Otis v. McMillan & Sons

70 Ala. 46
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 70 Ala. 46 (Otis v. McMillan & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Otis v. McMillan & Sons, 70 Ala. 46 (Ala. 1881).

Opinion

STONE, J.

The title to the lot, for the rent of which this suit was brought, was originally in Jewett. On the 20th May, 1859, Jewett, in consideration of five hundred dollars, payable in quarterly installments, leased the premises to Otis, for the term of one year, to commence June 1st, 1859, “with the privilege, on the part of said Otis, of renting said land, mill and improvements, from year to year afterwards for the space of ten years, at the annual rent of one thousand dollars, payable in quarterly installments as above; upon which terms the lease of said premises shall be annually renewed to said Otis, on his request.” At the expiration of this lease for one year, to-wit, on the first day of June, 1860, the contracting parties agreed to renew the lease, and indorsed the following agreement on the lease, which they severally executed with their signatures and seals: “ The within lease is hereby renewed from the first day of June, 1860, upon the conditions therein mentioned, to-wit, to continue in force for the term of ten years from this date, at the annual rent of one thousand dollars, payable in quarterly installments,” &c. On the 4th day of March, 1870, the contracting parties again renewed the lease, by indorsing the following agreement upon it, executed with their signatures, and seals: “This lease is extended from the first day of June, 1870, to the first day of June, 1880, upon the same terms and conditions.” While the body of the original lease evidently contemplated a letting from year to year, for the space of ten years, if desired by Otis, the lessee, the actual renewals indorsed on the lease, were each for a solid term of ten years. This was a modification of the original contract, which the parties were competent to make; and it is binding and valid, without further consideration than the mutual agreement of the parties. 1 Brick. Dig. 394, § 233.

After the second renewal of the lease, stated above, Jewett executed a trust deed, dated March 12th, 1872, by which he conveyed the lands, for the rent of which this suit is brought, to Bernstein, as trustee, to secure the payment of five thousand dollars to Caroline Sehonfield, the beneficiary in the deed; with power in the trustee, in case Jewett made default, to advertise and sell the lands, for the payment of said sum of five [50]*50thousand dollars. The trustee, Bernstein, sold under the power contained in the trust deed, and Yogel and wife became the purchasers. A recital in the deed herein next described show's that the conveyance by Bernstein, the trustee, to Yogel and wife, bears date April 16th, 1874. On the first day of May, 1874, Yogel and wife, by quit-claim deed, conveyed all their interest in the lands to William Otis, the lessee. On the 16th day of March, 1876, Jewett redeemed said lands from Otis, under the statute, and received from him, Otis, a quit-claim deed, re-conveying the lands to him, Jewett. It is shown that the money, with which this redemption was effected, was obtained by Jewett from Lyles.

On tiie same day, March 16th, 1876, Jewett, for the recited consideration of $6,397.35, conveyed said lands to Lyles, by absolute deed of bargain and sale, with covenants of warranty, and' also transferred and assigned to him tire Otis lease. On the 15th day of April, 1876, Lyles executed a written agreement to Jewett, reciting that the deed from Jewett to him -was received “ with the agreement that he would sell said lot of land to said Jewett, for the sum of six thousand four hundred dollars, the amount the same cost, with interest from the 16th day of March, 1876,” and therein bound himself, heirs, &c., “that on payment by said Jewett of said sum or sums of money to him, Lyles, heirs, &c., on or before the 16th day of March, 1877, he, his heirs, &c., shall re-convey said lot of land to said Jewett, his' heirs or assigns.” It was further stipulated, that there was “no debt existing from said Jewett to Lyles, in relation to said lot of land, and this transaction is a sale conditioned upon the prompt and actual payment, at the time named, of the sum or sums of’money herein before named and described, and not in any manner a mortgage,” &c.

'It was, in said agreement, further “ declared, that if, at any time before the purchase of said lot by said Jewett, if-lie make such purchase as he is, by this agreement, permitted to make, I* (said Lyles) shall have leased said lot, or tiny part thereof, to any person or ¡persons, or made any agreement as to the lease or renting thereof, such lease or agreement shall remain in full force and effect, and be valid and effectual against said Jewett and his assigns, except so far as the same may be changed, modified, or relinquished, by the voluntary act of the said lessee or his assigns.” It was further stipulated in the said agreement, that if Jewett re-purchased, he was also to pay to Lyles “ such amount of taxes and expenses as may be in excess of the income which Lyles may then have realized from said property.”

On the 16th March, 1876, Jewett assigned and transferred to Lyles the lease of Otis, with all its renewals. At this stage [51]*51of the transaction, Otis denied all further liability on his part to pay rent for the premises, according to thé terms of the lease he had taken from Jewett, and claimed he was absolved from the obligations thereof. Jewett claimed that Otis was still bound by the terms of the original lease and its renewals. This controverted question was not then settled or agreed upon between the parties. Lyles desired to realize rent for the premises, and Otis refused to pay him rent according to the. terms of the lease he liad received from Jewett. Thereupon Lyles executed a lease of the premises to Otis, bearing date 16th March, 1816, for the term of ten years, at an annual rent of eight hundred and fifty dollars, payable quarterly, with certain other stipulations in regard to repairs. This lease contains this clause: “If J. F. Jewett redeems before 16th March, 1811, then this agreement to be null and void, and of no effect.” On the 20th May, 1816, Lyles re-conveyed said premises to Jewett by quit-claim déed, reciting that he, Jewett, had paid to him, Lyles, said sum of six thousand four hundred dollars. On the 29th of the same month, Lyles transferred and re-assigned said original lease to Jewett. On the same day, May 29th, 1876, Jewett assigned and transferred said original lease to McMillan & Sons. The bill of exceptions also states, that the property, the subject of the original lease, was conveyed by Jewett to McMillan & Sons, as security for money or credit obtained from them, with which Jewett redeemed or re-purchased the lands from Lyles.

On a single question of fact,' there is an apparent conflict in the testimony. Some of the witnesses say, that when the title was conveyed to Lyles, he (Lyles) went into'possession of the premises, and afterwards let them to Otis. Other witnesses say, Lyles never took possession, but only asserted his right to the premises as landlord, by force of the title he held. (There is, also, evidence of an offer by Otis to surrender the possession to McMillan & Sons, when the title was put in them, and an agreement on their part to receive possession on certain conditions, which are not shown to have been complied with. No legal question is presented for our consideration, growing out of either of these phases of the evidence, and I do not feel called on to consider them. The record does not show any cancellation of the lease, by agreement of the parties, or that Otis was dispossessed, in fact, by any of his successive landlords.

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70 Ala. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otis-v-mcmillan-sons-ala-1881.