Kendrick v. Robertson

111 So. 99, 145 Miss. 585, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 136
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1927
DocketNo. 25759.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 111 So. 99 (Kendrick v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kendrick v. Robertson, 111 So. 99, 145 Miss. 585, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 136 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves the right to the occupancy of a certain building under the terms of a renewal lease thereon, executed by the owners of the building to appellees on April 1,1925. On and prior to the 18th day of September, 1924, appellees were occupying the building in question, which is located on the east side of Main street in the city of Columbia, Miss., under a written lease executed by the owner of the building in favor of appellees, dated March 29,1923, which lease contract provided for a month to month tenancy for an indefinite period of time, terminable at the will of either party on one month’s notice, and the appellees were carrying on in this building a meat market and grocery business, under the name of “City Market.” The business was conducted in the name of E. M. Eobertson, but there is testimony tending to show that the appellees were partners in business. Por some time prior to September 18, 1924, the appellant E. "W. Kendrick was an employee of E. M. Eobertson, and on said last-named date, while appellee Mrs. Bessie Eobert- *592 son was away from borne, appellee R. M. Robertson sold the entire stock of goods, fixtures,' and equipments to appellant E. W. Kendrick and one R. H. Pearson, for a consideration of three thousand dollars of which one thousand dollars was paid in cash and the balance evidenced by thirteen promissory notes maturing monthly. As evidence of the sale, appellee R. M. Robertson executed to the purchasers a bill of sale, reading, in part, as follows:

“I, the undersigned, do hereby sell, convey, deliver, and warrant unto R. H. Pearson and E. W. Kendrick, the following personal property, to-wit: two ice boxes;.one pair of counter scales; one electric motor with any and all fixtures; one meat cutter; two .cash registers; one oil tank; one pr. of Fjairbanks platform scales; one pr. swinging scales, and any and all knives, pins, hooks, anc saws, and, in fact, any and everything used in the meal market of the undersigned, situated on Main- street of Columbia, Miss., also any and all groceries, canned goods, three showcases, and any and all other fixtures used in and about the grocery department, which is also situated in the same building as the meat market.”

Immediately upon the consummation of this trade, appellant Kendrick and his partner went into possession of the building and stock of goods and fixtures therein, and thereafter they paid the monthly rental of fifty-seven dollars and fifty cents provided for in the lease contract from the owner of the building to the appellees, paying same to the appellees, who in turn paid it to the owner.

On September 26,1924, the landlord gave notice to ap-pellees to vacate said building and terminate their tenancy and occupancy thereof, in which notice was the following recital:

“I have heard that there has been some attempted transfer of a portion of this lease to Kendrick and Pearson by R. M. Robertson, and accordingly a copy of this thirty days’ written notice to vacate and terminate said tenancy is addressed to said party.”

*593 A copy of this notice to terminate the tenancy was served upon the appellant Kendrick and his partner, but no further steps were thereafter taken to terminate the tenancy or oust the tenants.

On the 1st day of April, 1925, the appellees procured a lease to said building from the owner for a period of one year from that date, with the privilege of renewal for a twelve months’ term, at a monthly rental of seventy-five dollars per month, and there is a recital in this lease contract that the building was then being occupied by Kendrick and Pearson as a grocery store and meat market under a lease from E. M, and Bessie Eobertson. After this lease was executed, no immediate effort was made to dispossess appellant Kendrick, but he continued to pay the. fixed rent of seventy-five dollars as usual, until the 15th day of July, 1925, when the appellees served him with notice to vacate the premises on or before the 1st day of August, 1925. In the meantime, appellant Kendrick had acquired the interest of his partner and had become sole owner of the business, and, upon receiving this notice to vacate the premises, he refused to do so.

Thereupon the appellees instituted in a justice of the peace court proceedings seeking to oust him from possession of the premises. This case, was heard before the justice of the peace, and judgment rendered for appellees, and an appeal was taken therefrom to the circuit court, where a motion was made to transfer the case to the chancery court, on the ground that there were equitable defenses which could not be availed of in the circuit court. This motion was overruled, and thereupon Kendrick and his sublessee, Neomi Padgett, filed their bill in the chancery couid seeking to enjoin further prosecution of the suit in the circuit court, alleging, among other things, that, contemporaneously with the sale of the property to appellant Kendrick, appellees entered into a separate, oral contract to act as agent in securing for Kendrick and his partner the occupancy of said building, and securing for them a long term lease on said building, and *594 taking said lease in the name of Kendrick and his partner or their assigns; that, relying upon the good faith of appellee in this regard, appellants had expended large sums of money which they would not have expended otherwise; that, thereafter, appellees designedly sought to repudiate the contract and evict appellants and repossess said building, and, with this in view, disregard their fiduciary relation to appellant Kendrick, as evidenced by the procuring of the lease to said building in their names; and the bill charged that appellees, in procuring the lease in their own names, acted in violation of their obligation to appellees; that, as a matter of equity, they held said lease as trustees, by reason of a trust arising ex maleficio; and that they should be compelled to assign the same to Kendrick, or be decreed to hold the same for his benefit. This bill was amended so as to charge that appellees represented to appellant Kendrick that they had a written lease, signed by the owner of the building, covering the premises in question, running for an indefinite length of time, and providing for a month to month tenancy, and that, as a part of the general transaction of sale of said stock of goods and fixtures in said building, and as an inducement for appellants to purchase said goods, appellees offered to let appellant Kendrick into possession of said building and keep him in possesson thereof, under the lease contract held by ap-pellees, so long as appellees could lease the building; that the appellees also represented that they were the only persons who could lease the building, and they agreed, as part of the transfer and as an inducement for entering into said contract, to obligate themselves to procure, in behalf of said appellant, a long time lease, taking such lease in the name of the appellant Kendrick; that this proposition was accepted and the trade consummated on this basis; and that appellant Kendrick and his partner went into possession of said building, paying rent thereon to appellees from month to month, relying upon this agreement had with them, and consequently *595

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 99, 145 Miss. 585, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendrick-v-robertson-miss-1927.