Maloy v. Griffith

240 P.2d 923, 125 Colo. 85, 1952 Colo. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 21, 1952
Docket16624
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 240 P.2d 923 (Maloy v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maloy v. Griffith, 240 P.2d 923, 125 Colo. 85, 1952 Colo. LEXIS 285 (Colo. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the court.

Bernard F. Maloy, James J. Carter and Patricia H. Maloy, individually and doing business as Maloy, Carter and Maloy, instituted an action based on false and fraudulent representations respecting a certain lease, claiming that by reason thereof they had been damaged in the sum of $5,000.00 actual and $10,000.00 exemplary damages, for which they sought judgment against Donald I. and Gladys May Griffith, the owners of the premises.

The Griffiths answered, denying false and fraudulent representations as alleged by plaintiffs and also filed, a cross complaint in which they sought damages in the sum of $3,839.99 for repairs and alterations necessarily made by them on the premises, and $3,000.00 due as rental for the unexpired portion of the lease. Upon trial, the jury found against plaintiffs on their complaint and in favor of defendants in the sum of $1,311.71 on their cross complaint, and judgment was entered accordingly. Plaintiffs bring the case here by writ of error for review.

Reference will be made to the parties herein as plaintiffs and defendants as they were designated in the district court, or as lessors or lessees as referred to in the written lease.

The record consists of 1379 folios, replete with incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial evidence, making a summarization thereof difficult. However, we consider the following statement sufficient in our consideration of the cause: Defendants were the owners of the premises located at 1335 Bannock St., which was zoned for other than business purposes, and plaintiffs were interested in leasing them for their law offices. On January 6, 1949, plaintiffs and defendants entered into a written lease for a term of one year beginning January 15, 1949, at a monthly rental of $300.00, the first and last months’ *87 rent being paid on the execution of the lease. It was provided in the lease that the premises were to be used as “Lawyers Offices and business purposes only.” It also was provided that plaintiffs would pay the cost of floor covering, not to exceed $600.00, exclusive of labor, and at the expiration of the term the lessors would repay the lessees the cost of the floor covering less certain deductions for depreciation. Plaintiffs expended $650.00 in purchasing the floor covering. Possession of the premises was delivered to plaintiffs on January 15, 1949, and surrender thereof was accepted by defendants on February 15, 1949, when it was discovered by plaintiffs that the premises were zoned for purposes other than business and a use for business purposes would be unlawful.

Plaintiffs base their action, as we have said, on false and fraudulent representations made by defendants to them with reference to the use which might be made of the premises, it being plaintiffs’ contention that defendants had definitely assured them that a permit had been secured under which the premises could be occupied by them as law offices while it is the position of defendants that at or before the signing of the lease they had apprised plaintiffs of the fact that the premises were zoned for purposes other than business, and plaintiffs had then assured them that they were in position to secure an occupancy change so as to use the premises for their purposes. When it was learned that the premises could not be used for business purposes, then it was that the lease was surrendered and the premises vacated. In addition to the rental which plaintiffs paid upon the execution of the lease and the sum of $650.00 for linoleum floor covering, they incurred expenses in connection with announcement cards, Venetian blinds, telephorie and other incidentals.

Defendants offered evidence in support of their cross complaint to establish the sums which they were obliged to expend in “readying” the building for their own occupancy. They testified that in making alterations and *88 changes necessary for their occupancy of the premises after plaintiffs had surrendered the possession thereof, the sum of $1,539.50 was necessarily expended and offered an exhibit evidencing part thereof. One item of expenditure made by defendants after the surrender of possession by plaintiffs, and after securing a building permit so to do, was “to build a stairway so that the building would be rated as an office building” no amount thereof being specified. Defendants offered an exhibit covering many of the expenditures' for which they demanded judgment, and, upon objection thereto, the court ruled: “The Court will hear testimony from Mr. Boxer on the labor for the installation of the bathtub and the kitchen sink only. The Court will hear testimony from the B & L Electrical Company on the work they had to do after the plug was pulled to determine how much that was as an element of damage allegedly caused by the actions of the plaintiffs. These things, after the testimony, then, will be ruled as the only element of damage, and all of the exhibits tendered as the Defendants’ Exhibit 11, the objection thereto is sustained.” (Italics ours.)

Thereupon the court orally instructed the jury as follows:

“Before we go any farther, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, when we suspended for the week end you may recall that just prior to excusing you the Court was asked to admit into evidence Defendants’ Exhibit 11, which consisted of certain bills that Mr. Griffith had testified to. I stated I would take the matter up in chambers and I would rule on that. The Court ruled that Exhibit 11 as constituted and offered into the Court in evidence would not be admitted. In other words, the objection to the bills was sustained. So the Court is instructing you to disregard the amounts testified to by Mr. Griffith, and that certain of these bills may be gone into by bringing in the plumber, and his testimony, whatever is received by the Court, will be pertinent.

*89 “You are instructed to disregard any testimony on the electrical bills. There was some testimony about $1500 on a stairway and any other bill on 1329 Bannock the Court ruled were immaterial, and you are instructed to disregard that testimony. As the bathtubs and sinks are capital expenditures and will be used for fifteen or twenty years, that is not a proper element of damage, and you are instructed to disregard that testimony.”

Under the court’s ruling, to which no objection whatever was made, the only recoverable item on defendants’ cross complaint would be the amount paid the plumber, and, in connection with his testimony, the court ruled that certain of the exhibits would be admitted “with the understanding that only the items set forth as to labor are material.” The items as to labor appearing on these exhibits and allowable under the court’s ruling approximated $100.00. Defendants also sought a judgment for $3,000.00 alleged to be the balance due them as rent under the terms of the lease, and with reference thereto the court ruled that defendants were not entitled to this item “for the reason that it is the opinion of the Court that the actions of the defendants in moving into the premises and occupying the same was tantamount to an acceptance of a forfeiture, and their change in position precludes them now from asking for rental on the premises.”

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
240 P.2d 923, 125 Colo. 85, 1952 Colo. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloy-v-griffith-colo-1952.