Pirkle & Williams, Inc. v. Shreveport Jitney Jungle, Inc.

140 So. 837, 19 La. App. 729, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 155
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 1932
DocketNo. 4182
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 140 So. 837 (Pirkle & Williams, Inc. v. Shreveport Jitney Jungle, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pirkle & Williams, Inc. v. Shreveport Jitney Jungle, Inc., 140 So. 837, 19 La. App. 729, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 155 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

DREW, J.

This suit was instituted by plaintiff against defendant on July 22, 1930. Plaintiff claimed the sum of $1,450, with interest from July 15, 1930, until paid, alleging that on July 1, 1929, Victor M. Mahr leased to defendant company a certain store building, No. 127 Kings highway, Shreveport, La., for a term of two years, tjie consideration being $100 per month, payable in advance. That on July 25,1929, plaintiff acquired the property affected by the lease from Victor M. Mahr, together with his lessor’s rights, lien, and privilege; that the defendant had defaulted in payment of the rent since April 15, 1930, making $350 [838]*838past due and unpaid at the time of the filing of this suit, and leaving a balance of $1,100, payable $100 per month, beginning August 1, 1930. A writ of provisional seizure was prayed for and issued, and on the same day, April 22, 1930, all the property contained in the leased premises was seized.

On August 8,1930, defendant made application to have the property released to it on bond, the amount of the bond, $1500, was agreed upon by attorneys for plaintiff and defendant, and an order signed authorizing the release of the property to defendant, with full reservation of all the rights of the parties. On the 12th day of September, 1930, defendant moved to dissolve the writ of provisional seizure and prayed for judgment in the sum of $150, as attorney’s fees, and $15, the amount of the premium on the bond, as damages sustained as a result of the improper issuance of the writ. It averred that, at the time suit was filed aRd seizure made, plaintiff had received all rent demandable, except for the months beginning May 26, 1930, and ending July 26, 1930, for which'it held defendant’s checks. After reserving its rights under the foregoing motion, answer was filed on July 12, 1931, in which the following issues were set up:

I. That the former owner of the premises, Victor M. Mahr, leased the premises to defendant, the lease to be effective July 1, 1929 ; that the building was at the time in course of construction and incomplete, and possession was 'not delivered until July 26, 1929.

II. That when plaintiff acquired the premises from Mahr on June 28,1929, as evidenced by deed recorded July 24, 1929, the lease which Mahr had theretofore executed in favor of defendant had not been recorded, but that it was recorded thereafter, and therefore, as plaintiff took the premises free of any recorded lease, defendant was not bound for the unexpired portion of the lease.

III. It further alleged thát it had paid to Mahr the sum of $100 for the rent beginning July 26, 1929, and ending August 26, 1929, and that it had paid to plaintiff all rent beginning August 26, 1929, and ending July 26, 1930, aggregating $1,100.

IV. It further alleged that on July 17, 1930, it advised plaintiff of its intention to vacate the property before the termination of the current month, ending July 26, 1930.

. V. It further averred that,.in the event the court should hold that the property was subject to the original lease executed by Mahr, and that defendant was bound thereon, then, in the .alternative, that plaintiff, on July 22, 1930, violated its obligation to maintain defendant in possession of the leased premises during the continuance of the lease by the manner in which the sheriff executed the writ of provisional seizure, and averred particularly that the sheriff, under the direction of plaintiff, demanded the keys to the premises and thereafter used the premises as a warehouse to store the property seized. That, on the day the seizure was made, defendant demanded in writing that plaintiff release the premises to it; that its demand was received by plaintiff on July 23,1930, but that notwithstanding no reply was received and the sheriff continued to use the premises as a warehouse to store the effects seized, until these effects ’ were released on bond August 8,1930.

The case was tried in the lower court. The motion to dissolve was taken up first; thereafter, the case was tried on the main demand. The lower court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $1,400, for fourteen months’ rent, at $100 per month, beginning April 26, 1930, with legal interest thereon from said date until paid, less a credit of $200, of date July 23,1930.- It maintained the writ of provisional seizure, recognized plaintiff's lessor’s lien and privilege on the property seized, and ordered it sold in accordance with the law. From this judgment, the defendant has appealed.

Several cheeks filed in evidence bear the notation “for rent from the 26th of one month to the 26th of the next month.” These checks were accepted as written and cashed, and it corroborates defendant in his testimony that the rent was due on the 26th day of each month. This being true, at the time of the seizure rent was due for the period beginning May 26,1930 to July 26,1930, amounting to $200.

Defendant contends that, when he gave cheeks on jiily 17,1930, to plaintiff covering this period of rent, the rent was-paid. We do not agree with this contention, for the evidence shows that payment was refused on presentation of the cheeks to the bank, and, until the checks were cleared, the rent was snot paid. Therefore, at the time of the filing of this suit and the seizure of the property in the premises, there was at least the amount of $200 due plaintiff for past-due rent. Defendant was removing the goods from the premises, and plaintiff was justified in having a provisional seizure issue.

There is no merit in defendant’s contention that the lease was not binding for the reason that it was not recorded at the time of the purchase of the property by plaintiff. The facts are that the lease was entered into by plaintiff and Victor M. Mahr on the 24th day of June, 1929; Mahr was at the time owner of the property. The lease was not filed or recorded until later. On July 25, 1929, Victor M. Mahr executed a deed to the property to plaintiff herein, and in that deed it provides that the sale is made subject to certain leases affecting said property describing other leases, and “one in favor of Jitney Jungle, Incorporated, of Louisiana, duly filed [839]*839and recorded, in the Clerk’s Office of Caddo Parish, Louisiana.”

The deed to plaintiff was 'filed and recorded July 26th, at 8:59 a. m., and the lease was filed and recorded on July 26, 1929, at 10:30 a. m. The lease filed in evidence shows the lessee to be the “Shreveport Jitney Jungle Company, Inc.,” and not “Jitney Jungle, Inc., of Louisiana.” The evidence fails to disclose that any other lease was entered into by defendant, and the fact that the name of the lessee in the lease contract and in the deed, with the assumption of the lease from Mahr to plaintiff, is different, is not raised by defendant, and justifies us, from the evidence, in assuming that the lease filed in the record is the same lease under which defendant held possession of the premises and the same lease plaintiff assumed when purchasing the property.

It is also true that the deed to plaintiff referred to a lease duly filed and recorded, when the lease filed in the record was not recorded until after the recordation of the deed, and neither was it filed for recordation until after the filing of the deed. This fact is what defendant bases one of its defenses on.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 So. 837, 19 La. App. 729, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pirkle-williams-inc-v-shreveport-jitney-jungle-inc-lactapp-1932.