Potts v. Park Investment Co.

161 N.E. 40, 27 Ohio App. 235, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 402, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 372
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 28, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 N.E. 40 (Potts v. Park Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. Park Investment Co., 161 N.E. 40, 27 Ohio App. 235, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 402, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 372 (Ohio Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mills, J.

This cause, being an action for damages for breach of contract to execute a lease, comes here on error to the court of common pleas, which at the trial below directed a verdict and rendered a judgment for $700, and interest, against Ben H. Potts, defendant below, called defendant here for convenience throughout the course of this opinion, *237 in favor of the Park Investment Company, plaintiff below, here again called plaintiff.

The plaintiff was the owner of certain land and buildings known as the Oxford Apartments, at 2100 Surrey road, in Cleveland Heights, and defendant was, by virtue of a certain written lease, the tenant of suite 6 on the third floor of said apartment building for a specified term of 10 months, ending August 31, 1924, at a specified rental of $140 a month.

The petition alleges that on August 14,1924, while defendant was still occupying suite 6, the plaintiff made defendant a written offer to renew the lease for a period of one year, beginning September 1, 1924, and that on August 20,1924, defendant made a written acceptance of the offer, and occupied the suite under said agreement during the month of September, paying the rent therefor, but thereafter vacated said premises and repudiated the contract, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $700 rental for the months of October to February, inclusive, with interest from December 1, the average due date on the monthly installments of rent.

• Defendant admits the receipt of the written offer, and admits that he occupied the suite during the month of September, 1924, and that he paid the rent therefor; but he denies that he accepted in writing, or in any other manner, the plaintiff’s offer to renew the lease. It is conceded that defendant vacated the apartment before the end of September.

At the trial below there were admitted in evidence, without objection, the lease for the term ending August 31, 1924, and six letters received by defendant from the plaintiff, and two letters received by plaintiff from the defendant. These nine documents con *238 stitute all the material evidence bearing on the issue. No exceptions were taken to the trial court’s rulings on question of evidence, except in three instances where the plaintiff excepted to the exclusion of certain testimony offered by it as to three separate conversations between the defendant and certain officers of plaintiff corporation. Although the party whose proffered evidence was excluded in those three instances, was the prevailing party below, we shall pass upon his exceptions, as we shall enter the judgment here that the Court below should have entered.

The trial court refused to permit plaintiff to introduce the testimony of one of its officers to the effect that on either the last day of August or the first day of September, in two separate conversations over the telephone, the defendant orally agreed to execute the lease. That evidence was properly excluded,. since the petition alleged that the contract was in writing.

The trial court refused to permit plaintiff to introduce the testimony of an officer of the plaintiff corporation to the effect that, on or about September 15, “he told Mr. Potts that he was already bound by the letters which they had exchanged, and that Mr. Potts did not deny this.” Plaintiff’s assertion that defendant was bound by the Jetters already exchanged between the parties was the statement of a conclusion of law. If defendant’s failure to deny the correctness of that assertion be regarded as an admission, it was an admission of a conclusion of law. As such, it was properly excluded. Chamberlayne on Evidence, Sections 1293, 2325, 2365, and 2367, and cases there cited.

Plaintiff’s case therefore rests entirely upon the *239 correspondence between tbe parties. Tbe first three letters were as follows:

“Cleveland, 0., August 14, 1924.

“Mr. Benjamin H. Potts, Suite No. 6, Oxford Apts., Cleveland Heights, Ohio — Dear Sir: We beg to call your attention to your lease covering suite No. 6 in the Oxford Apartments, which expires as of the last day of August next. Rental on this suite for the year beginning September 1st next and ending August 31, 1925, will be $140 per month. Alb of the other terms and conditions of tenancy or lease to be the same as in your present lease.

“In order to obtain the apartment at this rental for the additional term indicated above, it will be necessary for you to notify us at once of your acceptance of lease for 1 year as above outlined. On receipt of such notice, we will immediately prepare lease, submit same to you, and endeavor to obtain your signature thereto. If you fail to sign and return the lease to us when submitted, as tenants sometimes do, we are to have the right, if we so wish, to elect to hold that this letter and notice of acceptance by you constitute a lease as above provided, or we may hold that no lease or contract for lease exists.

“If you do not accept a further lease for 1 year as above stipulated and we do not rent the premises to others and by any combination of circumstances, you continue in the premises after the last day of September next, such continuance will be held by us to be an agreement on your part for extension of 1 year of your present lease by reason of what *240 is termed a ‘hold-over,’ at the rental stipulated above and under all the other terms and conditions mentioned in your present lease. If you have arranged for other quarters and do not wish to continue as a tenant, we will appreciate it if you will so advise us on receipt of this letter..

“We wish to express, further, our appreciation of your past tenancy and to thank you therefor, also to express the wish that you may continue to be numbered among the tenants of the apartment.

“Very truly yours,

, “Park Investment Company,

“By J. G-. Heckelman.”

“Cleveland, Ohio, August 20, 1924.

“Park Investment Company, Cleveland, Ohio. Attention Mr. J. 6r. Heckelman — G-entlemen: Referring to your letter of August 14th, it is our intention to remain in property at 2100 Surrey road, and you can prepare lease accordingly.

“There is only one thing, Mrs. Potts has not been at all well- and it is now quite a task for her to climb to the third story and we would like to know if we have first choice on second story, either building, preferably the one toward Euclid boulevard. Do you know whether either of these four tenants contemplate moving? Otherwise we can remain in our present quarters until such time as there is a vacancy in one of the four apartments mentioned. We might also consider one of the first floor apartments.

“Will you write me in preparing lease for present quarters, giving us the assurance wé can have the refusal of apartments as mentioned above if vacated, *241 until we make selection of some particular apartment.

“Yours very truly,

“B. H. Potts, 2100 Surrey.”

“August 22, 1924.

“Mr. B. H. Potts, 2100 Surrey Road, East Cleveland, Ohio.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 N.E. 40, 27 Ohio App. 235, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 402, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-park-investment-co-ohioctapp-1927.