Timmons v. McKinzie

189 P. 627, 21 Ariz. 433, 1920 Ariz. LEXIS 135
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1920
DocketCivil No. 1743
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 189 P. 627 (Timmons v. McKinzie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timmons v. McKinzie, 189 P. 627, 21 Ariz. 433, 1920 Ariz. LEXIS 135 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

CUNNINGHAM, C. J.

(After Stating the Facts as Above.) — The issues are reduced by the pleadings to the inquiry whether the plaintiff lessor violated his promises contained in the lease, whereby he agreed to pay all the water charges to be assessed “on said premises during said term” of lease; and the further promise that lessor “agrees to put all ditches and laterals and fences in good condition, ...” and, if plaintiff violated either or both of said agreements of the lease, what damage, if any, resulted to the defendant?

At the beginning of the consideration of this record and the questions raised, it will serve to clarify the matter by disposing of certain matters which have been discussed at some length by counsel, but which are unimportant to the inquiry. It is well to observe that the appellee agreed to pay to the appellant $1,000 as a consideration for the grant to him of a lease for a term of one year, ending February 5, 1919, and that the said consideration was paid as contemplated by means of cash money in the sum of $400, paid at the time of closing the deal, and by the making and delivery of the note for $600, the note sued on. The note was made and delivered to and received by the lessor as payment in full of the consideration mentioned in the lease. The note was not paid at maturity, and the payor resists payment upon the grounds that his damages resulting from the plaintiff’s failure to perform the promises contained in the lease exceeds the amount of the note by $600. In other words, the defendant claims damages in the [437]*437stun of $1,200, and seeks to set off his damages suffered against the note. No question of failure of consideration for the note is involved in the case, although the parties devote some space in their briefs to that matter. I repeat that the inquiry in the lower court concerned the lease and whether or not any of its covenants have been breached by the lessor, and, if so, the amount of damages resulting to the,lessee for such breach or breaches.

I will confine my discussion to matters pertaining to the subject matter of said inquiry wherein controverted questions are involved, viz., the breach of covenant and the measure of damages resulting therefrom.

The appellant’s assignments of error referring to matters other than the breach of covenant and resultant damages will not be discussed because they concern immaterial and irrelevant matters. The discussion will be limited to assignments 7, 8, and 18. These assignments (7 and 8) deal with the- instructions of the court which were given, and (18) with the order refusing a new trial.

Assignment 7 complains that the court erroneously instructed the jury as follows:

‘ ‘ Contracts are presumed to be made for some particular reason. If the plaintiff contracted in the lease to put the fences and ditches in good condition, the presumption of the law is that there was some reason for such covenants • on his part, and he is strictly held to the fulfillment of the same. He cannot avoid the obligation or shift it to the shoulders of the lessee, and, if the lessor violates said covenant so that the lessee is deprived of the use of the premises as contemplated, then in that case the lessee would be entitled to damages for all his actual loss sustained, included in which would be the rent paid, if any. ’ ’

The appellant points out, as the reasons why this instruction is error, that the court informs the jury that the repair clause in the contract of lease raised [438]*438the presumption of law that the fences and ditches were in bad condition when defendant took possession of premises, a,nd for the further reason that it directed the jury to award defendant, as a part of the damages assessed, all rents paid by defendant, if any, in the event the jury finds that the covenant of repairs was in fact breached by the plaintiff.

It is the duty of the court to interpret the contract and instruct the jury as to the meaning of every controverted clause and condition contained therein, and the legal effect of the same. Certainly, the words of the repair clause reading, “The party of the first part agrees to put all ditches and laterals and fences in good condition, party of the second part agrees to leave ditches and fences in good condition at expiration,” can be given but one fair meaning, and that is a duty presently imposed on the lessor, a duty to “put” the ditches, laterals and fences in good condition. The ditches, laterals and fences would not be required to be “put” in good condition unless they were at the time in bad condition. The interpretation placed upon the lease by the court is a fair interpretation of the language used, and therefore the objection is without merit.

The further reason urged why the instruction is erroneous, viz., “that it directed the jury to award to defendant, as a part of the damages assessed, all rents paid by defendant, if any, in the event the jury finds that the covenant of repairs was in fact breached by the plaintiff.” This is not a correct interpretation of the instruction, as will he observed. The instruction specifically contains the condition: “If the lessor violates said contract so that the lessee is deprived of the use of the premises as contemplated, then in that case the lessee would be entitled” to recover the rent paid by him, if any. The appellant overlooks the condition that is expressed and the existence of which gives the right to recover the rent [439]*439paid. The instruction is not subject to either objection. There is no serious contention that the plaintiff did put the ditches and laterals and fences in good condition, or that the plaintiff did pay for irrigation water in sufficient time to justify the defendant in planting a crop on the premises. Appellant contends that he had until the expiration of the lease in which to repair the ditches, laterals, and fences or in which to pay for the water, and, if the lessee did retain possession and not offer to rescind the contract for such omission, the expense of making such repairs was slight and should have been done by lessee and applied on the rent. That lessee did not require water on the ground for a first plowing, and, as a consequence, the lessee’s own fault caused him damages.

Assignment No. 8 predicates error upon the instruction given as the same appears in the abstract of record at designated folios, “for the reason that the term ‘other damages’ is confusing and uncertain and assumes that other damages had been sustained by defendant, and, though presumably attempting to instruct the jury as to the measure of damages, wholly fails to lay down any standard by which such damages may be measured.” Turning to the folios of the abstract of record designated (folios 504, 505), we find an instruction as follows:

“In considering the other damages in this case, you are to take into consideration the rental value of the premises, which has been established, so far as this action is concerned, by the agreement of the parties to be $1,000, which, under the contract of lease introduced in evidence, the defendant in this case agreed to pay, and of which he has already paid $400, promising to pay $600 more later on, and for which a promissory note was given and for the recovery of which note this action is brought. You may take into consideration any labor or money, if any, you find the defendant expended on said premises. If you find from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff failed [440]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 P. 627, 21 Ariz. 433, 1920 Ariz. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timmons-v-mckinzie-ariz-1920.