Stewart v. Basey

241 S.W.2d 353, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2172
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1951
Docket9967
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 241 S.W.2d 353 (Stewart v. Basey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Basey, 241 S.W.2d 353, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2172 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinions

GRAY, Justice.

By a written contract appellants leased to appellee three store buildings identified as 1200, 1202 and. 1204 South Congress Avenue, in the City of Austin. The lease was for a term of five years beginning January 1, 1949, and ending December 31, 1954, and provided for a monthly rental of $325 per month, payable each month in advance.

Among others, the lease contract contained the following provisions:

' “ * * * The failure to pay any monthly installment of rental when such installment is due shall terminate this lease at the option of lessors. The failure of lessee to make said payment or payments or the breach of this contract otherwise by him shall render him liable to lessors, as agreed liquidated damages, the sum of One Hundred P'ifty (150.00) Dollars per month for each and every month of the unexpired term of this lease which shall become due and payable when the option to terminate this lease is exercised or at the time of the breach of this contract otherwise by lessee if any, and the payment thereof be secured by lien on the property of lessee in said store buildings at said time.
******
“That the violation of any term of this lease by either party hereto shall terminate the same at the option of the other.”

Appellee went into possession of the store buildings and continued to pay the monthly rentals through October 1949. Some time in September or October 1949, appellee advised appellants he was going to move and, afterwards, did vacate the [355]*355■buildings. After some negotiations between the parties, -appellee paid appellants the rental for the' month of November 1949, and then told appellants he was going to disregard the contract and would suffer the consequences. Afterwards, the keys to the buildings were delivered to appellants through attorneys.

Appellants sued for the stipulated liquidated damages, and, in the alternative, for actual damages.

Upon a nonjury trial the court rendered judgment for appellants for $38.50 as damages to the buildings caused by the destruction of a partition door, but denied all other relief.

Findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed. Among other findings the trial court found:

“7. Lessee moved from the leased premises during the early part of November 1949; that E. C. Stewart, one of the plaintiffs herein, after he had been advised that the defendant was not going to pay any further rentals other than those for the month of November, permitted the premises to remain in the hands of defendant until on or about December 5, 1949, at which time the plaintiff, E. C. Stewart, demanded the defendant to return the keys to the building to him.
"8. * * * that the entire premises remained vacant from December 1, 1949, until February 15, 1950, on which latter date the plaintiff leased a portion of' said premises under a written contract of lease, * * *_
“9. That the lessors, E. C. Stewart and wife, Jennie Eck Stewart, leased the premises known as 1200 and 1202 South Congress Avenue, Austin, Texas, and in addition thereto two four-room apartments and a large iron safe located in said building to the Royal Order of the Eagles, said lease contract beginning on March 1, 1950, and terminating February 28, 1955; * * *.
“11. Lessors have had possession and control of said leased premises to the exclusion of lessee from the time the said keys were delivered to them by said lessee, and as between lessors and lessee the lessors have retained exclusive possession and control of said premises since the date lessors demanded and received the keys from lessee.
“12. Lessors did take exclusive 'possession and control of said premises upon the delivery of said keys and that lessors' have retained exclusive possession and control thereof since that date.
“13. It was the intention of the lessors in demanding the keys of said lessee to take exclusive possession and control of said premises to the exclusion' of lessee.
“14. That lessors elected, and did elect, to rescind and terminate said lease contract as per their option to do so contained in said lease contract, and that when lessors released the premises, lessors did so for lessors’ own benefit and not for the benefit of lessee.
“15. That said lessee surrendered all of his rights in and to said premises and property to said lessors, and said lessors accepted said leased premises and property with the intention of accepting such surrender of said.-lessee.
“16. That by the termination of said contract by lessors, it was the intention of lessors that said lessee was to be discharged from any other further liability to said lessors after November 1, 1949, except as per the liquidated damages clause in said lease contract, and for cost of restoring said buildings to their prior conditions less normal wear and tear.
“17. I further find that the plaintiffs and the defendant by their respective attorneys agreed upon the trial of this cause that the difference between the amount of rental payments accruing to the plaintiffs by reason of the leases to the Royal Order of the Eagles and the Austin Neon Advertising Company, and the rental payments which would have accrued under the lease agreement between the plaintiffs and the defendant herein were ascertainable from a mere reading of the respective lessees”

The conclusions of law of the trial court material here are:

“1. I conclude as a matter-of law that under the provisions of the lease contract that upon the failure of the defendant and lessee to pay the rent due for the month of [356]*356December' 1949, the plaintiffs and lessors had the right to terminate said contract, and did terminate such contract, and exercised their option to terminate such contract, by demanding the keys of said lessee, by entering into possession and control of the premises to the exclusion of the lessee.
“2. I conclude as a matter of law that it was the intention of the lessors to release said lessee from any liabj|igr to them for future rents, or future damages, after said contract was terminated except insofar as the liquidated damages feature of the contract was applicable.
“3. I conclude as a matter of law that the provision for liquidated damages contained in the lease contract cannot be collected for such provision is a penalty.
“4. I conclude as a matter of law that lessors and plaintiffs having elected to terminate the contract and repossess themselves of the leased premises and are precluded from standing on the contract and collecting rentals or damages for failure to pay rentals thereunder, under the lease contract and the facts in this case.
“5. I conclude as a matter of law that the acts and conduct of lessors amounted to an acceptance of the surrender of the premises by lessee by operation of law.
“6.

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Stewart v. Basey
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Stewart v. Basey
241 S.W.2d 353 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W.2d 353, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-basey-texapp-1951.