Lassig v. Cahill

41 S.W.2d 469, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1361
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1931
DocketNo. 7559.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 469 (Lassig v. Cahill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lassig v. Cahill, 41 S.W.2d 469, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1361 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

MCCLENDON, C. J.

Cahill sued Lassig (and a corporation, his assignee) to cancel a 50-year lease, under which Lassig was given the exclusive privilege of quarrying stone on land near Round Rock. In the alternative Cahill sought damages for failure to reasonably develop and for breach of certain covenants in the lease. Trial was to the court without a jury, and judgment was in favor of Cahill, canceling the lease. From this judgment Lassig and his codefendant have appealed.

The lease was executed April 27, 1923. It provided for a royalty of $2 per railroad car of stone mined and shipped from the premises, and that, if less than 100 cars were shipped in any year, lessee should pay $300. The lease was to be forfeited upon failure to ship the minimum of 100 cars or to pay the $300. The original petition, filed December 27, 1929, alleged three grounds of forfeiture, in substance as follows: (1) Failure to ship 100 cars prior to April 27, 1924, whereupon Lassig “became indebted” to Cahill for $300, and upon failqre to pay which the lease was forfeited; verbal extension of the lease for one year upon payment by Lassig of $250 and his promise to begin operations on a large scale; subsequent annual extensions from year to year upon like promises up to April 27, 1929, when Lassig represented he had large financial backing and would put the quarries in operation on a large scale if granted a little more time; and failure of Lassig to perform any of these promises, whereby the lease became forfeited. (2) Failure to perform an obligation in the lease to erect and maintain a gate where spur track entered the premises, whereby Cahill was inconvenienced and damaged in loss of and injury to stock. (3) Failure to operate and develop tl)e quarries since the latter part oí 1923, whereby both the written lease and verbal extensions were forfeited. Substantially the same grounds are alleged in the amended petition upon which the case was tried, with an additional alternative prayer for damages.

In addition to the holding that the lease had been forfeited by abandonment, which we will later consider, the trial court found that the cash consideration of $50 recited in the lease had never been paid “and has therefore failed” ; and that the provision for erecting and maintaining gates had not been complied with. These findings and plaintiff’s first ground of forfeiture will be first disposed of.

The failure of consideration finding which was not alleged in plaintiff’s pleadings arose out of the following circumstances: April 25, 1922, a lease in terms substantially the same as that of 1923 was executed. It recited a cash consideration of $50, which admittedly *471 was paid. It covered only 87 acres, but contained tbe stipulation that Cabin owned 1,000 adjoining acres covered by a previous lease, wbicb had been abandoned, and Cahill agreed “to include said property within the terms of this lease agreement or supplemental agreement, upon the same terms and conditions as herein provided as soon as he can get fully released from said prior lease agreement.” The 1923 lease carried the $50 cash consideration recital, and differed from the 1922 lease only in that it included the additional acreage. Lassig paid the $300 (due April 27, 1924, for failure to ship 100 cars) by check dated April 24, 1924, bearing the notation, “for one year rental on lease”; which check Cahill indorsed and cashed. The $50 recited in the 1923 lease was never paid. Lassig’s version of the matter was that the 1923 lease was merely substituted for that of 1922, and the recitation referred to the $50 paid on the latter. No demand was ever made for a $50 payment on the 1923 lease, and no complaint was ever made that it had not been paid. Cahill merely testified that he never got the $50, which fact Lassig frankly admitted, except as stated, under the 1922 lease. At the end of each year under the 1923 lease, including 1929, Lassig paid, and Cahill accepted, the $300 for failure to ship the 100 cars. Checks covering these payments for the years ending 1925, 1926, 1927, and 1928, were introduced, each showing the indorsement of Cahill. In acknowledging the 1926 check, Cahill wrote (4 — 19—26): “Your cheek and letter came to hand O'. K. to pay the lease. Many thanks, I was needing the check.” Accompanying the 1928 payment, which was in the form of a cashier’s check in favor of Cahill with the notation “for one years Rental for lease,” and was indorsed and cashed by Cahill, Lassig wrote, “Enclosed please find cashier’s check for $300.00 for one year’s rental for lease.” Cahill admitted getting the 1929 payment for which he executed the following receipt:

“Received of Oswald J. Lassig and Lassig Limestone Quarry Corporation, Houston, Texas, this the 22 day of April, 1929, the sum of Three Hundred and No/100 ($300.00) Dollars to cover lease rental on leases originally executed as between J. D. Cahill and Oswald J. Lassig, both of which are recorded in the Deed Records of Travis County, Texas.
“[Signed] J. D. Cahill.”

From the foregoing it is manifest that, if Lassig’s version of the recital of cash consideration was not correct, Cahill nevertheless acquiesced therein, and, in any event, waived the failure to pay same as a ground of forfeiture or failure of consideration.

The agreement in the lease regarding the erection and maintenance of gates was clearly not a limitation or condition subsequent, breach of which would terminate or afford ground to forfeit the lease; but was only a covenant for breach of which damages constituted the legal remedy.

There is no basis in the evidence for Las-sig’s first alleged ground of forfeiture. There was no failure to pay the $300 in 1924, and consequent abandonment and verbal one-year extension of the lease. That Cahill got this $300 is established by undisputed proof, including Cahill’s own admission. Lassig gave Cahill a check for this amount on a Houston bank, dated April 24, 1924. Cahill indorsed the check and deposited it with a bank in Round Rock, which latter indorsed it April 26, 1924; and it was paid in Houston April 28, 1924. There was never any claim by Ca-hill that the lease had been forfeited for default in this payment; and, as above shown, at the end of each succeeding year the $300 was accepted in recognition of and in accordance with the terms of the written lease. Cahill’s own testimony negatives the theory of default and verbal renewal as shown in the following excerpts:

“There was no agreement that way, that in April, 1924, Mr. Lássig wanted a one year oral extension and I agreed to that for $250, and he paid me the $250. * * * he never paid me $250. I had no agreement of that kind with Mr. Lassig.”
“I did not have any agreement where I told Lassig that I would let him stay one more year by paying me $250.00; I did not have any agreement of that kind.”
“I say here in my suit that I granted him an extension from time to time. I told him just to go ahead, I hope you will make money ; and he went ahead under the same written lease that he started with in April, 1923.”

This brings us to what we regard the controlling issue in the case, namely, whether the trial court’s judgment can be sustained upon the theory of cessation or abandonment.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 469, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lassig-v-cahill-texapp-1931.