Industrial Leasing Corporation v. Thomason

532 P.2d 916, 96 Idaho 574, 1974 Ida. LEXIS 480
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1974
Docket11359
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 532 P.2d 916 (Industrial Leasing Corporation v. Thomason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Leasing Corporation v. Thomason, 532 P.2d 916, 96 Idaho 574, 1974 Ida. LEXIS 480 (Idaho 1974).

Opinion

BAKES, Justice.

This action was brought by the lessor of farm machinery to recover damages for failure of the lessees to make installment payments as provided in the lease. The trial court, sitting without a jury, entered judgment in favor of the lessor. In reaching its decision, the trial court held that the lessor was under no duty to attempt to re-lease or sell the equipment in order to mitigate damages, and thus awarded damages in the amount of the accrued unpaid installments then due plus attorney fees, late payment charges and interest as provided for in the lease. Appeal is taken from the judgment and the conclusion of law that the lessor was under no duty to mitigate damages, and from the measure of damages adopted by the trial court, 1 as well as upon other findings.

Plaintiff-respondent Industrial Leasing, as lessor, entered into a lease of farm machinery with Howard and Mary Thomason, husband and wife, defendant-appellants, on April 15, 1971, later amended on May 31, 1971. The lease term was to run 68 months. The amended lease called for an initial payment of $18,796.15 when signed *576 and semiannual payments of $19,802.47 beginning on December 10, 1971. The total payments called for under the lease were $216,820.85. Appellant used the equipment in his farming operation during the farming season of 1971. Then, upon the advice of his doctor, he retired from farming for health reasons. After retiring and having no further use for the equipment, he cleaned it and returned it to the dealer from which Industrial Leasing had purchased it.

The equipment was returned to the dealer a few days before December 10, 1971, the date when the first semiannual payment was due. Although Howard Thomason testified that he informed Industrial Leasing prior to December 10, 1971, that he had returned the equipment to the dealer and would not continue the lease with them, Industrial Leasing denied knowledge that the equipment had been returned to the dealer prior to the date of the first payment on December 10, 1971, and the trial court found that the Thomasons “did not notify the plaintiff that they had returned the equipment to Dockins [the dealer] except by refusal to pay the rental therefor which was due on December 10, 1971.” The trial court made no finding of when Industrial Leasing first became aware that the equipment had been returned to the dealer. The trial court further made no finding of when Industrial Leasing became aware of the Thomasons’ intention to repudiate the lease. However, the plaintiff’s president, Mr. Friedman, testified that in the late fall of 1971 Mr. Thomason attempted to terminate the lease but “We told him it couldn’t be done.” The trial court also found that the dealer to whom the Thomasons had returned the farm equipment was not an agent of Industrial Leasing and thus that the Thomasons had retained possession of it while the equipment was at the dealer's place of business.

The lease provided no measure of damages in the event of default, other than that the lessor might exercise an option provided for in the lease to take possession of the property and either sell or re-lease it to another. In the trial court, respondent Industrial Leasing contended that it was not required to retake possession of the equipment and re-lease or sell it, but, instead as the rental payments provided for in the lease became due it was entitled to sue for them along with interest, late payment charges and attorney fees as its measure of damages. The trial court agreed, rejecting the appellant Thomasons’ contention that the lessor was under a duty to mitigate damages by attempting to put the equipment to other productive use. The trial court sustained objections to the Thomasons’ questions regarding any efforts by Industrial Leasing to re-lease the equipment. We conclude that the trial court erred in the measure of damages it applied.

This Court has not previously ruled on the precise issue now before us, i. e., whether or not a lessor, in the event of such a breach by the lessee, has a duty to retake possession of the leased property and make a reasonable endeavor to re-lease or sell the property in order to mitigate his damages. This Court did intimate as much in the case of Young Electric Sign Co. v. Capps, 94 Idaho 518, 492 P.2d 57 (1971). That was a case involving a breach of a lease of signs for a motel and lounge. The Court found the signs to be so unique and customized to the particular business that they would be of no use to any other business and thus not re-leasable. While the issue before the Court in that case was the validity of a liquidated damages provision which required the lessee, in the event of default, to pay as damages 75% of- the total lease payments reserved in the lease, the Court stated, at page 522, 492 P.2d at page 61:

“To determine the reasonableness of the 75% provision, the proper measure of damages must first be announced. For this type of bailment agreement, classifiable under the rubric of partially executed contract, ‘[i]t may be stated as a general proposition that * * * the pur *577 pose or objective of the court is to place the injured party, so far as may be [sic], in the position no better and no worse than he would have occupied had the contract been performed.’ King v. Beatrice Foods, 89 Idaho 52, 58-59, 402 P.2d 966, 969 (1965). This general statement requires refinement in one regard. As pointed out above, the signs are of negligible value so Young Electric is under no duty to mitigate its damages through a reasonable endeavor to relet the signs. Young Electric’s damages are, however, reduced by certain saved expenses which it does not incur since the breach by lessees has relieved it from further performance.” (Emphasis added).

Other courts have had occasion to rule on this issue, and some require the lessor to attempt to re-lease the property in order to mitigate the damages, 2 and others do not. 3 However, it is our view that the best rule is that suggested in Young Electric Sign Co. v. Capps, supra, i. e., that a lessor should be required to mitigate his damages through a reasonable endeavor to relet the property unless the property is so unique that it could be said as a matter of law that reasonable efforts would not be productive. Such a rule would discourage idleness of productive property and would be in keeping with the other generally accepted damages rules in other commercial law transactions. E. g., in the rental of real property, most jurisdictions place a duty upon a landlord to seek new tenants when the lessees have refused to pay rent as provided in the lease agreement and have vacated the property. Martin v. Siegley, 123 Wash. 683, 212 P. 1057 (1923); Wright v. Baumann, 239 Or. 410, 398 P.2d 119 (1965). As stated by the Oregon Supreme Court in the Wright case:

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Bluebook (online)
532 P.2d 916, 96 Idaho 574, 1974 Ida. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-leasing-corporation-v-thomason-idaho-1974.