Smoot v. Strauss

21 Fla. 611
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 Fla. 611 (Smoot v. Strauss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smoot v. Strauss, 21 Fla. 611 (Fla. 1885).

Opinions

The Chief-Justice

delivered the opinion of the court:

This suit was instituted -by appellants in the Circuit Court of Jefferson county, to recover rent for a store house in the town of Monticello, for the year expiring March 81st, 1883.

The proceeding was under the act of March 11th. 1879,. McC.’s Digest, 701 and 702. This act provides that any person to whom rent may be due, or his agent or attorney, shall be entitled to a distress warrant against the property of the defendant upon making an affidavit before the proper officer in the county in which the land rented lies,, stating the amount or quantity and value of the rent due for such land, and whether it is payable in money, cotton or other agricultural product or thing. The act further provides that an issue may be made in the case by the de[613]*613fendant denying that all or any part of the rent claimed is d.ue, and that no written pleadings shall be required. The act further provides that in case an issue is made a jury shall be sworn to try, and a true verdict render, whether any, and if any, what rent is due the plaintiff, as alleged in the affidavit.

The plaintiffs filed their affidavit claiming that defendant was indebted to plaintiffs in the sum of $200.00 lawful money for the rental of a certain store house, describing it “ payable according to their agreement in money.” The defendant filed an affidavit in accordance with the statute, •denying the allegation in their affidavit.

A jury was called and sworn to try the issue, whereupon ■a verdict was rendered for defendant and' judgment entered-in pursuance thereof. The plaintiffs moved the court for a new trial on the grounds :

1st. That the verdict is contrary to law.

2d. The verdict is contrary to evidence.

3d. The verdict is contrary to law and evidence.

4th. The jury were misled by the charge of the court.

5th. The Judge erred in refusing to charge the jury as ■requested.

6 th. The verdict works wrong and injury to the plaintiffs.

Which motion was denied by the court and plaintiffs appealed to this court.

In a proceeding of this nature the affidavit stands in lieu of and performs the functions of an ordinary declaration. The affidavit alleges that defendant was indebted to plaintiffs in the sum of j>800.00 lawful money, payable according to their agreement in money.

This being denied by defendant it was incumbent on the plaintiffs to prove it as alleged.

This court in Belton vs. Willis & Moseley, 1 Fla., 226, say: “ The court fully recognizes the doctrine that where a sum[614]*614mary remedy is given by statute those who wish to avail themselves of it must be confined strictly to its provisions and shall take nothing by intendment. See Longwood vs. Huntsville Bank, 1 Minor, 23 ; Young vs. Martin, 2 Yates, 312.

There is a total failure of the evidence to sustain it. The only evidence tending to prove it is in the deposition of the plaintiffs, read in evidence in the court below, that their instructions to their agent were to make such an agreement, and that they never authorized him to make-any other. This evidence is insufficient to support the allegation. If the defendant had introduced no evidence and had demurred to plaintiffs’ evidence the court should have sustained his demurrer.

To cross interrogatory 3, plaintiffs say the store was-rented to March 31st, 1883, for $200.00, which amount is still due. This answer is not in response to the interrogatory ; the interrogatory only inquires as to how much rent had been received, but the plaintiffs also say that they made the contract through their agent, that they were-non-residents, and all their knowledge of the contract is by information from him.

The defendant in his evidence denies that the rent was to be paid in money, and further, that it was to be-paid in goods to the attorney or agent. Admitting that such an agreement was void, if ever made, and we are still left without evidence to prove the agreement alleged in the-affidavit. The jury could not have found any other verdict-on the evidence. Taking this view of the case, we do not think the appellants could have been injured by any error in the court below in admitting in behalf of defendant illegal evidence, or by any error favoring the defendant by the court in charging the jury. May’s Executors vs. Seymour, 17 Fla., 725.

[615]*615The judgment of the court below denying a new trial is affirmed.

The following petition for a rehearing was then filed:

To the Honorable, the Supreme Court of Florida:

The petition of Sidney Gr. Hartshorn, as surviving executor of the will of Samuel E. Mabbett, late oí the City and State of New York, deceased, by Samuel Pasco, his solicitor and attorney, respectfully sets forth the following matters with his prayer for relief:

Your petitioner is the plaintiff in appeal in a certain cause submitted to this Honorable Court, at its present term, originally instituted in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County against Simon B. Strauss, numbered 16 on the dockets, and a decision has been pronounced sustaining the judgment of the court below.

The appeal is based upon alleged errors in law in the charge of the Judge of the Circuit Court to the jury, but it has failed upon the ground that there is an entire lack of evidence to sustain plaintiff’s case, and your petitioner desires to state more fully the facts upon which he rests and ro direct the attention of the Court to such parts of the record as sustain his position.

Your petitioner urges that the statute under which this remedy of distress is given applies alike to actual and implied bargains for renting land. The statute of 1866 (Chapter 1498) applied only to actual bargains framed in a particular way, and your petitioner believes that the Legislature desired to avoid the restrictive features of the old law and intended by this statute to give landlords a broader remedy, applicable to all classes of leases. The court has not dissented from this view.

Upon the basis that the contract here sued upon was an implied contract for rent your- petitioner respectfully di[616]*616rects the attention of the court to the testimony in the record by which it is supported.

The law will in general imply the existence of a tenancy whenever there is an ownership of land on the one hand and an occupation by permission on the other; for in all such cases it will be presumed that the occupant intended to pay for the use of the premises. Taylor on Landlord and Tenant, par. 19. On these points there is no dispute in the present case. Smoot and Hartshorn both testify that the store for which rent is claimed belonged to their testator in his life time, and that they had controlled and leased it in their representative capacity after his decease. Their character as executors was not denied. Rule of Ct. 57.

Andrew Denham testifies that Strauss, the defendant, occupied the store during the period for which rent was claimed.

Other witnesses testify as to the value of the annual rental. J. S. Denham fixes it at two hundred dollars in cash, the amount claimed by plaintiffs in their affidavit.

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Related

East Coast Stores, Inc. v. Cuthbert Et Ux.
133 So. 863 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1931)
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33 Fla. 715 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
21 Fla. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smoot-v-strauss-fla-1885.