Standard Livestock Co. v. Pentz

269 P. 645, 204 Cal. 618, 62 A.L.R. 1239, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 729
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1928
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11931.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 269 P. 645 (Standard Livestock Co. v. Pentz) 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
Standard Livestock Co. v. Pentz, 269 P. 645, 204 Cal. 618, 62 A.L.R. 1239, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 729 (Cal. 1928).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

The plaintiff herein appeals from a judgment rendered and entered after a directed verdict in the defendant’s favor. The action is one for the recovery of both general and special damages for the breach of the *621 implied covenant of quiet enjoyment in a lease executed by the defendant on November 1, 1917, to the assignor of the plaintiff, and covering a large tract of land in the county of Mendocino, chiefly adapted to the raising and breeding of stock. The plaintiff in its second amended complaint sets forth said lease in full and also sets forth the written assignment thereof from one P. B. Noonan, the original lessee named therein, to the plaintiff, together with the written consent to such assignment on the part of the lessor. The plaintiff further avers its entry upon said premises under said lease and the performance by it of all of the covenants and agreements therein to be by it performed prior to its eviction from the premises covered thereby; and also avers its various acts and expenditures in the way of stocking and operating said premises as a stock ranch up to the time of its eviction therefrom. The plaintiff then proceeds to allege that at the time of the making and execution of said lease there were in existence two mortgages made and executed by a prior owner of said premises and then held and owned by the First Federal Trust Company, a corporation; that said mortgages and the moneys due thereon not having been paid, the said mortgagee, on November 6, 1918, commenced an action for the foreclosure thereof in the superior court in and for the county of Mendocino, to which action both the plaintiff and the defendant herein were made parties, together with certain other defendants; that in due course in said action a decree of foreclosure and sale was duly given and made, under the terms of which the whole of said premises was sold to one W. H. Sullivan on the eighth day of November, 1919; that a deed thereto was in due course, one year later, executed and delivered to said W. H. Sullivan as the purchaser at said judicial sale; that thereupon the said purchaser demanded of the plaintiff herein that it surrender and abandon the possession of the whole of said leased premises to the said purchaser, and this demand being refused, the said W. H. Sullivan applied to and procured from the said superior court a writ of assistance, under which writ, in the hands of the sheriff of said county, the plaintiff herein, with all of its properties then upon said premises, was ejected and removed from said premises and the whole thereof on the twenty-eighth day of February, 1921, and *622 the said plaintiff and its said properties have ever since been excluded therefrom; that said plaintiff resisted said eviction, by all of the legal means within its power, unsuccessfully. The plaintiff then alleges that the defendant herein at all times knew of the existence of said superior mortgages of the First Federal Trust Company and of the institution of said action for the foreclosure thereof. The plaintiff then proceeds to allege that under the terms of section 1927 of the Civil Code the lessor of said premises was obligated to secure to the plaintiff herein, as the assignee of said lease, the quiet possession of said premises against all persons lawfully claiming the same, and that such obligation became and was a part of said lease; that the plaintiff herein, immediately upon the commencement of said foreclosure action, notified the defendant herein, as such lessor thereof, and demanded that he maintain and keep the plaintiff herein in the quiet and peaceable possession of the whole of said leased lands and premises; that said defendant not only failed so to do, but, on the contrary, united with The Bank of California National Association, a corporation, and a co-defendant in said foreclosure action, in filing a cross-complaint in said action, wherein the plaintiff herein was also made a cross-defendant, and wherein it was alleged that the plaintiff herein claimed some right, title, or estate in the property described in said lease and in said action, but that such claim was subsequent and subject to the right, title, interest, and estate of said corporation and also the defendant herein as the said cross-complainants in said foreclosure action; that the plaintiff herein was obliged to appear in said action to defend itself against said cross-complaint; that when said cause came to trial upon the original complaint, and also upon said cross-complaint, it was adjudged and decreed by said court that the lease of the plaintiff herein was in full force and effect at the date of said decree and was prior to and superior to the right of the said Bank of California National Association and of the defendant herein, as asserted in their said cross-complaint, but was subject and subordinate to the right of the First Federal Trust Company, the original plaintiff in said foreclosure suit. The plaintiff further alleges that it had paid all of the rents due and owing under the provisions of said lease up to and including the thirtieth day of Novem *623 her, 1918; that upon the institution of said foreclosure action the plaintiff herein offered and agreed to pay to the defendant herein the rents subsequently to accrue under the terms of said lease, provided said defendant would protect and agree to protect the plaintiff herein in the quiet and peaceable possession of said leased premises against said foreclosure action and the claims of the plaintiff therein thereunder, but that the defendant herein failed and refused so to do. The plaintiff then proceeds to allege, with ! much of detail, the damages, both general and special, ] which it sustained as the result of its aforesaid eviction from said leased premises, both as to the loss of the value of its said term and of the particular losses which it suffered in the way of the destruction of and detriment to its property due to said eviction, and the hardships with which it was executed and attended. It is not necessary to refer to these averments with much of detail for the purposes of this decision, but as a result thereof it is sufficient to state that the plaintiff herein prayed for general and special damages in the aggregate sum of $112,214.

The defendant in his answer to the plaintiff’s second amended complaint admits the making and execution of said lease, the assignment thereof to the plaintiff, his consent to said assignment, the possession thereof of the plaintiff thereunder and the eviction of the plaintiff from the premises by the holder of a superior title, as set forth in the plaintiff’s said complaint, and denies most of the other averments therein contained. The defendant alleges that in the making and execution of said lease to the original lessee, and in the consent to the assignment thereof to the plaintiff, he was acting throughout not as the owner of said premises but at all times as the agent and representative of one L. B. McMurtry, and was known by the said original lessee so to be and so to be acting. He denies, for want of information and belief, practically all of the plaintiff’s averments with respect to its operation of and expenditures upon said premises, as 'well as its alleged losses incident to its eviction therefrom. In addition to its foregoing denials the defendant pleads the following special defenses: He alleges that the plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by the provisions of section 337, subdivision 1, section 338, subdivision 1, and section 339, subdivision 1, of the Code of Civil Procedure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P. 645, 204 Cal. 618, 62 A.L.R. 1239, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-livestock-co-v-pentz-cal-1928.