Raapke & Katz Co. v. Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co.

118 N.W. 652, 82 Neb. 716, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 338
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1908
DocketNo. 15,366
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 118 N.W. 652 (Raapke & Katz Co. v. Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raapke & Katz Co. v. Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co., 118 N.W. 652, 82 Neb. 716, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 338 (Neb. 1908).

Opinion

Calkins, C.

This was an action upon a supersedeas bond given upon appeal to the district court from a judgment of restitution rendered by the county court of Douglas county in an action of forcible entry and detainer between the same parties. The bond was given October 7, 1905, the appeal dismissed April 10, 1906, and the defendants surrendered the premises April 15, 1906. The only controverted question of fact in the trial of this case in the district court was the rental value of the premises; the plaintiff alleging it to be $250 and the defendant denying that it exceeded the sum of $100 a month. The jury found against the defendant the Selimoller & Mueller Piano Company in the sum of $1,625, and against its surety in the sum of $1,463. From a judgment rendered upon this verdict the defendants appeal.

1. On the 7th day of September, 1903, Meyer & Raapke h>.t the premises in question to Hockstrasser & Kunde for a term of two years from said date, reserving an annual rent of $1,800 for the first and $1,500 for the second year of said term, with an option to the lessee to take the premises for a third year at an annual rent of $1,800. The defendant Selimoller & Mueller Piano Company came into possession of the premises by virtue of an assignment of this lease;, but refused to either avail itself of the option to take the same for a third year or to surrender possession of the premises at the end of the two-year term. The period of wrongful holding for which the action of forcible entry and. detainer was brought against it was embraced in the year covered by this option. The plaintiff called four witnesses qualified to give an opinion as to the rental value of the premises, who placed the same at from $200 to $250 a month, while a like number of witnesses called by the defendants estimated the rental value at from $125 to $150 a month during the period in question. Although it appears from the cross-examination of one witness that there had been a change in rental [719]*719values prior to April 15, 1905, there is nothing in the record to show the condition of the rental market in September, 1903, at which date the lease in question was made, compared with the period of the wrongful holding. This being the state of the record, the defendants offered the lease in evidence for the purpose of showing the rental value for the period in dispute. This evidence was excluded on the objection of the plaintiff, and it is urged that the failure of the district court to permit this fact to go to the jury constitutes error. Only two cases are cited, Fogg v. Hill, 21 Me. 529, where similar evidence was held to be properly admitted, and Dietrichs v. Lincoln & N. W. R. Co., 12 Neb. 225, where, the question being the value of land March 30, 1880,. it was held error to admit deeds made to the owner in pursuance of an administrator’s sale had on April 10, 1877. This case might be distinguished on the ground that the sale was a compulsory one, but it was followed in Omaha S. R. Co. v. Todd, 39 Neb. 818, where the purchase seems to have been at voluntary sale. However, we think the district court had the right to exclude this evidence on principle. The fact in issue was the rental value of the premises. The rule that any fact that shows a fact in issue does or does not exist, or probably does or does not exist, is subject to exceptions and limitations, one of which is that the judge may exclude evidence of facts otherwise relevant which appear to him too remote to be material under all the circumstances of the case. Stephens, Digest of the Law of Evidence, ch. 2, art. 2. While the fact that the owners in September, 1903, made a lease of the property in question for a term of two years, in which the rent was reserved at the rate of $150 a month for the first year, $125 for the second year, and with an option for a third year at $150 a month, in the absence of any other evidence, furnishes some idea of the value of the property, it is of little or no weight in solving the problem presented to the jury, which was at what figure between $125 and $250 a month the actual rental value [720]*720should be fixed. The most that the making of the lease Avould prove is that the parties making the same estimated that the rental value of the property would be that therein named. There is no presumption that the property in a rapidly growing and changing city will remain of the same value from year to year, and the estimate made in the year 1903 is too remote to be received as evidence of the rental value in 1905.

% The defendants offered to prove by the witness Turner, manager of Schmoller & Mueller Piano Company, that on September 15, 1905, the president of the plaintiff company stated that the defendants might have the property at the rate of $150 a month for the period of one year, and assigned the rejection of such testimony upon the objection of the plaintiff as error. Whether such offer could have been received in evidence if the option referred to had not been contained in the lease it is not necessary to determine. Under that option the Schmoller & Mueller Piano Company was entitled to hold the premises for another year at the rate of $150 a month, and the statement by the president of the plaintiff company that it could hold the property for a year on those terms was no more than a statement of the terms of the option. It could not be construed as an estimate or admission of the rental value.

3. Upon the cross-examination of one of the witnesses called by the plaintiff to testify as to the rental value of the premises, he was examined concerning his knowledge of the character of other property in the neighborhood and as to his knowledge of what the same actually rented for. There appears to have been a building in the vicinity of- the property in question known as the “Ravage Building”; and, the witness having testified that he had not made any inquiry and did not know what the corner room in that building rented for, he was asked to say what the reasonable rental value of the same would be. This question was objected to as not proper cross-examination, and, the court having sustained the objection, the defendants [721]*721now insist that such ruling was erroneous. The defendants were entitled to examine the witness concerning his knowledge of rental values in the vicinity in order that the jury might have the facts, circumstances and reasons upon which the witness’ opinion was based, but this did not give the right to ask the opinion of the witness as to the rental value of other property in the vicinity. This was not a fact, circumstance or reason upon which his opinion was or could be based, and the evidence was properly excluded. Similar questions propounded to two of the plaintiff’s other witnesses were excluded for the same reason. What we have said with reference to the cross-examination of. the witness Mithin applies to these witnesses.

4. The defendants sought to prove the reasonable rental value of the premises for the piano business, and contend that the refusal of the court to permit them so to do was erroneous, as well as the instruction of the court which did not confine the rental value to the piano business. There is no merit in this contention. The defendants were wrongfully detaining the property, and the plaintiff was entitled to the highest price it would bring for any lawful use to which it was adapted and for which it was available. Lowe v. City of Omaha, 33 Neb. 587; Maul v. Drexel, 55 Neb. 446; City of Omaha v. Croft, 60 Neb. 57.

5.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 N.W. 652, 82 Neb. 716, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raapke-katz-co-v-schmoller-mueller-piano-co-neb-1908.