Talbott v. English

59 N.E. 857, 156 Ind. 299, 1901 Ind. LEXIS 46
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1901
DocketNo. 18,880
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 59 N.E. 857 (Talbott v. English) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talbott v. English, 59 N.E. 857, 156 Ind. 299, 1901 Ind. LEXIS 46 (Ind. 1901).

Opinion

Hadley, J.

Six several actions were- brought by the appellee against the' appellants to recover the rent'for the premises known as “English’s Opera House.” The complaints in the several actions are founded on the-same writ[301]*301ten lease and are in all respects the same, except as they were for different instalments they differ in amounts and dates. The answers are the same in all the cases, viz.: (1) The general denial; (2) eviction by the plaintiff; (3) damages for.plaintiff’s refusal to renew the lease .and set-off; (4) set-off for money expended in the erection of a new stage, and (5) payment. The cases were consolidated and tried together. The court made a special finding of facts and stated five conclusions of law, to four of which appellants excepted, and to one of which appellee excepted. The court gave judgment for appellee in five of the causes, and for appellants for their costs in the other. Errors are assigned by appellants upon their exceptions to the conclusions of law, to the ruling denying them a new trial and to the overruling of their motion for a venire de novo. Cross-error is assigned by appellee upon his exception to the fifth conclusion of law.

The principal contentions arise upon the issues of eviction and payment. The material facts disclosed by the special findings are that on August 21, 1893, William H. English, now deceased, by the writing sued on, leased to appellants his opera house in Indianapolis for a term of three years from Tune 1; 1894, for $6,250 per annum, payable in ten equal instalments of $625 each month until fully. paid, beginning August 1st of each year. Appellee succeeded to the ownership of the opera house and hotel, being parts of the same building, on March 23, 1896, subject to the unexpiréd term of. appellants’ lease upon the opera house, and was entitled to the rents accruing after said date.

Relating to the third paragraph of answer the facts are: Soon after appellee became the owner of the opera house the parties expressed to each other satisfaction in their business relations with respect to the theatre, and mutually expressed a willingness to extend the lease for another period of years upon its expiration, if terms could be agreed upon. Negotiations for a renewal of the lease continued [302]*302through the summer by further conversations and correspondence, and closed in September, 1896, without any agreement for a renewal of the lease having-been made. With respect to the answer of set-off for money expended in the construction of a new stage, in the-spring of 1896, it was agreed between -the parties that appellee should furnish the lumber and the appellants the labor for the rebuilding of the stage, and in pursuance of which agreement . appellee did furnish the-lumber and • appellants the labor, and the stage was reconstructed under- said special agreement, and not under an agreement that appellants should have the theatre for a further term. Upon the issue of eviction the facts are that in the latter part of May, 1896, appellee entered into written contracts with carpenters, plumbers, marble workers, and layers of mosaic tiling, to make alterations ' and repairs, á substantial part of which was' to be done in the theatre (which right of the landlord to make alterations and repairs is expressly stipulated in the lease), but the greater portion of them were in and for the benefit of the English hotel; owned by appellee and part of the same building; that the entrance to the theatre, being a part of the leased premises, is adjacent-to the entrance and lobby of the hotel, and separated therefrom only by a wall through which openings for doors existed and in which doors were hung; the terms of these contracts made each of the contractors- an independent contractor. The work done in'the theatre and- entrance consisted of changing the steam heating apparatus in the theatre, rewiring the theatre for electric lighting, and the building of a new stage 'entrance from the rear. In the main entrance of' the theatre changes were made in the wires for electric lighting; the old radiators for supplying heat were removed, and new radiators put in; the box office was changed from the east to the west side of the entrance; one of the doors between the hotel lobby and the theatre entrance was: taken out and the aperture closed, and a window cut and put in the same wall; the changes in the [303]*303entrance and removal of the box-office were made with the' consent and approval of the appellants; the changing of the wiring for electricitywas done upon the requirements_of the board of underwriters in thé city of Indianapolis to lessen the risk of fire; some of'the contractors began work about the 1st of June, another about the 17th of June, and another about the 30th of July, and the work continued .to about the 14th of September; from an early period in the prosecution of the work of alteration and repair of the hotel the 'employes of the several contractors engaged-in the work did at different times, and sometimes to a very Considerable extent, deposit building material in the entrance to the theatre, and ¿t one'time some bid tiles-taken-from the hotel floor'were piled in the entrance to the theatre; the old radiators in-the entrance were disconnected from the system of heating and allowed to stand in their old position until the new radiators were brought and substituted for them-; at one time a steam heating table was brought into the entrance from the' hotel and was allowed to remain there for some time, but it was so done with the express consent of the defendants; and a small mortar box was constructed in the entrance by some of- the employes of one of the contractors; that the- amount of building material and other matter ’thus placed in-the entrance would greatly • hinder the passage of persons through such entrance, and it would scarcely -have been practicable to have given any performance in the theatre while the entrance was thus encumbered, but at no time, was the entrance so encumbered' but that a few workmen might have removed it' in one day or less. Appellee was in the city and living in the hotel from the time of entering -into said contacts until about the 24th. of July; that on one occasion he saw an employe of one of the contractors doing some work in the theatre entrance, to be- used in the hotel, and' notified him it could not be done there, and it was promptly removed. At another time he found' and ordered buckets used by the workmen removed from the theatre en[304]*304trance. Shortly before June 15th, the appellants desired to give a series of entertainments at the English. Opera House, but finding that the theatre was not then in a suitable condition transferred the same to the Grand Opera House, another theatre .under their control in the city of Indianapolis; that no complaint was made by appellants to the appellee, nor to any agent or representative of the latter of the condition either of-the theatre or the entrance thereto until November 5th, although appellee, or his general agent, or his architect in charge of the work under said contracts, was at all times in the city and living at the hotel. On August 1, 1896, appellants transmitted by mail to appellee a check for $625, being the instalment of rent that day falling due, without any statement or complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.E. 857, 156 Ind. 299, 1901 Ind. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbott-v-english-ind-1901.