Schramm v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co.

169 So. 116, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 315
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 22, 1936
DocketNo. 16018.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 169 So. 116 (Schramm v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schramm v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co., 169 So. 116, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 315 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Frederick C. Schramm is the owner of a large commercial building in this city, which, for several years, had been leased by Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company. From year to year the lease was customarily renewed by the execution of a new written contract. In the lease contract, with which we are now concerned, there was a stipulation which reads as follows: “At the expiration of this lease, or its termination for other causes, Lessee is obligated to immediately surrender possession, and should Lessee fail to do so, he consents to pay as liquidated damages five times the rent per day, with attorney’s fees, costs, etc. Lessee also expressly waives any notice to vacate at the expiration of this lease and all legal delays, and hereby confesses judgment with costs placing Lessor in possession to be executed at once. Should Lessor allow or permit Lessee to remain in the leased premises after the expiration of this lease, this shall not be construed as a re-conduction of this lease.”

This lease terminated on September 30, 1929, but the Yellow Cab Corporation did not vacate the premises until October 31, 1929. ■

Claiming that, by reason of the stipulation from which we have quoted, the said company had become obligated to him for rent for thirty-two days at five times the normal daily rate, plaintiff filed this suit seeking judgment for that amount (he has since conceded that the claim should have been made for only thirty-one days) and he included a claim for attorney’s fees of $150, in accordance with a stipulation in the lease under which, in case of default, a reasonable attorney’s fee is provided for.

In the alternative plaintiff alleged that, if it should be considered that, by the action of the defendant in remaining in the premises, a reconduction of the lease had been effected, then he should obtain judgment for the monthly rental which had accrued up to the time of the filing of the suit. This alternative claim has since been abandoned, it being now conceded that, because of the latter part of the stipulation, above quoted, there was no reconduction of the lease.

Therefore the claim, as we now find it, is for thirty-one days’ rent at five times the daily rate set forth in the lease and for an attorney’s fee.

Defendant admits the execution of the lease and concedes that it did not vacate the premises on September 30, 1929, and continued to occupy them during the entire month of October, but it maintains that this continued occupancy resulted from a new and independent agreement entered into with plaintiff during September, under which it was understood that it might continue in possession for an additional month' upon payment of rent at the rate set forth in the former lease, to wit, $260.34, instead of on the basis agreed upon as liquidated damages and fixed in the written lease at five times the normal daily rate.

On the merits, then, the case presents only one question, and that one of fact, viz.: Was the property occupied during October, 1929, as the result of a verbal agreement under which $260.34 was to be paid, or were the terms and conditions of that occupancy controlled by the provisions of the former lease. .

From a judgment sustaining the contention of defendant that only $260.34 was due, plaintiff has appealed. .

There are two preliminary questions of law which are raised by defendant, either of which, if settled in accordance with its views, would defeat the claim of plaintiff. The first is raised by motion to dismiss the appeal because of alleged acquiescence of plaintiff in the contention of defendant.

This contention is based on the fact that when defendant had, with its answer, tendered the amount admittedly due and had deposited this amount in the Registry of the court, plaintiff, on motion, obtained an order permitting him to withdraw the said amount. Defendant maintains that, where a larger sum is sued for, and a defendant, admitting indebtedness for a smaller sum, tenders the smaller sum and deposits it in court, the withdrawal of that smaller amount estops the plaintiff to proceed with the claim for the amount originally sued *118 for. .This contention made here by motion to dismiss the appeal was also made by exception in the district court. There the exception was overruled.

The order under which the deposit' was made and the order under which the amount thereof was withdrawn show plainly that there was involved nothing whatever resembling, in the slightest degree, a tender of an offer of compromise, or an acceptance of such an offer. The order, which authorized the deposit stated that it, the said deposit, represented “the amount admitted to be due by the defendant for the Month of October, 1929” and further set forth that the deposit was made “for the benefit of the plaintiff.” The order which authorized the withdrawal by plaintiff recognized the fact that the said withdrawal was “without prejudice to Mover’s rights to proceed with the prosecution of this suit, for recovery of the amount alleged to be due and owing under the contract herein sued on.” Of course, had there been any contention by defendant that it owed nothing whatever, and had it tendered the amount in an effort to compromise a possible liability for a larger sum, then the withdrawal by plaintiff would have estopped him to claim more, but that is not the case. On the contrary, defendant, though denying that it owed the amount claimed by plaintiff, admitted that it owed him $260.34 in any event. This admission was made without condition or reservation, and we see no reason which would prevent plaintiff from withdrawing the deposit so made.

The deposit was obviously made to avoid a possible liability for costs. There was no other object. Had there been any other condition, then the deposit would not have served the purpose for which it was made because, in order that a deposit have the effect of permitting the depositor to escape the payment of costs, it must be made as an unconditional tender, and not as an offer to compromise.

In Succession of O’Keefe, 12 La.Ann. 246, the Supreme Court said: “In order to make a valid tender, the money must be placed in the power of the adverse party. If paid into court, it must be with the intention on the part of the debtor that the creditor shall be at liberty to take it out of court.” See, also, R.C.C. art. 2140; Alexandrie v. Saloy, 14 La.Ann. 327.

In Jonathan Turner’s Sons v. Lee Gin & Machine Co., 98 Tenn. 604, 41 S.W. 57, 38 L.R.A. 549, a case much relied on by plaintiff, obviously the deposit was made under a statute which had been interpreted, by the Supreme Court as providing that the withdrawal of such a deposit should be construed as an acceptance of the amount deposited in full payment. The court discussed at length the distinction between a deposit made as a tender in full settlement and a deposit made of an amount admittedly due in any event, and said that in that case the deposit had been made under a statute which had been construed as requiring that the withdrawal should be considered as an acceptance of payment in full. That is not the situation which confronts ús. Here defendant’s answer, even if it had not been accompanied by a deposit of the amount admittedljr due, would have been sufficient to authorize a judgment pro tanto against it for the amount admittedly due and plaintiff would have been entitled to obtain that judgment and to have then litigated over the additional claim. See Act No. 157 of 1912, as amended by Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
169 So. 116, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schramm-v-toye-bros-yellow-cab-co-lactapp-1936.