Knight v. Black

126 P. 512, 19 Cal. App. 518, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 196
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1010.
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 126 P. 512 (Knight v. Black) 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
Knight v. Black, 126 P. 512, 19 Cal. App. 518, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 196 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

Respondent had judgment in the lower court as the plaintiff in an action in unlawful detainer. The defendant, Henry Black, has appealed from the judgment and from an order denying him a new trial. The points presented upon the appeal relate mainly to the overruling of the defendants’ demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint, the sustaining of the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendants’ cross-complaint, and the granting of plaintiff’s motion to strike out parts of the defendants’ answer.

The plaintiff’s cause of action is founded substantially upon the following facts:

On November 23, 1908, plaintiff leased to the defendant certain premises in the city and county of San Francisco for a period of ten years from and after the completion of a building which plaintiff agreed to erect upon the premises. The building was completed on the twenty-fifth day of June, 1909, whereupon defendant went into possession under the terms of the lease.

The lease contained some sixteen covenants. Of these an alleged breach of the fourteenth, taken in connection with the sixteenth, was the basis of the plaintiff’s cause of action. The fourteenth covenant of the lease reads as follows:

“Fourteenth: It is further understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that the lessee shall immediately upon completion of the building furnish the same with suitable furniture, bedding and carpets that shall have a cash value of not less than three thousand ($3,000) dollars and shall be *521 owned by the said lessee free from all liens and encumbrances and upon the completion of said furnishing, and within thirty (30) days after the completion of the demised premises, the said lessee shall execute to the said lessor a note and first chattel mortgage on all said furniture, bedding and carpets for the full sum of three thousand ($3,000) dollars, to secure to said lessor the payment of all rents or other claims arising in favor of said lessor under this lease and during the entire term of same, which chattel mortgage shall be in legal form and shall contain an express covenant that none of said furniture, bedding and carpets shall be removed from said premises during the continuance of this lease and that the said lessee shall at all times keep the same in good order, repair and condition.”

The sixteenth covenant of the lease reads as follows:

“Sixteenth: It is further understood and agreed that all the covenants and agreements of the said lessee herein contained are conditions and that in default of the lessee fulfilling any of same the said lessor may at any time thereafter at his option forfeit this lease, and that in that event any holding thereafter of the said lessee shall be construed to be a tenancy from month to month only, for the same rental payable in the same manner as hereinbefore stated.”

The plaintiff on August 25, 1909, gave the defendants three days’ notice in writing in the alternative form as required by subdivision 3 of section 1161 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but the defendant failed either to perform the covenant or to deliver up the possession of the property.

In support of his demurrer, it is the defendant’s contention that a covenant to give security for the payment of rent is collateral to the lease it accompanies, and does not run with the land; and that an action in unlawful detainer will not lie for a breach of any covenant which does not come within the technical definition of “covenants running with the land.”

No authority from this state has been cited to us by the defendant in support of his attempted limitation of the scope and effect of the code section under consideration, and we shall not attempt to follow counsel for the defendant in his discussion of the legal niceties and refinements which distinguish “covenants running with the land” from those that do not, but will content ourselves with saying that to hold as he con *522 tends would not only be a manifest violation of the plain purpose of the unlawful detainer act of this state, but would not accord with the views of our supreme court as expressed in several actions of unlawful detainer which were sustained solely because of breaches of purely collateral covenants. Thus in the case of Silva v. Campbell, 84 Cal. 420, [24 Pac. 316], it was said, in effect, that upon the giving of the three days’ notice required by subdivisions 2 and 3 of section 1131 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the summary process provided by that section will lie for a failure to perform any condition or covenant of the lease or agreement under which the property is held.

In the ease of Kelly v. Teague, 63 Cal. 68, it was expressly held in construing a statute substantially, if not entirely, similar to our present unlawful detainer act, that “the right of action by a landlord against a tenant accrues upon the latter continuing in possession of the demised premises in person or by his subtenant for a neglect or failure to perform any condilion or covenant of the lease.”

To the same effect is the decision in the case of Schnittger v. Rose, 139 Cal. 656, [73 Pac. 449], which involved the violation of a covenant to manufacture wine upon the demised premises from grapes raised upon the adjoining ranch of the lessor.

The agreement in the present case to provide security for the payment of the rent stipulated in the lease is a condition and not a covenant. There is a decided distinction between the creation and effect of a condition and a covenant. A condition is a qualification annexed to an estate by the grantor, upon the happening of which the estate granted is enlarged or defeated, and it differs from a covenant in this, that it is created by the mutual agreement of the parties and is binding upon both; whereas a covenant is an agreement of the covenantor only.

A breach of a condition upon which an estate is granted works a forfeiture of the estate, while a breach of a covenant is merely ground for the recovery of damages. (Brown v. Chicago N. W. R. R. Co. (Iowa), 82 N. W. 1003; Langley v. Ross, 55 Mich. 163, [20 N. W. 886].)

Ordinarily, in order to avoid a forfeiture, conditions in a conveyance will be construed as covenants when this can be *523 reasonably done, but a covenant instead of a condition will never be implied contrary to the clear intent of the parties. Although designated in the lease as a covenant, the agreement in the present case to give security for the payment of rent must, in accordance with the express intention of the parties, be construed and considered as a condition rather than a covenant (K ew v. Trainor, 150 Ill. 150, 37 N. E. 223), and as the language of the statute plainly includes and applies to any and every condition embodied in a lease, the question as to what is or what is not “a covenant” running with the land is not involved in the case at bar, and need not now be considered. The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 512, 19 Cal. App. 518, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-black-calctapp-1912.