Smith v. Whitbeck

13 Ohio St. 471, 13 Ohio St. (N.S.) 471
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 13 Ohio St. 471 (Smith v. Whitbeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Whitbeck, 13 Ohio St. 471, 13 Ohio St. (N.S.) 471 (Ohio 1862).

Opinion

SutlifR, C. J.

There are numerous exceptions presented in the record, to the holding of the justice of the peace, upon the trial before him. It was really a trial of the right of possession between the parties. When the plaintiff, Smith, gave in evidence the lease showing an unexpired term granted by the defendant to him, it made a prima facie case, on his part, to recover possession of the premises. It then became necessary for the defendant, Whitbeck, to show that the term, which, by the indenture or lease, appeared to have been conveyed by Whitbeck to him, Smith, really did not exist in fact. This might have been shown by proof of a surrender or a forfeiture; or, in short, by any proof that the lease was not, in fact, in force between the parties at the time of the trial.

The defendant relied upon a termination of the estate expressed in the written lease, by a forfeiture and re-entry. If shown by proof that a forfeiture and'a legal re-éntry had occurred, the defense would be perfect; but it was incumbent upon the defendant to make full and satisfactory proof of this defense ; since forfeitures are never favored in law.

He who asserts for himself title by forfeiture, must prove it by establishing every fact, and showing every circumstance and condition requisite to constitute the forfeiture, without the benefit of any presumptions in his favor.

The old books furnish much ancient and curious learning upon the subject of forfeiture of estates by tenants; but it is unnecessary here to do more than barely glance at the old and well-established rules upon the subject, in order to see whether the facts of this case are in accordance therewith.

In Coke upon Littleton (lib. 3, estates upon condition, 202a), it is said: “ though the rent he behind and not paid, yet,. [478]*478if the feoffor doth not demand the same, he shall never e^iter,” etc. “ Secondly, The demand must be made on the land, because the land is the debtor. * .* * If there be a house upon the land, he must demand the rent at the house. And he can not demand it at the back doore of the house, but at the fore doore, because the demand must ever be made at the most notorious place. And it is not material whether anyone be there or not. * * * And all this is to be understood, when the feoffor is absent, for if the feoffee cometh to the feoffor at any place on any part of the ground on ihe day of payment and offer his rent, albeit, they be not at the most notorious place, nor at the last instant, the feoffor is bound to receive it, or else he shall not take any advantage of any demand of the rent for that day. Therefore, the place of demand being known, it is further to be known what time the law hath appointed for the same. This partly ap-■peareth from that which hath been last said. For albeit the last time of demand of the rent is such convenient time before the sunn’s setting of the last day of payment, as the money may be numbered and received * * * notwithstanding, if the tender be made to him that is to receive it upon any part of the land at any time of the last day of payment, and he refuseth, the condition is saved for that time, for by the express reservation, the money is to be paid on the day indefinitely, and convenient time before the very last instant, is the uttermost time appointed by law, to the intent, that then both parties should meet together, the one to demand and receive, and the other to pay it, so as the one should not prevent the other.”

it will be remembered, that in the time of Coke and Bacon, the word “prevent” signified “to come before the usual time,” in which former, but now obsolete, sense, the word was • doubtless here used by Lord Coke.

And we find the following remark as to the time of payment of the rent by the lessee, in the case of Hill v. Grange, 1 Plowden Rep. 172, decided Michaelmas T., 3 Phil. & Mary.: “ So that his time to pay it continues until the separation of •day and night, which is the'time when the day ends and the [479]*479night begins. And, therefore, the lessee is not bound to be there before the last instant of the last time, and so (it was said) the opinion is held in 6 H. 7. And forasmuch as the lessee is not bound to pay the rent, until the last instant of the last day, for he is not bound to demand the rent until the other is bound to pay it; for if the law should force him to demand it sooner than the other is forced to pay it, it would be contrary to all reason, which our law is not, for it will not compel a man to make a vain demand or request for a thing which the other is not bound to pay. Yet, the law will compel him to make a demand, or else he should never enter, as it is held in 20 H. 6. And if the lessee does not come to the land the last instant of the last day to demand the rent, and the lessee be not there to pay it, the lessee shall never enter, because he ought to do the first act; that is, make a demand. And such demand shall not be until the other is bound to pay it, and that he is not, before the last instant of the.last day, which time is only material for them both,” etc.

And in the case of Fabian v. Winston, Croke’s Rep. 209, decided in C. B., at Mich. T., 33 Eliz.: “ the question was upon the avoiding of a lease upon condition for nonpayment of the rent.” * * * u And upon a special traverse the issue was, if the plaintiff by Edm. Bedle, demanded £7 10s. of rent due to him for half a year, the twentieth day after the feast, by the space of half an hour before the sunset. And upon the special verdict, it was found that the said Ed. Bedle petiit £1 10s. pro redditu dimidii anni Anglioe, for half a year’s rent prcefato J. Fabian tunc debit pro tenemen-tis prcedictis, and there remained demanding the rent by the space of a quarter of an hour, et non plus before the sunset, tanquam ad, and after the sunset; and that no rent was due but the half year’s rent,” then falling due. “ The question was, if this verdict was found for the plaintiff or defendant ? And all the court held as for the time, although it was not found to be half an hour, but a quarter of an hour; yet it was a good demand; for being demanded well enough for the time, it is not material, although it be not precisely according to the traverse. But they all held this demand of the rent [480]*480(then due), is not good; for he ought precisely to show upon his demand, what rent he demands; for, if it were due five years before, it was then due,” etc.

This case very well illustrates the rule as to the time when the demand should be made. A convenient time before sunset, was understood, it appears, by the counsel, to be certainly included in the space of half ah hour before sunset; for the averment so made by plaintiff’s counsel was traversed, and not demurred to by the defendant’s counsel. And when the verdict showed the time of the demand to have been from a quarter of an hour before, until and after the sunset, the court held the demand was made at the proper time.

Again, in the case of Duppa, executor of Baskerville v. Mayo, 1 Saund. Rep. 276, the question as to the time of demand was presented in Icing’s bench. Trin. T., 22 Car. 2. “ And Hale said,” (according to the report of the case) “ that although the time of sunset was the time appointed by law to demand rent, to take advantage of a condition of re-entry, and to tender it to save a forfeiture, yet the rent is not due until midnight; for if a man seized in fee makes a lease for years, rendering rent at the feast of St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio St. 471, 13 Ohio St. (N.S.) 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-whitbeck-ohio-1862.