Levering Investment Co. v. Lewis

208 S.W. 874, 200 Mo. App. 679, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 22
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 208 S.W. 874 (Levering Investment Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levering Investment Co. v. Lewis, 208 S.W. 874, 200 Mo. App. 679, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 22 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

— On January 25, 1915, plaintiff filed its amended petition upon which the case went to trial, to recover a year’s rent of certain premises owned by plaintiff and leased to the defendant. It is averred that it is provided in the lease that the defendant should give plaintiff formal written notice at least thirty days before the expiration of the lease, as [681]*681to whether or not he would surrender the premises at the end of the lease, or would exercise an option given him by the lease to renew it for another term of one year; that defendant failed to give any notice to plaintiff of his intentions; that it was further provided that unless such notice was given by defendant to plaintiff, plaintiff had the right to declare the lease renewed for an additional period of one year; that after defendant’s failure to give notice, plaintiff, in accordance with the provisions- of the lease, notified defendant that it declared the lease renewed for the additional term of' one year, and averring refusal to pay the rent when due each month, for the months beginning October 1, 1913, to September 1, 1914, a total of $1080, demand is made for judgment for' this, with interest on each installment of $90 from the first day of. each month on which the installment became due, and for costs.

The second amended answer to this, after a general denial, pleads that the clause set out above and relied on by plaintiff is unconscionable and not binding on defendant.

At the trial this answer was amended by inserting a paragraph immediately following the above, to the effect that the clause relied on by plaintiff for the extension and renewals for another year of the term was always mutually disregarded, waived and held as naught by both plaintiff and defendant in all their negotiations, written communications and transactions in relation to the leased premises, and was not considered as any part of the contract by either party until after defendant had given notice that he would not take a lease on the premises for another year, whereupon plaintiff, for the first time, called attention to the clause and claimed rights under it. As a further defense the second amended answer set up that from and after about March 1,- 1913, the premises were in an untenantable condition; that defendant notified plaintiff thereof; that plaintiff failed to [682]*682repair the same and put the premises in a tenantable condition.

This was replied to by general denial.

The trial before the court and a jury resulted in a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff, filing a motion for new trial and excepting to that being overruled, has duly appealed.

At the trial plaintiff introduced the lease in evidence. This lease bears date September 15, 1912, and by it the plaintiff leases to the defendant certain rooms on the second floor of an apartment building in the city of St. Louis. It is provided that the term shall commence on the 1st day of October, 1912, and end on the SOth day of September, 1913, at a total rental of $1080, payably in monthly installments of $90, on the first day of each month. The conditions are then set out, by the first section, among others, at the end of that first section this:

“And the said lessee hereby expressly agrees to give formal written notice to the said lessor,' at least thirty days before the expiration of this lease, of his decision as to the reletting, or surrender of the premises hereby leased and in. the event the lessee fails to give such notice the lessor may at his option prior to the expiration of this lease declare this lease renewed for a like term under the conditions of this lease, but in the event that he does not so declare, this lease shall terminate, without the approval of the said lessor. ’ ’

Then follow clauses against the assignment or underletting, without the written consent of the lessor, and the usual terms of house leases, none of which are here involved. •

Plaintiff’s president, P. Churchill Whitteinore, after identifying the lease, testified that he had received no notice from the defendant as to his intention to quit or continue the lease prior to September 1, 1913, and identified a letter mailed by plaintiff to defendant, of date September 17, 1913, in which it is stated that the lease between the parties would have [683]*683expired on September 30th, “did we not notify yon of the renewal of the lease as provided for in the first section of the lease;” and the letter proceeded: “We* therefore, beg to declare that in accordance with the conditions thereof, the lease, is renewed for a like term, or for one year from October 1, 1913, and to end on the 30th day of September, 1914, at a yearly rental of $1080.” The president of plaintiff company also testified that bills for the rent had been sent to defendant every month, none of which had been paid. He further testified that defendant had been a tenant in the premises since 1907; that he had had a lease each year; that the clause in the lease regarding renewal had been in “for a year or two;” that the typewritten words “without the approval of the lessor,” were put in at the request of defendant; that he (witness) had had conversations with' defendant’s wife and with the subtenant under them; that he had no notice that defendant had rented another apartment when he wrote the letter, of September 17, 1913. This witness also identified a letter, of date September 11, 1913, written by an officer of plaintiff, to defendant, and an answer to this letter, of date September 13, 1913, in which defendant acknowledged the receipt of the abovementioned letter of the 11th, and in which letter of September 13th, defendant wrote that upon mature consideration he and his wife had decided not to lease the apartment for the coming year but would give it up on October. 1, 1913, and that they did not wish to keep the apartment during October, writing about the disposition of articles in the apartment.

It appears that Mr. Whittemore, president of the plaintiff company, was absent from St. Lous in September, 1913, and had written to his office concerning the negotiations with defendant as to repairs which were to be made in the apartment, and under date of September 11th the office wrote defendant, quoting from this letter, to the effect that plaintiff would do as always about repairs, etc., and adds that as the re[684]*684pairs cannot be made until after October 1, 1913, there will be plenty of time to take these up when Mr. Whittemore returns. .It was in answer to this letter Of September 11th that defendant wrote the foreg'oing letter of the 13th.

This witness further testified that on October. 3, 1913, the key to the apartment was left in his office by some one representing defendant. When plaintiff refused to receive it, the messenger left them on the counter in the office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 874, 200 Mo. App. 679, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levering-investment-co-v-lewis-moctapp-1919.