Powder v. Neiss

7 Ohio N.P. 1, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 18 Ohio Dec. 766, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 31
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 Ohio N.P. 1 (Powder v. Neiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powder v. Neiss, 7 Ohio N.P. 1, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 18 Ohio Dec. 766, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 31 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

MoRRis, J.

(orally).

The defendant, Neiss, leased certain real estate from one Margaret Herb for a term of years. During his term Neiss sublet the premises for the remainder of his term to one Tschirret. Before the time of the original lease had expired Tschirret, by a written instrument containing the usual covenants of a lease, let the premises to the plaintiff, Powder, at .the same rental, for the whole of the unexpired time of the original lease, and Powder took possession. Subsequently the original lessor, Margaret Herb, brought an action in forcible entry and detention before a justice of the peace against Neiss, Tschirret and Powder, and a judgment for restitution of the premises was entered in said case against all the defendants. Neiss, however, did not appear, and the record in said case shows the return of the constable, as follows:'

“Received this writ Sept. 2, 1905/ and on Sept. 2, 1905, I served Ernest Powder by leaving a true copy at his usual place of residence, and Emil Tschirret and Prank Neiss in person.”

Thereupon, the plaintiff, Powder, paid Margaret Herb, who he claims in his petition was the owner of the paramount title, the sum of $100 in consideration of her allowing him to remain in quiet and undisturbed possession of the premises. And this action is brought by Powder against Neiss to recover as damages the $100 so expended by Powder to Herb, and in addition about $60 expended by him in costs, expenses and attorney fees in the forcible entry and detention case. Plaintiff claims the defendant, Neiss, is liable to him by reason of an implied warranty of title and quiet enjoyment contained in the lease of the premises,'which Neiss made to the plaintiff’s lessor, Tschirret; and [3]*3also by reason of alleged false representations on the part of Neiss as to the property in question.

At the conclusion of the evidence motion was made by the plaintiff for the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in his favor, and a like motion was made by the defendant for a verdict in his favor.

The plaintiff, Powder, is seeking to recover the amount he ac-

The ease is a very interesting one from several points of view, tually paid to the owner of the property, the original lessor, in order to secure peaceable possession of the premises in controversy, and he seeks to recover the expense he was put to in the case brought by the owner of the property to oust him from his possession.

The plaintiff in his petition sets forth two causes of action; one in contract, and the other in tort. And it is claimed now that although the plaintiff might not be entitled to have this ease go to the jury to determine the question made in the pleadings on the first cause of action, where the contract simply is involved, that it should be allowed to go to the jury on the question of tort; in other words, that the question should be submitted to the jury as to whether or not, under the evidence in this case and the law, „the plaintiff is entitled to recover dam-, ages against the defendant, by reason of the defendant’s deceiving him with reference to his title to this property at the time he entered into his contract with Neiss and Tsehirret, in view of his having known the intention and purposes1 of the parties at the time.

I am disposed to think, however, from the evidence as I recollect it — and I have paid pretty close attention to it — that there has been a complete failure here to show that the defendant was guilty of misrepresentation or fraud or willful deceit that would furnish a basis of recovery on the second cause of action. There-is nothing here that shows, or tends to show, it seems to me, that the plaintiff in this- ease was misled as to his rights or that he did not thoroughly understand the nature of the defendant’s connection with this title, and his rights under his contract with Mrs. Herb; or thait there was any act of the defendant that should have deceived him, or any representation [4]*4made by defendant that was misleading. There was no intention on defendant’s part to deceive him in any way. There is nothing in the ease supporting the cause of action based upon tort.

The only question, therefore, is whether, as the case now stands on -this record, the defendant is entitled tó a verdict. Now? the first and most interesting question is as to the character of this transaction entered into between Tschirret and Powder, by which Tschirret in the ordinary form of a land lease, as drawn in this state, conveys to Powder the property in question for a specific length of time (which in fact covers the exact time that Tschirret was entitled to hold the property under his lease with Neiss), in consideration of Powder’s agreement with Tschirret to pay a stipulated rent and to comply with its terms in all respects, and, on his failure to so comply with the -terms of the lease, to surrender whatever interest he had therein to Tschirret, and in -addition’ to that to surrender -to Tschirret, the property so conveyed, at' the expiration of the -term so fixed in the lease between these two parties.

The question is whether -that was an .assignment or a subletting. The plaintiff’s position is that, as the lease on its face .transfers the possession of this property to -the plaintiff for the identical time that -the lease from Neiss to Tschirret then had to run, and at the same rental, although it contained clauses of defeasance and a further agreement on the part of Powder to put Tschirret in possession -of the property, as if he were the owner of it, at the expiration of the lease — still it was an assignment and not a sub-letti-ng of Tschirret’s interest in the property. There seem to be authorities on both sides of that proposition; at least, there are eases that take the view of counsel on either side of this ease. There does not seem, however, to be a distinct holding either way by any court of this state, whose decisions or opinions -we. are required to follow.

I will say that, personally, I am impressed with the logic of the holdings of Massachusetts, Iowa and the other states, in the cases that have been cited by counsel for defendant, on this proposition: Dunlap v. Bullard, 131 Mass., 161; Collamer v. Kelley et al, 12 Iowa, 320; Hicks v. Martin, 25 Mo. App. Rep., [5]*5366; Martin et al v. O’Conner, 43 Barb., 514; People v. Elston et al, 39 Barb., 1; Koppel v. Tilyan, 70 N. Y. Suppl., 910; 2 Blackstone’s Com., p. 143; Post v. Kearney, 2 Comst. (N. Y.), 394.

Now Tschirret, who was confessedly a tenant of Neiss and who agreed in his lease that he would not sub-let or assign the premises without the consent of Neiss, .although there was no forfeiture clause in the lease provided he violated that part of the .contract, has made a straight lease of this property, containing all of the defeasance clauses that are in common use; there is no reference to the original lease which Neiss had of these premises; no reference to who owned the property or who owned an interest in it; and Powder binds himself at the expiration of the term named in the lease — or at any time during the period between the making of the lease and taking possession under it, and the time limited in the lease, provided he fails in any regard to comply with the terms of that instrument —to quit and deliver up the said premises to said Tschirret, as if' Tschirret was the absolute owner of the- same.

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7 Ohio N.P. 1, 7 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 18 Ohio Dec. 766, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powder-v-neiss-ohctcompllucas-1908.