Polhamus v. Roberts

175 P.2d 196, 50 N.M. 236
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1946
DocketNo. 4977.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 175 P.2d 196 (Polhamus v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polhamus v. Roberts, 175 P.2d 196, 50 N.M. 236 (N.M. 1946).

Opinion

BRICE, Justice.

This action in ejectment was instituted by plaintiffs (appellees) to recover from defendant possession of certain real estate situated in Roswell, New Mexico, and to recover damages for its retention. Defendant claims the right to possession under an alleged lease from plaintiffs. 'From a judgment for plaintiffs defendant has prosecuted’this appeal.

The facts necessary to a decision are substantially as follows:

The property in question is owned one-half by the plaintiff, Birdie Polhamus, and the other one-half by plaintiffs Norma Jane Savage and Martha Lee Savage, who are minors and plaintiff’s wards.

The defendant had been in possession of the building and operating a saloon therein under a lease from plaintiffs since 1941, paying monthly rental in advance. On or about January 15, 1945 he entered into an agreement to sell his saloon to J. A. Terry and Rulon Moody for $14,500 to be effective if the proposed purchasers could secure a lease of the real property in suit for a period of two years. The plaintiffs lived in Eureka, Kansas, and the defendant in Roswell, New Mexico.

On January 13, 1945 the defendant sent the following telegram to plaintiff:

“I have a chance to sell to two good men. They would like a two year lease or assurance of keeping the location. I am sick and have to sell my place. Please wire immediately.”

On the 15th day of January, 1945, the plaintiff replied to the telegram as follows:

“Will give two year lease on premises you occupy at $175 monthly. I am also ill and contemplate sale of the building as soon as possible. If you want lease please advise.”

The telegram was received by defendant on the same day; and upon its receipt Terry and Moody paid him $7500 as part of the purchase price of the saloon,'and were let into possession of the property.

Late in the afternoon of January 16, 1945, the defendant deposited in the United States Post Office at Roswell, postage prepaid, an air mail letter in answer to plaintiff’s telegram, as follows:

“Received your wire dated January 15, 1945, agreeing to lease me the Green Lantern for two years at $175 per month. I accept the lease proposition but as I wrote you before I am assigning all of my lease rights to the parties to whom I sold the bar, a Mr. J. A. Terry and Mr. Rulon Moody, and they desire to have a written lease from you, and consequently I have had a lease drawn up between you and Terry and Moody leasing this property for a term of two years.
“They have signed the lease in duplicate and when you sign the same it will be complete. You can keep one copy and mail the other copy back to me for the purchasers.
“I am- also enclosing check of Moody and Terry for $175 for the first month’s rent beginning January 20, 1945.
“I am sure these parties I am selling to will keep all rental paid promptly each month and will take good care of the premises.
“If the lease is not satisfactory you can draw a new lease and send it down, but I think the lease is okey.
“Trusting I may hear from you by return mail returning the signed copy of the lease, and with best regards, I am, Etc.”

A proposed lease to Terry and Moody, to be executed by plaintiff, with Terry’s check for $175, was enclosed in the letter, ’which was received by plaintiff on the 19th day of January 1945.

On the 18th day of January 1945, and prior to the receipt of defendant’s letter, plaintiff telegraphed the defendant as follows :

“Please disregard my wire of January 15 regarding lease. Believe building has been sold and will advise you of new owner as soon as possible.”

The proposed lease sent to the plaintiff by defendant, and J. A. Terry’s check for $175 for one month’s rent, enclosed therewith, were returned to the defendant and the offer to lease the property was rejected. The contemplated sale mentioned in plaintiff’s telegram was not consummated. The plaintiff on May 28,1945, leased the building to another for a period of ten years from that date, at $250 per month.

The defendant was duly served with notice to vacate and of the termination of tenancy to be effective July 23, 1945. In answer defendant offered to pay rent at $175 per month from January 20, 1945, to-that date, upon condition that plaintiff should recognize a two year lease in defendant, which tender was rejected.

The defendant paid no rent after January 20, 1945, and the court determined that the rental value of the property was $200 per month; that the plaintiff was entitled to recover possession of the property, together' with $135 per month from January 22, 1945 until July 23, 1945, and $200 per month thereafter until the premises should be-yielded to plaintiff.

Terry and Moody do not claim, and never have claimed, any lease on the premises. Upon their demand the defendant returned to them the $7500 which they had paid on the purchase price of the saloon, the reasonable market value of which in the meantime had depreciated $8000.

The trial court concluded from the foregoing facts, as follows:

“That the defendant having initiated the-negotiations by telegraph and Birdie Polhamus having answered by wire offering-a two-year lease at $175 per month and stating ‘If you want lease please advise/' and the defendant having elected to answer by mail, Birdie Polhamus was within her rights in withdrawing her offer prior to the receipt of the defendant’s letter.
“That no lease contract * * * and no contract to lease * * * resulted from the telegrams and correspondence, and that no lease resulted from such negotiations.
“* * * The defendant having failed to accept the counter offer made by Birdie Polhamus by telegram, and Birdie Polhamus having revoked such offer prior to the receipt of the letter, the defendant is without standing to assert that he has a lease on the property.”

The question is whether the telegrams and letter we have copied herein constituted a lease contract between the parties.

The defendant’s telegram of January 13 was an inquiry as to whether the plaintiff would lease her property to two unnamed persons to whom he “had a chance” to sell his saloon. He did not contemplate leasing the property himself.

The plaintiff’s answer was an offer to lease the property at $175 per month, but the lessee was not named. It would ordinarily be assumed that her offer to lease the property was tendered to the unnamed persons mentioned in defendant’s telegram, notwithstanding after the offer she added, “If you want lease please advise.” It was defendant who applied for the unnamed persons and the reply was properly addressed to him.

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Bluebook (online)
175 P.2d 196, 50 N.M. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polhamus-v-roberts-nm-1946.