Senter v. Propst

197 So. 100, 190 Miss. 190, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 176
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1940
DocketNo. 34176.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 197 So. 100 (Senter v. Propst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Senter v. Propst, 197 So. 100, 190 Miss. 190, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 176 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Propst filed his bill in equity in which he prayed to be relieved of a claim of forfeiture asserted by appellants for nonpayment of rent, which was due by Propst and in *200 default, and lie asserted that in equity lie was entitled to tender the amount of rent in default and be re-instated to possession of the leased premises, and that his contract with the American Oil Company be enforced as to rent due by it to him. He alleged that his ejection as tenant was procured by fraud and collusion between the American Oil Company, subtenant, and J. T. Senter, landlord, and he generally prayed for a restoration of the status quo before the eviction.

The appellants, the American Oil Company and Senter, by their answer, denied the charge of fraud, denied that the American Oil Company was a subtenant of Propst, but alleged that the American Oil Company was the assignee of all the right and title which had been invested in Propst by his contract with Senter. A lease contract from Senter to Propst was exhibited in the pleadings and offered in evidence; likewise a contract between Propst and the American Oil Company was also exhibited and offered in evidence.

The Reporter will set out these contracts in full in stating the case. 1

The court below decreed that Propst, the complainant there, was entitled to full relief, set aside the eviction as fraudulent, and entered a money decree for rent in arrears against the American Oil Company and issued an injunction to enforce the decree.

On the 13th day of February, 1931, S. N. Propst entered into a lease contract with J. T. Senter by the terms of which he leased from Senter certain real property in the Town of Fulton. This land was an unimproved lot upon which appellee, Propst, erected a filling station building and put thereon necessary instrumentalities with which to operate a filling station. By its terms this lease was to begin on April 1st, 1931, and continue for a term of ten years thereafter, for which Propst was to pay Senter $60 per year. At the time of the execution of the lease, it was *201 arranged between Propst, Senter and the Tnpelo Bank at Fnlton that the annual rental was to be paid to the Tupelo Bank on an indebtedness owed it by Senter, and the bank agreed that in ease of foreclosure on Senter’s property of which the land included in this lease was a part, that Propst would be protected by the bank in his possession thereof. Propst paid the first year’s rental of $60 on April 1st, 1931, and after that date until October 5, 1937, he never paid to the bank or to Senter any further rent. On that day Senter declared a forfeiture of the lease because of the failure of Propst to pay the rent and acquired possession by a demand upon Cunningham, the agent of the American Oil Company, which was cheerfully granted by Cunningham to Senter. Cunningham examined the contract of Dr. Senter and yielded the possession of the premises to him. Within the week Cunningham assisted Senter in re-letting the property to another by written lease for a term of one year and a rental of $25 per month. Cunningham procured this contract to be written by his lawyer in Tupelo and carried it back to Fulton and the proposed tenant in the execution of the contract.

Propst conducted a filling station business on the property until the 11th day of May, 1934, when he entered into a contract with the American Oil Company by which he put the latter in possession of the Ffilton premises for a minimum rental of $100 per month, and an excess of that amount in the event the sales of gasoline and oil warranted additional payments at a specific rate per gallon. The American Oil Company promptly paid to Propst the minimum rental of $100 per month up to and including October 1,1937. Propst at the time of the alleged eviction was a citizen of Coliman, Alabama, though he had filling stations in Mississippi, and Dr. Senter testified that he was at all times solvent.

No demand was ever made on Propst by Senter or the bank for the payment of the rent. No forfeiture was ever declared on any of the due dates of the lease contract, existing between Propst and Senter by anyone, and Propst *202 did not know that the American Oil Company had yielded up peaceable possession of the premises until about the 12th or 13th of October when the American Oil Company ratified the action of its agent Cunningham and notified him that they had been evicted from possession by Senter and considered their lease contract terminated, and enclosed to Propst a check for the few days’ rental due in October. Senter likewise notified Propst about the same date that he had declared a forfeiture. When Propst received these notices he promptly went to Fulton, within a few hours, and demanded that Senter re-instate him in possession of the premises, and finally he and his attorney went to the bank and tendered the amount of rent in arrears, with interest thereon properly calculated. The bank, on the instruction of Senter, declined to receive this tender of the rent. Senter waived a tender by declining to put Propst in possession of the leased premises.

The circumstances of the surrender are important and material. For some months the filling station at Fulton had not been open and operated by the American Oil Company. The chancellor was warranted in finding that the American Oil Company desired to be released from its obligation to pay Propst $100 per month. On the 5th day of October, Cunningham, the agent of the American Oil Company, went to the filling station in Fulton, opened it up, and was sweeping out when Dr. Senter, seeing him there, went to the station, asked Cunningham what he was doing, to which he replied that he thought they might reopen and begin operations or maybe sublease to someone else. Thereupon Senter told him that the rent had not been paid for six years, and, under the terms of the lease contract between him, Senter, and Propst, he was entitled to declare a forfeiture of the lease and take possession of the premises on account of the non-payment of rent by Propst. Cunningham examined the lease contract between Propst and Senter, surrendered the premises without any request for them to notify his principal or to notify Propst.

*203 After the surrender in this fashion to Senter of the premises, and after Senter had procured another tenant, the American Oil Company then notified Propst for the first time. Likewise, Senter notified him for the first time that he had been evicted from the premises. The evidence shows that in the improvement of the land in controversy the appellee had expended in excess of $1,300, erected a building, graded the property, and otherwise made it fit for use as a filling station. It was provided in the lease contract between Propst and Senter that the buildings placed thereon should become a part of the real estate and at the expiration of Propst’s lease title that the buildings should vest with the real property in Senter, the landlord.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 100, 190 Miss. 190, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senter-v-propst-miss-1940.