Mileski v. Kerby

113 P.2d 950, 57 Wyo. 109, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 22
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1941
Docket2180
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 113 P.2d 950 (Mileski v. Kerby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mileski v. Kerby, 113 P.2d 950, 57 Wyo. 109, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 22 (Wyo. 1941).

Opinion

*113 Kiner, Chief Justice.

This is a direct appeal from a judgment of the district court of Washakie County, and presents the question whether the defendant and appellant, Kerby, was evicted by his lessor from certain premises leased by the plaintiff and respondent, Mileski, to the former, and who in consequence attempted to surrender the said lease, the surrender being claimed to have been accepted by Mileski. The question arose upon Mileski’s action for the overdue rental alleged to be due plaintiff from the defendant for certain months under the lease aforesaid. The parties will usually be referred to as “lessor” and “lessee” or by their respective names. The essential facts out of which this controversy commenced are briefly these as disclosed by our examination of the record:

For some years prior to the 28th day of July, 1938, the appellant held a lease upon and was in possession of “the property known as the Elk Theater, located on the first floor of the two story brick building, situated on Lots 19 and 20, Block 3, Original Town of Wor-land, Wyoming”. On the date last mentioned the lessor demised and leased to the lessee the property just described, for the term commencing August 1, 1938, and running until August 1, 1943, said demise being for the sum of §10,800.00 as rental for said premises, “payable at the rate of §180.00 per month in advance, on the 1st day of each month”. The premises thus described were used by the lessee as a moving picture theater until about September 21,1938, when he moved out whatever equipment was needed to operate what is designated in the record as lessee’s “new theater” and abandoned the use of the premises described above as a picture show at that time.

*114 It seems there was a basement underneath the sloping floor on which the picture show was conducted. In this basement and on the floor thereof there were two so-called dressing rooms located under the stage, which in years past, when road shows were in vogue, were used by the actors in preparing for their stage appearances. During the time Kerby ran the place as a moving picture show these rooms were used only to store a ventilating system, and lessee’s operator of the moving picture machine, one Frank Killie, roomed there all the time. In the main part of the basement under the theater auditorium Kerby kept the “motor generator”, which was used in operating the moving picture machine. He also had stored in the basement a lot of theater seats and other odds and ends. The lessor also seems to have kept lighting and heating equipment in said basement, a pool table and other material. As Mileski, the lessor, testified, “I told him (Kerby) to use it * * * when he needed it. When he wanted it he could use it just like I did”. Both parties to the lease over a period of years appear to have thus made use of the basement. Neither seems to have made any objection to the use of the basement by the other until the matter of the card game came up, as subsequently hereinafter described.

When Kerby moved to his “new theater”, as already mentioned, his moving picture machine operator still continued to make use of the dressing rooms as a place to sleep until about the 1st of October, 1988, at which time he also moved over to lessee’s “new theater”. Thereafter the leased property aforesaid would appear not to have been used by Kerby for any active purpose, except the basement, which was employed by him to store certain equipment not needed in his new theater. Kerby testified that his taking a lease for five years, at the time the written instrument aforesaid was *115 signed, was partly “to prevent competition in the way of another picture show coming in there”.

Thereafter and about the middle of November, 1938, the lessor’s son, one Peter Mileski, Jr., gave one Latham oral permission to start a card game in the dressing rooms aforesaid. Latham and Mileski, Jr., entered the basement and made some alterations by moving the partition between the two rooms to one side and putting in a heating and lighting system for the one room thus constructed. The material and equipment belonging to Kerby, which they found in the dressing rooms, they moved into another part of the basement under the theater, but, so far as can be told from the record, did no damage to it. Subsequently Kerby came and hauled the stuff which had been stored there away from the premises and sold part of it. Latham then used the room in the basement fashioned as described above, as a card room, for about six weeks. He agreed to pay Peter Mileski, Jr., §1.00 a day for every day “he had a game in there”. The latter testified that Latham paid him §10.00 or §12.00 for the use of the room for playing cards; that his father owned and rented the building, and that he (the son) had no authority at all to rent the property, and that his father knew nothing about the arrangement between him and Latham at the time it was made.

The lessee, Kerby, testified that he learned through a friend that the basement premises above described were being used for card game purposes. Kerby then went into the basement and found several card tables in the room — formerly dressing rooms — and men playing cards there. He inquired of them who put them in there, and they said “Mileski”. Kerby stated on the trial of the case that “they asked me if I wanted them to get out, and I told them I would go and see Pete (the lessor in the written five year lease), and I went to Pete about it”. But Kerby took no other steps him *116 self either by request or otherwise so far as the card players were concerned, to get them out. Kerby did, however, go to the lessor, Mileski, Sr., and complain of what had been done. The latter, testifying as a witness in his own behalf, said that he thereafter went into the basement aforesaid and stopped the use of the premises for card playing. The record is not altogether clear just when this occurred, but Latham left the premises some time the latter part of December, 1938. About the middle of December of that year Kerby turned over the key to this property to his lessor. There is some conflict in the testimony as given on the trial as to just what was said at that time, but there is none at all as to the return of the key. Mileski, Sr., testified that nothing was said. Kerby’s testimony was that he told the lessor then that “you have taken over part of the building”, and that “you can have the rest of it”.

Kerby claimed that the above described acts on the part of Latham and Mileski, Jr., established a constructive eviction of the lessee from the leased premises. Kerby paid the rental prescribed in the written lease until January 1, 1939, and declined to pay any more. The lessor brought an action in the district court for the amount due upon eleven months delinquent rental after January 1, 1939. Kerby interposed the defense as already intimated, that he had been evicted from the premises by the lessor and had accordingly surrendered them, which surrender was accepted by Mileski, Sr. All this was denied by plaintiff’s pleading in reply.

The district court of Washakie County found among other things that “the temporary use or occupancy of part of the basement, known as the dressing room” by Latham, “did not materially interfere with the defendant’s use of said property and was insufficient to constitute an eviction of defendant therefrom”.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P.2d 950, 57 Wyo. 109, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mileski-v-kerby-wyo-1941.