Klayman v. Putter

1935 OK 313, 43 P.2d 150, 171 Okla. 215, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 26, 1935
DocketNo. 23980.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1935 OK 313 (Klayman v. Putter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klayman v. Putter, 1935 OK 313, 43 P.2d 150, 171 Okla. 215, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 149 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiffs leased a store building to three persons for one year under a written contract. In paragraph 3 of the contract it was provided that the lessees would “keep and maintain all portions of the building let to him by the terms of this contract in as good state of repair as the same are turned over to him, natural tear and wear alone excepted.” In paragraph 9 of the contract it is provided that:

“Said tenants shall further have the use and benefit of and occupancy of all of the store fixtures now within the said store room and agree to keep and maintain and surrender the same at the end of this lease, or its termination for any cause, in as good condition as received, usual wear and tear alone excepted.”

In paragraph 12 it is provided that:

“The tenants further agree that after the expiration of the time given in the lease, to wit, the 6th day of April, 1931, without notice from the landlords, to give possession of said portion of building to said party of the first part, the landlords, or upon its renewal, if renewed. The destruction of said building on said premises by fire to work a termination of this lease.”

The lessees held the premises for about nine months, conducting a mercantile business, and then sold all of the stock of goods to defendant, who took over the lease and occupied the building to the end of the term, running the same business in it that was conducted by lessees. The lessees during their occupancy made changes in the building for the convenience of the business, taking out part of the fixtures that were attached to the building and making an opening in a partition wall between the two rooms of the building. At the time the defendant was taking over the property, plaintiffs notified him of these changes and the damages to the property, and that “he should not pay him over the money.” He also had telegrams sent to the defendant at St. Louis, where the defendant lived, and to Tulsa, notifying him of the damages, and that they expected him to make good the damages or pay rent from that time on. No proof was made of the delivery of these telegrams, except from the fact that they were not returned, and defendant denied receiving them. The defendant occupied the premises to the end of the term, and then surrendered them to the plaintiffs without replacing the fixtures and leaving the opening in the wall. The plaintiffs secured a verdict and judgment for the damages to the premises, from which this appeal was taken.

The first contention of the defendant is that the covenant in paragraph 3 of the lease, requiring the lessees to keep and maintain the building in repair, was breached at the time the opening was made in the wall by lessees, and no assumption of that liability being undertaken by the defendant, he was not liable for that breach. The second contention of the defendant is that the covenant to keep and .maintain the building in repair covered everything that was part of the building, and so tlie covenant concerning the fixtures was personal, binding only on the lessee. The plaintiffs contend that both covenants, 3 and 9, run with the land and are binding on the assignee of the lease for the damages to the property, when it was surrendered to the landlords.

Counsel for neither of the parties have cited any decision from the courts of this state in which the questions involved in this appeal have been considered, and we have found none. Text-writers and the courts of other states have given the question of the liability of an assignee of a lease to the lessor consideration, and there is some conflict between them as to the rules that should govern such liability. The weight of authority supports the rule that an assignee of a lease is liable to the lessor for breach of a covenant running with the land which occurs while such assignee holds the leasehold estate, and he is not liable for a *217 breach of such covenants made before he became such holder, nor for a breach of merely personal covenants. It is not in the statement of these rules that the courts and text-writers disagree, but in the application of them to varying facts under different covenants. The principles underlying these rules control the decision in any ease, rather than the formal statement of the rules themselves. 36 C. J. 199, sec. 863; 16 R. C. L. 849, sec. 349; 1 Wood’s Landlord and Tenant (2d Ed.) 666, sec. 304; Note to 42 A. L. R., 1174; 16 R. C. L., 849, sec. 349; Id., 850, sec. 351; First National Bank v. Hazlewood Co. (Ore.) 166 P. 955; Boardman v. Howard (Minn.) 64 L. R. A. 648; Spafford v. Meagley, 1 Ohio Dec. Reprint, 364; Pollard v. Shaaffer, I L. Ed. (U. S.) 104.

The provision in paragraph 3 of the lease, providing that the lessees shall “maintain all portions of the building let to him by the terms of this contract in as good state of repair as the same are turned over to him, natural tear and wear alone excepted,” united with paragraph 12, binding them to return the premises at the end of the term to plaintiffs, carries the necessary meaning that the building will be returned to the plaintiffs in the condition which the contract requires that it be kept, that is, “in as good state of repair as the same are turned over to him, natural tear and wear alone excepted,” with the added exception in paragraph 12 that destruction by fire would terminate the lease. This amounts to an express covenant to restore the premises at the end of the term in same condition as they were when received, with these stated exceptions; since, if the property is kept in repair, it will be in repair when returned.

Covenants to keep in repair and to restore in repair are separable, and they constitute two covenants each capable of a breach, although joined together in the same paragraph of the lease. In this case the covenant to maintain in repair was breached at the time the changes were made by the lessees in the building, and for making these changes the lessees alone were liable. A breach of the covenant to return the premises in repair eopld not be made until the time at which the premises were restored, and for that breach the tenant at the end of the term would be liable. This rule of construction is laid down in section 611, page 1094. 16 R. C. L., in the following language:

“A covenant to repair and to leave in repair are generally treated as independent covenants, and the landlord may maintain an action for want of repair before the end of the term. And a judgment for damages for the breach of a continuing covenant to repair does not bar a subsequent action for damages sustained by neglect to repair continued after the period covered by the prior recovery.”

And in 36 C. J., page 202, it is said:

“A recovery of damages for breach of covenant to repair is not estoppel to a recovery of damages for failure to leave the premises in repair, due allowance being made for the sum previously recovered.”

The covenant to leave in repair, express or implied, runs with the land, and it is equally binding upon an assignee as upon the lessee. One who takes an assignment of a lease must take notice of the terms of the lease and of the law applicable to such use of another’s property. No one may justly take the benefits of a contract and repudiate its obligations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 313, 43 P.2d 150, 171 Okla. 215, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klayman-v-putter-okla-1935.