation (then Harkins Realty Company) acquired a one-half interest in the leased property from Rose S. Harkins by deed dated November 17, 1954; that Harkins Corporation was dissolved on June 30, 1964; that Georgia Railroad Bank & Trust Company, as executor of Rose S. Harkins, acquired all other outstanding stock in the Harkins Corporation.

Thus, from the plaintiffs’ pleadings and proof it appears that when the lease contract was entered into between Mrs. Harkins and Mrs. Rubenstein and the defendants, Mrs. Harkins did not own an interest in the building and Mrs. Rubenstein (the predecessor in title of Mrs. Goodman, Mrs. Simon and Mrs. Moss) owned the building as a tenant in common with the Harkins Corporation. The lessor Mrs. Rubenstein did not, so far as the record reveals, have any authority from the Harkins Corporation, which is not mentioned in the lease, to execute the contract.

“Ordinarily, a tenant in common who has not been authorized by his cotenants cannot execute a lease of more than his own interest in the common property that will bind them without subsequent ratification; and this -is true even though the tenant in common attempting so to lease is in possession of the whole property. In this respect, a tenant in common has, by virtue of his relationship as such, no authority to act as agent for his cotenant in leasing the common property to third persons, and the law will not infer one cotenant’s authority to lease the other’s interest, simply because a leasing was contemplated. . . In the absence of authority from his cotenants one tenant in common cannot bind his cotenants by an agreement to lease the common property to third persons.” 86 CJS 518, Tenancy in Common, § 113. The rule is stated in Roberts v. Burnett, 164 Ga. 64 (9) (137 SE 773): “Where one cotenant, without authority from his cotenants, executes a lease under seal for such cotenants, the latter are not bound; and until they become bound, the contract signed by the other cotenant for them lacks the element of mutuality between them and the lessee, and the lessee’s holding is to be considered as a tenancy at will.” Morgan v. Maddox, 216 Ga. 816, 819 (120 SE2d 183); Motor Aid v. Ray, *619 53 Ga. App. 772 (187 SE 120). The lease was under seal. In the Roberts ease, supra (Headnote 10), this court held: “Ratification of such an instrument, to be binding upon the principal, must also be under seal, and can not be by words or conduct. McCalla v. American Freehold &c. Co., 90 Ga. 113 (15 SE 687); Overman v. Atkinson, 102 Ga. 750 (29 SE 758).”

Under the foregoing authorities it is apparent that not only did the plaintiffs fail to perform the contract provisions that the leased premises shall be in the exclusive possession of the tenant and that the lessee defendants have the right to sublet the rented building, but that the plaintiffs did not, as tenants in common with the Harkins Corporation and in the absence of that corporation’s consent, have the authority or power to perform these important covenants of the contract. For any such authorization to be valid it would have to have been in writing and under seal. Roberts v. Burnett, 164 Ga. 64 (10), supra.

For the reasons stated, the plaintiffs failed to prove their case as laid in the petition in that there was not performance of the contract on their part.

The plaintiffs insist the defendants were estopped to plead a deficiency or defect in the former’s title because they had accepted the lease and entered into possession under its terms. From the record the contrary appears. The evidence is without dispute that the lease was executed and delivered to the defendants sometime prior to the beginning of the stipulated rental period and that when the time came for the defendants to go into possession, they refused and have continuously refused ever since to enter the building as the plaintiffs’ tenants or to occupy the same at all. The refusal was on the ground that the building was not in such state of repair as to be fit for occupancy or to measure up to the condition contemplated by the lease contract. Whether the defendants were right in this position or not is immaterial because, while they were unaware that one of the plaintiffs owned no interest in the property and the remaining plaintiffs were tenants in common with the Harkins Corporation at the time the lease was executed or when the day arrived for them to take possession, this is an admitted fact and appears from the amendment to the plaintiffs’ petition *620 and the plaintiffs’ proof to which there has been a previous reference both in the statement of facts and the preceding division of this opinion.

Code § 61-107 reads: “The tenant may not dispute his landlord’s title nor attorn to another claimant while in possession.” It is thus apparent that the chief requisite and most essential ingredient of the estoppel therein provided is that the tenant be in possession when he denies the validity of his landlord’s title.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.E.2d 455, 222 Ga. 613, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friedman-v-goodman-ga-1966.