Kester v. Disan Engineering Corp.

591 P.2d 344
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 22, 1979
Docket51022
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 591 P.2d 344 (Kester v. Disan Engineering Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kester v. Disan Engineering Corp., 591 P.2d 344 (Okla. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

BACON, Presiding Judge.

This appeal involves a suit by a landlord for forcible entry and detainer of a building in Nowata, Oklahoma.

On December 17,1963 Disan Engineering Corp. [Disan], an Oklahoma corporation, through its president, Bill Brown, leased the building from Yinita Mathis. The lease was a three-year written lease and expired by its own terms on November 30, 1966. The parties failed to agree on another written lease when the previous lease expired, but orally agreed that Disan could continue to occupy the premises by paying $87.50 per month. Disan remained in the building for the next 10 years and no other lease agreement was ever discussed.

The record shows conflicting testimony between Brown and Mathis as to the payment of rent during those last 10 years. Mathis testified that Brown was usually late in paying and oftentimes she would not be paid until she “dunned” Brown. Mathis further testified the lease was a month-to-month lease and not a quarterly lease. Brown testified that the rent was not always paid on time because Mathis was sometimes out of town. Brown further testified that Disan, the last year, had paid the *346 rent three months at a time, which Mathis said was never in advance but always after Disan was three months in arrears. Mathis testified, in fact, that Disan was two months behind in its rent when Mathis sold the property to Leona Kester, appellant herein, on March 2, 1977.

On March 3, 1977, Kester gave notice to Disan to quit the premises on or before April 5, 1977. Disan refused to vacate the building and Kester filed a forcible entry and detainer action against Disan.

Disan answered by general denial and further alleged it occupied the premises under an oral annual lease that did not expire until November 30, 1977.

The cause proceeded to trial, resulting in the trial court finding that Disan had “a valid quarterly lease” and had until June 5, 1977 to vacate the premises. Both parties initiated an appeal but Disan later dismissed its appeal. Only Kester’s appeal remains.

Kester’s first proposition reads:

“Whenever a written lease, for one or more years, expires and the tenant continues to occupy the premises, the tenant is a tenant at will and is subject to termination as a tenant at will.”

Under this proposition, Kester takes the position that when the original written lease expired and Disan held over, Disan became a tenant at will. Kester argues that a tenant at will is only entitled to 30 days’ notice and she gave notice on March 3, 1977 to vacate April 5, 1977, therefore, she says the trial court erred in finding (a) a quarterly lease existed, and (b) the termination date was June 5, 1977.

Disan counters by now concurring in, and attempting to, uphold the trial court’s judgment in finding a quarterly lease existed, running from December 1 to February 28, then from March 1 to May 31. And, argues Disan, since notice was given on March 3, 1977 and “that quarter” would not end until the last day of May, the trial court correctly refused to order vacation of the premises prior to the last day of May, 1977. Disan does concede that the trial court gave “five ‘free’ days” from June 1 to June 5 to vacate the premises.

So, to this point, the posture of the ease is that Kester contends Disan was a tenant at will, while the trial court, with Disan agreeing, urges that Disan was a quarterly tenant.

After a close review of the record and law, we conclude that Disan was neither a tenant at will nor a quarterly tenant, but a tenant from month-to-month.

The reason we do not agree with Kester that Disan was a tenant at will is because Kester’s argument assumes Disan was a tenant at will due to the fact that Disan held over after the original written lease expired in 1966. Such an argument overlooks the undisputed fact that a separate oral lease was entered into after the original written lease had expired. With an oral lease in existence, a tenancy at will could not exist.

The reason we find the lease is not a quarterly lease is because the record simply does not support such a conclusion. The only evidence in the record to support such a conclusion is the self-serving testimony of Brown, the president of Disan. Brown’s testimony, at best, is speculative and shows he was not sure what type of tenancy existed. Further, evidence of his unsureness is the fact that he first took the position that Disan had an oral annual lease, but later changed his position to ultimately conclude that it was a quarterly tenancy. For example, Brown testified:

“Q. I will direct your attention to the month of November, 1966 and ask you what happened when that lease expired.
“A. Actually I cannot definitely tell you what happened. I can tell you what I felt that we did to the best of my memory. I don’t remember every detail.
“Attorney: Objection. The witness says he doesn’t know and what he feels is incompetent and irrelevant.
“The Court: Sustained.”

Brown went on to testify that the parties agreed that the old lease would be renewed on an annual basis with the rent paid on a *347 semiannual basis. He testified that the rent was paid whenever Mathis would call and ask for the rent. Then, Brown testified:

“Q. Would you pay in advance or would you pay in arrears?
“A. I honestly don’t know. Part of the time I knew it definitely was in arrears because it was whenever she would call.”

Later, Brown testified that the rent was paid for the last year on a quarterly basis. Yet, Mathis testified, and Brown did not deny, that Brown had paid for January and February of 1977 after the sale to Kester. If Brown had been paying quarterly, and that quarter was December of 1976, January and February of 1977, why would Brown be paying for January and February only? No checks or evidence of payment was offered into evidence by either party.

The above, as indicated earlier herein, is the only evidence in the record from which the trial court could have found a quarterly lease existed.

Kester testified that it was her understanding that when she bought the property Disan was a tenant paying $87.50 per month.

Mathis, the prior owner, was positive in her testimony. She testified that when the written lease expired in December 1966, Brown told her that he did not want a new written lease. She said she then asked for $100 per month and they agreed on $87.50 per month. Then, she adamantly denied an oral annual lease. When asked if she had any conversations with Brown regarding the rental after the December 1966 oral agreement, she said the only conversations were about getting her money from Brown and that she had to “dun” him for it. She explained that Brown paid her for January and February of 1977, after she sold the property in March because Disan was behind on rent for those two months, and had been behind previously up to four months. Brown did not rebut this testimony nor deny it on rebuttal. For these reasons we find Disan was a tenant from month-to-month, with the monthly pay period commencing on the first of the month.

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Bluebook (online)
591 P.2d 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kester-v-disan-engineering-corp-oklacivapp-1979.