Lilly v. Raleigh Hardware Co.

111 S.E. 592, 90 W. Va. 607, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 268
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 S.E. 592 (Lilly v. Raleigh Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lilly v. Raleigh Hardware Co., 111 S.E. 592, 90 W. Va. 607, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 268 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Ritz, Judge:

Plaintiffs by this writ of error seels reversal of a judgment in favor of the defendant in an action of unlawful entry and detainer brought by them to recover the possession of a business house situate in the City of Beekley.

In the summer of 1914 A. A. Lilly was erecting a business building upon a lot owned by him in the City of Beekley. The defendant desired to secure this .building for the conduct of its business, and entered into negotiations with Mr. Lilly to that end. These negotiations resulted, on July 1, 1914, in Mr. Lilly preparing a lease of the premises to the .defendant for the term of ten years, at a rental of $150.00 per month, payable monthly. This lease was-duly executed by Mr; Lilly under seal and duly acknowledge by him, and sent to the defendant with the expectation upon his part that the defendant would also execute and acknowledge it. The term of the lease was to begin as soon as the building was completed which was then in course of erection, and which was expected to be ready for occupancy by the first of November following. The defendant did not execute the lease sent to it by Mr. Lilly, but desired, if possible, to secure a modification of one of the conditions contained in .it in regard to liability for explosives stored upon the premises. The lease as prepared and executed by Mr. Lilly made the defendant liable for any injuries to the building caused by explosions upon the premises, while the defendant desired to have its liability limited to injuries caused by explosives stored in excess of the amount allowed by law, or from its negligence. It had its counsel prepare a lease in identical [609]*609terms with the one signed and acknowledged by Mr. Lilly, with the exception that- the condition in regard to explosives was changed as above indicated. It forwarded this paper to Mr. Lilly, calling his attention to the change, and in a letter expressed the hope that he would accept the lease in the form prepared by it. It did not, however, return the lease executed by Mr. Lilly and sent to it. Mr. Lilly declined to accede to the change suggested by the defendant, and early in October, 1914, upon his attention being called to the fact that he had done nothing in regard to the matter, he wrote a letter to the defendant advising it that he had gone over the lease which he had prepared and executed, and also the one that the defendant had submitted to him containing the change, and that he had prepared a third' paper which he believed was about right, and which he forwarded with the request that, if it. was acceptable to the defendant, it execute it and return it to him, and he would thereupon execute it. It does not appear what this third paper contained. Neither of the parties ever executed it, and it does not appear that there were any further negotiations in regard to the matter. When the building was completed about the first of November the defendant moved in, and it has occupied the building ever since.

On the first of July, 1919, A. A. Lilly, by deed of that date, conveyed the property to George H. Spaulding, Fred Faulkner and John Faulkner, in which deed there is contained the following stipulation: ‘ ‘ This conveyance is' made subject to lease contract, bearing date the 1st day of July, 1914, made between the said A. A. Lilly and Raleigh Hardware Company, a corporation, reference to which contract is here made.” After Spaulding and his associates got the property from Lilly, the defendant continued to occupy it without its right to do so being questioned until Spaulding and his associates sold it to C. M. Lilly and W. L Smith, the plaintiffs in this suit, and conveyed the same to them on the 27th of July, 1920. Soon after the plaintiffs got their deed from Spaulding and others they notified the defendant that it had no lease entitling it to occupy the .premises, and that it must vacate or make some arrangements with them in re[610]*610gard thereto. The defendant received this letter. on the first of September, and in answer thereto transmitted the rent for one month which was dne on that day, and insisted upon its right to hold the property for the full term of ten years, as provided by the lease above referred to. Plaintiffs declined to receive the rent, and since that time it has been regularly deposited in a bank in Bepkley to their credit. Notice was given the defendant to vacate the premises upon the theory that it was a- tenant from month to month, and upon its refusal to do so in accordance with the command in the notice this action of unlawful entry and detainer was instituted, and upon the facts being shown, as above indicated, the court, on motion of the defendant, directed the jury to return a verdict in its favor, upon which verdict the judgment complained of was rendered.

The plaintiffs insist that the judgment cannot stand, for the reason that there never existed any binding and valid contract between A. A. Lilly and the defendant for the lease of the premises, and that the holding thereof by the defendant, and the payment of rent therefor by the month, simply made it a tenant from month to month; while the defendant contends that its occupancy of the premises under the circumstances showed a clear intention and determination upon its part to accept the lease of July 1, 1914, and that it has a right to rely upon the terms of that lease and to occupy the premises thereunder. The plaintiffs insist that the facts disclosed by the record show that the defendant never accepted the lease signed and acknowledged by Mr. Lilly dated the first day of July, 1914, but instead of accepting it prepared another form of lease making a change in one of the conditions which Mr. Lilly refused to accede to, and that there never was any agreement of the parties upon the terms of the lease. The defendant’s contention is that it did accept the lease first sent to it by Mr. Lilly, and that this acceptance upon its part is shown by the fact that it retained this lease at all times after the same had been signed and acknowledged and sent to it, and did not return it with the form of lease it sent to Mr. Lilly to be executed evidencing the change; that its purpose at all times was. to [611]*611accept the lease as prepared if it was unable-to secure the changes it desired, and that when it did not succeed in securing the changes desired by it, the negotiations were discontinued, and it moved into the premises under the lease then in its possession. It is very significant that the defendant was permitted to move into the leased premises if, as contended for by the plaintiffs, it had no contract therefor. It sufficiently appears, we think, that for nearly six years the defendant occupied these premises upon the terms prescribed by the lease upon which it relies, and it also sufficiently appears that the rental value of the building had increased enormously during a considerable part of this time, notwithstanding which no demand was made upon the defendant for increased rent; and not only that, but when Mr. A. A. Lilly sold the premises he inserted in his deed to the purchaser the stipulation above quoted, clearly recognizing the rights of the defendant in the premises under the lease dated July 1, 1914. That could refer to no other paper than the one now relied upon by the defendant. Lilly had executed no other lease. It was the only paper by which he could be bound.

It is insisted that because the lease executed by A. A. Lilly, dated the first day of July, 1914, contemplated execution upon the part of the defendant, and was never formally executed by it, it cannot be relied upon as a binding contract, and the cases of Herndon v. Meadows, 86 W. Va. 499; Hoon v.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E. 592, 90 W. Va. 607, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lilly-v-raleigh-hardware-co-wva-1922.