Randol v. Tatum

33 P. 433, 98 Cal. 390, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 932
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1893
Docket14391
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 33 P. 433 (Randol v. Tatum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randol v. Tatum, 33 P. 433, 98 Cal. 390, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 932 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Temple, C.

Plaintiff appeals from an order granting defendants a new trial.

[393]*393The action is against sureties upon a bond given by the lessee to recover rent for the period of nine months, in the payment of which it is alleged default has been made. Defendants claim that the rent has been duly tendered month by month as it fell due, and therefore there has been no default.

There was a covenant in the lease to the effect that the lessee would not assign without the written consent of the lessor; also, a condition that if default were made the landlord might reenter and take possession without previous notice or demand.

The bond was conditioned that the lessee “shall in all things stand to and abide by and well and truly keep and perform the covenants, conditions, and agreements in the written lease contained on his or their part, to be kept and performed át the time and in the manner and form therein specified,” etc. The lease bore date July 17, 1882, and was for the term of ten years.March 4,1885, the lessor gave the tenants, George A. Davis and Company, written permission to assign to H. L. Tatum, who was one of the sureties and is a defendant herein, and the lease was assigned in accordance with' the permission on the same day. Tatum did not take possession of the demised premises, and it was evidently not expected that he would; for plaintiff testified that he understood that Davis was financially embarrassed, and that Tatum, as surety, desired the assignment so that he might have no trouble with the creditors of Davis. June 9, 1885, Tatum assigned to H. G. Billings, who entered under the lease and took posession of the premises, and on the 18th of the same month assigned to his wife, E. A. Billings. The last two assignments were made without the consent of the lessor in writing or otherwise. E. A. Billings carried on the business of selling agricultural implements, which were stored on the demised premises, which was a warehouse. The Gloster and Davis Implement Company was a copartnership, composed of D. M. Gloster and M. F. Lauden. They acted as the agents of E. Billings in the sale of the goods kept by her at the warehouse. Davis had no interest in the business, but his name was retained to secure the good will of the business formerly conducted by George'A. Davis and Company, and Davis was employed for a few months as clerk.

The agents were not let into possession of the warehouse, but [394]*394were furnished with duplicate keys so that they could have access to it when necessary. It was understood that E. A. Billings retained possession and H. E. Billings attended to her part of the business as her agent. Rents were paid by E. A. Billings regularly as they fell due until April 15, 1887, either by H. E. Billings as her agent or by the Gloster and Davis Implement Company, and by them charged to her. Receipts were given in the name of George A. Davis and Company until February 15,1886, and thereafter until December, 1886, in the name of the Gloster and Davis Implement Company, and thereafter until April, 1887, in the name of H. G. Billings, agent, and thereafter until September, 1887, in the name of D. M. Gloster.

The plaintiff claims and the court found that plaintiff supposed that Davis was a member of the firm of the Gloster and Davis Implement Company until April, 1887, when he admits that he was informed of the assignments and the claim of E. A. Billings. The rents sued for accrued after that time. H. E. Billings testified that he informed plaintiff of the facts as early as December, 1886, but the finding of the court that plaintiff did not know that Davis was not a member of the firm is not attacked on the motion for a new trial, as unsupported by the evidence.

The partnership, styled the Gloster and Davis Implement Company, was dissolved about March, 1887, and Gloster in the night time forcibly entered and took possession of the warehouse, ousting E. A. Billings, and kept possession until June, 1888, when E. A. Billings recovered possession through legal proceedings in which she claimed under the lease from plaintiff.

The rent due in April, 1887, was paid by D. M. Gloster, and also by E. A. Billings through H. G. Billings, agent. The first payment was by Gloster, and then Billings tendered the rent to Randol, showed him the lease and the various assignments, and was told by Randol, in ignorance, that the rent had already been paid, to pay it to his clerk, which was done. Upon discovering the fact of the double payment plaintiff offered to return to Billings the rent he had paid, and when Billings refused to receive it deposited the amount in a bank, and notified Billings of the fact in writing, stating that he had never recognized [395]*395Billings except as the messenger of the Gloster and Davis Implement Company, or of D. M. Gloster, and did not wish to deal with him in the future in any capacity, adding: “The Gloster and Davis Implement Company and D. M. Gloster, as the successor of said company, are the only ones whom I have and do now recognize as my tenants,” etc.

As a matter of fact, neither the company nor Gloster had any interest under the lease, or any color of right, but Billings was the real owner of the term, and had paid the rent up to that month when Gloster forcibly took possession. He claimed, however, that the partnership had been in possession and had paid the rent, and that he had succeeded to the rights of the partnership.

Plaintiff claims that in accepting rents prior to April, 1887, he did so in ignorance of the fact that there had been a second assignment; but there is no question but that he was fully advised at that time. He nevertheless continued to receive rents from Gloster, and to refuse them from E. A. Billings until August, 1888, when Gloster, having been sued by Billings to recover possession, ceased to pay. E. A. Billings, however, notwithstanding the refusal and the notice that plaintiff would not recognize her or receive rents from her, continued month by month to tender the rent to plaintiff at the time it fell due, under the terms of the lease, during the entire period in which the rents sued for accrued. Plaintiff invariably refused to accept it from her, saying that he would receive rents only from Gloster, because he was in possession. E. A. Billings did not, when plaintiff refused to receive her money in payment of rents, deposit the same or any of it in a bank or elsewhere, in compliance with the provisions of section 1500 of the Civil Code.

Motion for a new trial was made by defendants upon several grounds, including the claim that the findings are not sustained by the evidence, under which head many specifications are made. Also upon the ground that the judgment upon the findings should have been for defendants.

One specification in respect to the insufficiency of the evidence was the finding to the effect that plaintiff when he received rents from Billings as agent, and from the Gloster and Davis Imple[396]*396ment Company, believed that Davis was a member of that company, and that Billings was agent of the company or of Gr los ter. It cannot be denied that the evidence on this point is conflicting. Upon the theory adopted by counsel on both sides, and by the court, it was most material; for it tended to show that the plaintiff had not recognized the lease as continuing after knowledge of the second assignment. Indeed, the findings consist solely of probative facts, except as to finding Ho. 1, to the effect that all the allegations of the complaint are true.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P. 433, 98 Cal. 390, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randol-v-tatum-cal-1893.