Munford v. Humphreys

229 P. 860, 68 Cal. App. 530, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 348
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 3, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 2799.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 229 P. 860 (Munford v. Humphreys) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munford v. Humphreys, 229 P. 860, 68 Cal. App. 530, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 348 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The complaint alleges that “on or about the 1st day of October, 1922, plaintiffs and defendants entered into a written lease, wherein and whereby plaintiffs leased, let and demised to defendants, for the term of one year those certain rooms designated as rooms numbered 10, 11 and 12 on the second floor of the Mail Building, in the City of Stockton, ... at a monthly rental of one hundred dollars per month, payable on the 1st day of each and every month, commencing on October 1st, 1922; that . . . defendants paid to plaintiffs herein the monthly rentals accruing thereon, excepting the sum of $100 which became due ... on the 1st day of March, 1923, and the sum of $100 which became due ... on the 1st day of April, 1923”; that the plaintiffs recovered judgment for the sum of $200 so remaining unpaid; “that subsequent to the 1st day of April, 1923, there became due, owing and payable from, defendants to plaintiffs herein the monthly rentals for‘said premises payable on the 1st day of May, the 1st day of June, the 1st day of July, the 1st day of August, the 1st day of September, each of said monthly rentals being for the sum of $100, and the total amount thereof, for said months being the sum of $500; that although demand has been made upon defendants by plaintiffs herein for said sum of $500; they have failed and refused, and continue to fail and refuse to pay the same, and the whole thereof, to-wit, the said sum of $500 is now due, owing and unpaid.” The prayer is for judgment in the sum of $500.

The answer denies the execution of the alleged written lease and alleges that on the first day of October, 1922. and thereafter until the twenty-eighth day of February, 1923, the defendants were in possession of the premises, “occupying the same under a month to month tenancy from plaintiffs”; that on the latter day, after the termination of said tenancy by due notice in writing to plaintiffs, the defendants surrendered possession of the prem *533 ises to plaintiffs; and that defendants “paid all rent due for said month to month tenancy up to and including the last day of February, 1923.”

The findings substantially follow the allegations of the complaint and judgment was entered thereon in favor of plaintiffs for the sum of $500. The defendants prosecute this appeal from the judgment.

For about eighteen months prior to October 1, 1922, the defendants occupied the premises under a month to month tenancy at a rental of $75 a month. In August, 1922, plaintiffs wrote defendants as follows: “Upon investigation of rentals in Stockton, it is found that the amount you are paying is inadequate. Please take notice that the rental for the offices you now occupy will be one- hundred dollars per month, payable in advance, beginning October first, nineteen hundred twenty-two. Please prepare a lease for one year in accordance with these terms.” Plaintiff Kittie L. Munford testified as follows: “Q. Pursuant to that letter did Humphreys & Matthews prepare the lease of the premises for a year, from October 1, 1922, to October 1, 1923? A. They did.” After the answer had been given defendants objected to the question on various grounds, but made no motion at any time to strike out the answer. The court said: “Objection sustained.” If it be conceded that the question was subject to some of the objections urged, the fact that defendants prepared the lease sued on, after receipt of plaintiffs’ letter directing the preparation thereof, was material and would probably have been shown by further examination of the witness if the answer had been stricken out. Since the answer was allowed to stand, it must be given consideration. The lease was lost after the trial in the justice’s court mentioned in the complaint and prior to the trial herein. The parties stipulated “that it was a lease dated October 6, 1922, running from the first day of October, 1922, for one year, referring to the premises involved in this suit, being in form one of the printed instruments of lease that is usually purchased at various stationery stores, containing certain conditions' which were typed in, one of which was that the tenant should make all repairs. And it bore the signatures of the plaintiffs herein, but not of the defendants. . . . That according to its terms the rental for the prem *534 ises was one hundred dollars per month, . . . payable in advance, . . . the payments to begin on October 1, 1922.” The plaintiffs signed the lease and left it in the possession of the defendants, who retained possession thereof during their subsequent occupancy of the premises and regularly paid the rental, as therein provided, up to and including that falling due February 1, 1923. On the 10th of January, 1923, the defendants wrote plaintiffs, among other things, saying: “This will inform you that we will move from our present location in the Mail Building about February 15th.” Plaintiff Kittie L. Munford testified: “After I received a notice that they were going to move, ... I called up Mr. Humphreys and told him he had overlooked his lease. He told me that they had not signed the lease. That was the first I knew of it.”

Appellants contend that the findings are contradictory and do not support the judgment. The complaint and the findings might have been drafted with greater accuracy of statement, but the meaning and effect thereof are plain. The action is not based upon the alleged justice court judgment in any respect. The defendants appealed from that judgment to the superior court and, by stipulation of the parties, the justice court case and the instant case were there tried at the same time and submitted on the same evidence. It is true that the second paragraph of the findings recites that the defendants paid plaintiffs the monthly rentals accruing under the lease, except those falling due March 1 and April 1, 1923. The next paragraph recites that judgment was recovered in the justice’s court for such unpaid rentals. From the findings as a whole it is apparent that in those two paragraphs the court intended to cover the period only from October 1, 1922, to and including April 1, 1923, because in the next paragraph it is found that “subsequent to the 1st day of April, 1923, there became due, owing and payable from defendants to plaintiffs herein the monthly rentals for said premises payable on the 1st day of May, the 1st day of June, the 1st day of July, the 1st day of August, the 1st day of September.” Then follows the finding “that there is now due, owing and unpaid from defendants . . . five months’ rental at $100 per month, for the months of May, June and July, August and September, 1923.” The *535 answer denies that any rents became due subsequent to the first day of April, 1923, and alleges that defendants paid all rent due “up to and including the last day of February, 1923.” There was no contention at the trial that any payments had been made Other than as so alleged in the answer. The only issue raised by the pleadings or contested at the trial was whether the defendants were bound by the terms of the alleged written lease. The findings to the effect that the first five installments of rent had been paid and that judgment had been recovered for those falling due March 1st and April 1st may be treated as immaterial recitals leading up to the essential finding that the last five installments had not been paid. So interpreting the findings they are entirely consistent and the only findings upon the question of payments warranted by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 860, 68 Cal. App. 530, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munford-v-humphreys-calctapp-1924.