Mittwer v. Stremel
This text of 71 N.W. 698 (Mittwer v. Stremel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
For the purposes of this appeal, the material facts of this case may [20]*20be briefly stated as follows: The plaintiffs leased a store building to the defendants for a term of three years from October 1, 1892, at a rental of $100 a month. The lease provided that the defendants should have
“the privilege of remaining two years after the expiration of this lease, at a price to be determined by disinterested parties, and to be settled by arbitration in the usual manner.”
According to the allegations and proof of both parties, after the expiration of .the term of the lease, they made a new and express contract for the further occupation of the premises by the defendants, but they differ as to the terms of this contract. The claim of the plaintiffs is that it was a lease for one year from October 1, 1895, while the contention of the defendants is that the agreement, was that they should occupy the premises as tenants from month to month. The defendants continued to occupy and pay rent for the premises until July 1,1896, when they vacated them pursuant to due notice previously given to the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs, claiming that the contract was for one year, brought this action to recover rent for the remaining two months of that term; hence the only issue between the parties was whether the reletting was for one year, or from month to month.
A second defense interposed, which, however, seems to have cut little or no figure on the trial, was that, in any event, the tenancy had been terminated on August 1, 1896, by defendants’ surrender of the premises, and plaintiffs’ acceptance of such surrender. Counsel requested the court to charge the jury that
“if defendants bound themselves for another year’s rent, beginning with October 1, 1895, all the provisions of the original lease were still in force, except as to the amount of rental paid.”
This request was refused. It is now claimed that this instruction should have been given, in view of the second defense, because the original lease contained a provision that, if the lessees failed to pay rent when due, or to fulfill any of the covenants of the lease, the lessors might re-enter and take possession, without such re-entry working a forfeiture of the rents to be paid. It may be doubted [22]*22whether there was any evidence to which the request or this provision was applicable. But, in any event, counsel should have specifically called the attention of the court to this particular provision in the lease, and suggested the purpose for which the instruction was asked. There was nothing in the request itself, and nothing had occurred on the trial, which was calculated to suggest to the mind of the court any materiality in the request or the purpose for which counsel desired it’to be given. The trial had proceeded throughout as if the only controversy was whether the re-letting was for a year, or from month to month.
Order affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
71 N.W. 698, 69 Minn. 19, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mittwer-v-stremel-minn-1897.