Umerska v. Katz

477 So. 2d 1252
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 11, 1985
DocketCA-3180
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 477 So. 2d 1252 (Umerska v. Katz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Umerska v. Katz, 477 So. 2d 1252 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

477 So.2d 1252 (1985)

Lois Athena UMERSKA
v.
Barry B. KATZ.

No. CA-3180.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

October 11, 1985.
Rehearing Denied November 26, 1985.

*1253 James Foley, III, Kenner, for plaintiff appellee.

Bradford R. Roberts, II, Roberts, Katz, Baudier & Broussard, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.

Before SCHOTT, KLEES and BYRNES, JJ.

SCHOTT, Judge.

This is a damage suit by a former tenant lessee against her former lessor for abuse of judicial process, harassment, and breach of his obligation to provide her with peaceful possession of the leased premises by repeatedly filing suits against her to force her to vacate the leased premises. From a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $3,500 defendant has appealed. Plaintiff has answered the appeal seeking an increase in the amount of damages. The principal issue is whether the evidence provides a legal basis for the award.

The parties entered into a six month lease of the premises at 628 St. Philip Street in New Orleans commencing on February 1, 1981. The lease provided for monthly rent of $650 payable not later than the fifth of each month.

The March rent was not paid on time notwithstanding plaintiff's explanation that she did pay the rent to defendant's girlfriend. Thus, on March 6, defendant served a notice on plaintiff to vacate the premises and followed up on March 17 with a rule to vacate the premises (Suit 1). This rule was dismissed on March 27 after a hearing.

On the following day defendant served a second notice on plaintiff to vacate the premises for non-payment of rent. On April 6 defendant filed a second rule for possession (Suit 2). In the present suit plaintiff testified that she tendered the rent to defendant on March 27 and he refused to accept it. However, the evidence established that plaintiff tendered only $600 and not the $650 which was due. She withheld $50 she paid for electrical repairs to the premises. This second rule for possession was dismissed on April 10, and there is a notation by the minute clerk that the judgment was conditioned upon "payment made within 24 hours." The testimony in the present case established that defendant was paid in April $1300 which covered the rent for March and April, 1981.

On May 7 defendant filed a "supplemental rule for possession" in Suit 2 seeking to have plaintiff evicted for violations other than non-payment of rent. These alleged violations included keeping a dog on the premises, using the premises for commercial purposes, having more than three persons residing there, damaging the premises, causing the premises to become a health hazard, and cluttering the common patio. This supplemental petition did not come to trial on the merits but was dismissed on plaintiff's exception on May 20. The exception was based on the proposition that once the rent was paid Suit 2 was terminated and could not be revived by a supplemental rule.

Simultaneous with the dismissal of Suit 2, defendant filed Suit 3, and a rule for possession based on the same grounds alleged in the supplemental rule in Suit 2 and discussed above. This time plaintiff countered with an exception of unauthorized use of summary proceedings which was based on the theory that the notice to vacate because of the alleged violations was vitiated by defendant's acceptance of the May rent precluding the use of summary process. On May 29 a consent judgment *1254 was signed maintaining the exception and dismissing the suit.

On June 9 defendant served plaintiff with a notice to vacate for non-payment of the June rent. The record shows that plaintiff gave defendant a check on June 2 for $650 but this was dishonored by plaintiff's bank as NSF. Defendant filed a rule for possession (Suit 4) on July 6 based on plaintiff's failure to pay the June rent. This suit was dismissed on August 12, 1981. While not clear from the record of Suit 4 or the testimony in the present case it appears that plaintiff finally paid and defendant accepted the June rent bringing about the dismissal of the rule.

Suit 5 was a rule for possession of the premises for non-payment of November rent by then $750 monthly in accordance with the lease. This suit resulted in a judgment in defendant's favor terminating the lease and ordering plaintiff to vacate the premises.

The present suit was filed on June 17, 1981 but not tried until May 1984. Among plaintiff's allegations is that she paid her June rent on June 2, and she attached to her petition a rent receipt of the same date. However the testimony establishes that her rent check was NSF, and that plaintiff was the victim of a forgery which caused her account to be overdrawn. But when the notice to vacate was given plaintiff on June 9 the rent had not been paid.

In reasons for judgment the trial court noted that defendant decided almost from the beginning of the lease that plaintiff was an undesirable tenant and he sought to have her evicted on what he considered legal grounds, but "every judge who considered his claim recognized his actions for what they were." The trial judge reasoned that "common sense" notions of justice required a judgment for plaintiff. He considered defendant's eviction suits to be a violation of the obligation of a lessor under LSA-C.C. Art. 2692(3) "to cause the lessee to be in a peaceable possession of the thing during the continuance of the lease." He concluded that defendant's conduct was tortious because it was in violation of the law and was intentional entitling plaintiff to damages.

A lessor's obligation to maintain the lessee in peaceable possession is not absolute but conditioned on the lessee meeting the obligations imposed under the lease. If plaintiff was in violation of the lease each time defendant sought to evict her he cannot be said to have wrongfully disturbed her possession of the premises. From our review of the record we find that each suit was justified under the lease between the parties and cannot be considered a violation of plaintiff's right to peaceable possession.

Plaintiff was bound to pay $650 not later than the fifth day of each month. Her failure to pay the March rent by March 5 entitled defendant to expel her from the property. C.C. Art. 2712. Plaintiff's explanation that she had given the rent to defendant's friend was not an excuse for failing to pay the rent and did not deprive defendant of his right to expel her. Thus, Suit 1 could not and did not constitute a wrongful disturbance of plaintiff's possession of the premises.

Suit 2 was filed on the day Suit 1 was dismissed by the trial court. According to plaintiff whose testimony was accredited by the trial judge and is therefore accepted by us, when Suit 1 was dismissed the trial judge ordered defendant to accept the rent, but he refused to do so and filed Suit 2 instead. However, plaintiff also testified that she tendered only $600 because she had spent $50 on electrical repairs and credited this to the rent.

The lease provides "No repairs shall be due Lessee by Lessor except to the roof and such as may be rendered necessary by fire or other casualty...." Accordingly, plaintiff had no right to deduct $50 from the rent and defendant was not obligated to accept anything less than $650 if obliged to accept anything at all at the late date. Therefore Suit 2 could not and did not constitute a wrongful disturbance of plaintiff's possession of the premises.

*1255 At some point in April plaintiff paid and defendant accepted $1,300 rent for the months of March and April so that Suit 2 was concluded.

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Bluebook (online)
477 So. 2d 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/umerska-v-katz-lactapp-1985.