Giraud v. Milovich

85 P.2d 182, 29 Cal. App. 2d 543, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 378
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1938
DocketCiv. 2111
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 85 P.2d 182 (Giraud v. Milovich) 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
Giraud v. Milovich, 85 P.2d 182, 29 Cal. App. 2d 543, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 378 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

The appellant, Mrs. Adelaide F. Giraud, brought this action of unlawful detainer against her tenants, P. M. Pocock and Mijo Milovieh, the respondent herein, for *544 failure to pay rent. The action was apparently abandoned as to Pocock, but was defended by Milovieh, the tenant then in possession." There is some evidence to the effect that Pocock sold his interest to Milovich or at least agreed to a sale, soon after they took possession.

Milovieh defended the unlawful detainer action upon the theory that he had been previously evicted by the landlord from the substantial portion of the leased premises and was accordingly relieved from the obligation to pay rent.

The parties acquired their respective interests in the property as follows: Pelician Giraud, the original lessor, executed to P. M. Pocock a lease of the premises in question. It was a rectangular piece of property located an eighth of a mile south of Bishop, California. It had a 100-foot frontage on U. S. highway No. 395 and a depth of about 50 feet.

The lease was for a term of five years from March 25, 1933, at a rental of $25 per month. Pocock, on April 25, 1933, assigned the lease to himself and Mijo Milovich. The lease and assignment were duly recorded May 5, 1933.

The respondent entered into actual possession of the premises on April 25, 1933, on which he erected and maintained a gasoline service station, and continued in actual possession of all of it except a strip fronting on the highway which had a length of 100 feet and a depth of 20 feet, from which the court found he had been evicted.

After making the above-described lease, Pelician Giraud, the original lessor, on October 31, 1933, conveyed a right of-way to the state of California for highway purposes consisting of a strip of the leased premises 100 feet long by 20 feet deep where the property adjoined the U. S. highway No. 395, for the sum of $151.50.

Pelician Giraud, on the same day, executed a deed to the remaining portion of the leased property to Alfred and Adele Giraud. Alfred Giraud conveyed his interest in the premises to appellant about July, 1934, prior to the commencement of this action. December 18, 1933, Alfred and Adele. Giraud signed a quitclaim deed to the described 20-foot strip of property, conveying it to the state of California for highway purposes.

The deed from Pelician Giraud contained the following: “And I, the said grantor, do hereby waive all claim for any and all damages or compensation for and on account of the *545 location, establishment and construction of said state highway and do grant to the grantee the right to remove any and all trees, growths and road-building material within said right of way, and the right to use the same in such manner as the said grantee may deem proper, needful or necessary in the construction, reconstruction or maintenance of said state highway,” etc. The deed from Alfred and Adelaide F. Giraud contained the following: “and we- release --and discharge -for ourselves-grantees and--assigns-, the state - from any - suits - damages - or claims-we now have-by reason of the location or construction -of the state highway-and to all damages to the remaining section of our said lands by reason of the severance therefrom of the parcel - conveyed and quit-claimed”. The state went into possession of the 20-foot strip of land in question and forcibly ousted and evicted him therefrom, thus leaving him only the 30 feet in depth of the original 50 feet upon which to conduct and operate his business. The court found that Alfred and Adelaide F. Giraud were at all times the owners of the real property leased, although Felician Giraud held the legal title in trust for them.

From the record, which is woefully lacking in clarity, it appears that respondent testified that he had no knowledge of the execution of the deeds to the state until the authorities were about to enter and widen the highway, which date was around November, 1934. About this time respondent stated to appellant that he would be satisfied to let her sell this strip to the state and allow it to enter into possession if she would replace the strip so taken from her adjoining property, and raise the gas station, pumps and tanks. He testified that he did not know that the parcel had theretofore been sold to the state. However, the evidence is conflicting and there is in evidence an encroachment permit dated April 8, 1933, issued to P. M. Pocoek, authorizing certain work to be done in reference to an approach to the oil station.

The evidence discloses that it would be necessary to make some extensive fill to the rear portion of the remaining parcel of the leased premises before it would be usable as a filling station; that respondent was compelled to move three large one-thousand-gallon gasoline tanks from the strip taken by the state and that thereafter he had no available space on the *546 property to place them, and was forced to store them on a portion of an unopened adjoining street.

There is considerable evidence indicating that the landlord and the representatives of the state were busily engaged in an endeavor to appease the tenant before moving upon the property. After the state took possession appellant made no attempt to secure for respondent, by lease, any additional ground and refused to raise the gas station, etc., whereupon respondent offered to do this work and withhold the cost from the monthly rental, which was refused. He also offered to sell his equipment and interest to appellant at considerable discount but appellant declined, whereupon respondent refused to pay further rent for the premises.

The rent was ordinarily paid to appellant, but she claimed none had been paid by Milovich or Pocoek since November, 1934. The trial court found that Felician Giraud, Alfred Giraud and appellant Adelaide F. Giraud ousted, evicted and dispossessed the respondent from a substantial portion of the premises leased, to wit, the 20-foot strip above described, and that such eviction still continued; that the rental value of that portion of the premises from which he had not been ousted, at the time of the signing of the findings, was 82-j-c per day; that appellant had not sustained any damage in any sum by reason of the detention of the premises and accordingly denied appellant the relief prayed for in her complaint.

The appellant advances the contention that the lease, being for more than one year and duly recorded, and the lessor-owner having made an outright deed to a portion of the premises, that this only constituted a severance of the reversionary interest in the property and did not amount to an eviction by the lessor, and constituted no wrong to the tenant, and that therefore the law will apportion the rent. (Citing 16 R. C. L. 916, note 8; 16 R. C. L. 945, note 8; Dreyfus v. Hirt, 82 Cal. 621, 627 [23 Pac. 193]; Linton v. Hart, 25 Pa. 193 [64 Am. Dec. 691].) She contends further that the state evicted the tenant, if there was an eviction, and that therefore the tenant is still required to pay the rent to the landlord for the proportionate value of that part of the land which the tenant still retained, and for failure to pay such rent the tenant should be dispossessed in an unlawful detainer action. (Citing sec. 1935, Civ. Code.)

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Bluebook (online)
85 P.2d 182, 29 Cal. App. 2d 543, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giraud-v-milovich-calctapp-1938.