Noll v. Moran

109 A. 241, 94 Conn. 452, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 109 A. 241 (Noll v. Moran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noll v. Moran, 109 A. 241, 94 Conn. 452, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 18 (Colo. 1920).

Opinion

Case, J.

The plea in abatement is overruled. Its essential basis is that the claimed errors assigned are either not apparent on the face of the record, or where they do so appear, that they present only questions of fact rather than of law.. Certain of the assignments of error are open to neither of these criticisms, and present questions of law fairly disclosed by the bill of exceptions, and reviewable upon the facts open to us in that part of the record.

Nor is there merit in the claim suggested by the plea, that the writ is bad in its entirety because the plaintiffs in error have sought a review of the whole *454 case by attempting to inject all the evidence into the record. "While bringing up the evidence was a superfluous proceeding and one that in no way enlarges the legitimate sources of our information, its mere presence cannot affect one way or another the merits of the assignment of any claimed error of law properly presented by the bill of exceptions.

The plaintiffs in error are retail shoe dealers in the premises involved, who became, by assignment, the accepted successors of the original lessees of the place under a five-years’ term "for the yearly rental of two thousand dollars,” and as such successors finished the term on June 1st, 1917. There has been no renewal of the lease, nor any new lease in writing, but the plaintiffs in error have continued, and still continue, to occupy the premises. The defendants in error, the owners of the property, brought an action of summary process against them in September, 1919, claiming a holding over from month to month, and prosecuted it to a judgment for the recovery of possession. The writ of error seeks to reverse this judgment, and several of its ten assignments require but brief attention.

The first of them challenges the capacity of the plaintiffs in the original action (the defendants in error) to sue, on the ground that the action was brought under and in pursuance of a contract which they, as owners of the property, had with an intending purchaser, by which they were to evict the tenants for his benefit and convenience in his contemplated destruction of the building. For this reason it is claimed that the action "was not being prosecuted by the real parties in interest,” and that it should have been dismissed. The record shows that no such question was seasonably raised in the court below, and that is of course a sufficient answer to it here. The objection comes too late.

*455 It is also assigned as error that the court refused to hold that the contract referred to was “contrary to public policy and void” and “that by reason thereof this action should not be maintained.” The record warrants no such claim, and discloses no conduct on the part of the owners of the property which would bar them from bringing and maintaining the action, if the occupation was in fact one then terminable by summary process. They were quite within their rights even though the person chiefly benefited may have been an accepted purchaser, about to take the property upon the conditions described.

The sixth assignment of error was abandoned upon argument before us; the seventh attempts a review of the court’s action in not finding a certain fact “to have been proven by the evidence,” and for that reason alone obviously calls for no consideration.

The ninth assignment charges the trial court with having wrongly put the burden of proof upon the defendants — the plaintiffs in error — to establish the fact that the tenancy of their present occupation is one from year to year. It is of negligible consequence, so far as any question before us is concerned, what the court did with the burden of proof. The assignments of error calling for our review are specifically based upon the finding of the bill of exceptions that the facts regarding them were undisputed. There was therefore neither occasion nor opportunity for the trial court to consider any rule of proof as to matters so calling for its determination. Only a clear question of law upon admitted facts confronted that court — as it now confronts us.

The tenth assignment is bad from its general character, and because it avowedly invites a review of all the evidence in the case for its consideration.

The remaining assignments of error present in *456 different forms substantially a single question of law— that dealing with the character of the tenancy under which the plaintiffs in error have been holding since the expiration of the written lease. They claim that, upon the facts apparent on the record, their tenancy became one from year to year, and that so construed, they had already begun a new annual period in June, 1919, which was not terminable short of its year’s duration. Unless it appears, however, that this occupation since June, 1917, rests upon some new agreement definite as to the time of its termination, or reserving an annual rather than a monthly rent, it must by the positive terms of our law be construed as one under a lease from month to month. General Statutes, § 5099.

The allowance of a bill of exceptions not only gave it a place in the record, but necessarily established the truth of such facts embraced in it as are essential to the proper presentation of the rulings assigned as erroneous. Its function is analogous to that of the finding of facts in our procedure by appeal, and its office is properly performed only when it fairly and fully serves its primary purpose of supplying the court of review with all the information necessary for the determination of the matters submitted.

As defining the scope of the conditions under which the plaintiffs in error continued in occupation after their lease had expired, it appears from the bill of exceptions that “prior to the termination of said lease and in or about the month of March, 1917, the plaintiffs in error interviewed said John F. Moran, who acted for himself and the joint owner in the leasing of the properties, with the purpose of renewing the old lease or obtaining a new lease, and an arrangement was entered into in pursuance of which the plaintiffs in error remained in possession of said store and premises and are still in possession thereof”; and as perhaps more *457 precisely characterizing this "arrangement,” it further appears that "in said conversation which resulted in said further occupancy, the said Moran informed the plaintiffs in error that they might stay in the premises, that said Moran did not believe in leases but that the plaintiffs in error could stay in the store provided they paid an increased rent which amounted to one thousand dollars a year and that he wouldn’t disturb them.” They have "remained in possession of said store paying the annual rental of three thousand dollars by monthly payments of two hundred and fifty dollars each during the early part of each month.” These facts, and also that after the interview referred to "nothing was ever said or done between the parties hereto with respect to the occupancy or leasing of said premises,” were undisputed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 A. 241, 94 Conn. 452, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noll-v-moran-conn-1920.