Gary Realty Co. v. Kelly

214 S.W. 92, 278 Mo. 450, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 3, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 214 S.W. 92 (Gary Realty Co. v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary Realty Co. v. Kelly, 214 S.W. 92, 278 Mo. 450, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 108 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

PARIS, J.

This is an action under our forcible-^ entry and unlawful-detainer statutes for the possession' of certain premises situate in Kansas City. Plaintiff had judgment for possession; for damages, assessed at two thousand dollars, which sum was doubled by the cou/rt; for future rents and profits, assessed at $650 per month, pending appeal and till possession be delivered to plaintiff, which sum was likewise doubled. Whereupon, defendants Kelly, LeMarquand and LeDoux appealed in the conventional way.

The action orginated before a justice of the peace and was begun by filing a complaint which, formal parts and signature of counsel omitted, reads thus:

“Gary Realty Company, a corporation, duly organized^ and existing according- to law, plaintiff, complains of E. P. Kelly, Paul LeMarquand, A. LeMarquand, O. LeDoux, P. G. Bonfils,-Harry H. Tammen and Empress Theatre Company, a corporation, defendants, and says that on the 29th day of October, A. D. 1915, and long-before that time he was in the lawful and peaceable possession of the certain premises situated in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, described as the certain (formerly store) room at the northwest corner of* Twelfth and McGee Streets in said city, having a frontage of twenty feet and ten inches on. said Twelfth Street and extending back northward the full depth of Lot 134, Swope’s Addition in said city, and still further north beyond the north line of said lot, ap[456]*456proximately 16 feet, said room having been used as a part of the lobby of the Empress Theatre in the City of Kansas City, Kaw Township, of the County of Jackson, State of Missouri, and has ever since been and 'still is entitled to the possession thereof; that on the said 29th day of October,. 1915, the defendants wilfully and unlawfully hold over and detain possession of said premises or wrongfully and without force, by disseizin, obtained possession of said premises, and have ever since held and still hold possession- thereof “wrongfully and unlawfully; and although the plaintiff did, on the 30th day of October, 1915, demand in writing the possession of said premises of the defendants, they, the said defendants refused and neglected to quit the possession-thereof, to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum 'of two thousand dollars, Wherefore plaintiff demands judgment for the possession of said premises and- for said damages.”

Thereafter, by certiorari under the statute defendants caused the proceedings to be removed to the Circuit Court of Jackson County. In the latter court, and at the December Term, 1915, semble, a stipulation waiving trial by jury was duly filed in the case. This stipulation, omitting formal parts and signatures of counsel, reads thus:

“Come now the parties hereto and by their attorneys hereby stipulate and agree that the trial of this cause by jury is hereby waived and that said cause may be set for trial on any day during the first' week of January, 1916, term of court, or thereafter, according to the convenience of the court.”

On the same day on which the above stipulation, was filed, defendants Kelly, LeMarquand and LeDoux filed formal answers, which consisted, in all pertinent parts, of (a) general denials, except of the fact of possession, which defendants Kelly, LeMarquand 'and LeDoux admitted; .(b) a plea of ownership and possession under a purchase by said defendants of the lease at [457]*457a sale by tbe receiver of tbe Empress Theatré Company, pursuant to an order of the circuit court; (cj a tender, as such tenants so in possession of all rent due according to the tenor of the instrument of lease-evidencing the term so purchased, and (d) a waiver of forfeiture by plaintiff of conditions broken, arising, it is averred, from the acceptance of the rent and the recognition of the receiver as plaintiff’s tenant. Defendants Bonfils and Tammen filed general denials, which included, of course, negation of the fact of possession.

Thereafter, defendants Kelly, LeMarcjuand and LeDoux (who, since they alone have appealed, we shall hereinafter call 'defendants) filed a motion to require plaintiff to elect, for that the allegation' in plaintiff’s complaint that “the defendants wilfully and Unlawfully held over and detained possession of said premises, oy wrongfully and without force by disseizin obtained possession of said premises, and have ever since held and still hold possession thereof wrongfully and unlawfully” was “an attempt to charge the defendants with both unlawful detainer and forcible entry and detainer’^ and that “said causes of action being entirely separate and distinct can not under the law be charged in the same cause of action.” This motion to elect was overruled. Thereafter, on January 29, 1918, defendants filed a demurrer to the complaint, which demurrer, in addition to the customary allegation that the facts set forth in the complaint are not sufficient to constitute a cause of action, further averred “that several causes of action have been improperly united.” While this demurrer was overruled, plaintiff on the same day asked and was given leave to file an amended complaint within four days thereafter. Whether the demurrer, as the practice is, was overruled upon and because ’ of the request of plaintiff for leave to file an amended complaint does not affirmatively appear, since no reason is given in the record for the trial court’s action in this [458]*458behalf. Afterwards, and within the four days allowed by the court, plaintiff. filed an amended complaint in two cóunts. The first count charges the holding over of' the possession of- the premises wilfully and without force after the expiration of the term; while the second count charges the obtention of possession and the withholding thereof wrongfully and without force by disseizin after demand therefor made in writing. Since the court found in favor -of plaintiff upon the first count only, no necessity1 is seen for burdening this necessarily lengthy statement with a recital of the second count. But the first count is pertinent, since about it, as a storm center, rage well-nigh the whole of the contentions made. It reads thus:

‘ ‘ Comes now the complainant, Gary Realty Company, and ' for its first cause of action against defendants, states that complainant is and was at all times hereinafter mentioned a corporation^ organized and existing under the laws of Missouri, and complains to the above entitled court that on or about the 30th day of October, 1915, and at the time of the institution of this action, complainant had the legal right to the possession of the certain premises (together with the improvements thereon) situated in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, and in Kaw Township, in said city, described as the certain room at the northwest corner of Twelfth and McGee Streets in said city, having a frontage of twenty feet and ten inches on said Twelfth Street and extending back northward therefrom, the full depth of Eot 134, Swope’s Addition in said city, and still further north, beyond the north line of said lot, approximately sixteen feet, said room having formerly been used as a store room, but more recently and at the present time being used as a part of the lobby of the Empress Theatre conducted by defendants in said city; that complainant has been ever since the date aforesaid and still is entitled to the possession of said premises [459]*459and improvements; and that defendants wilfully and .without force hold over the possession of said premises after the expiration of the time for which they were let to one H. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 S.W. 92, 278 Mo. 450, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-realty-co-v-kelly-mo-1919.