Universal Milk Co. v. Wood

272 P. 745, 205 Cal. 751, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 604
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1928
DocketDocket No. Sac. 4108.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 272 P. 745 (Universal Milk Co. v. Wood) 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
Universal Milk Co. v. Wood, 272 P. 745, 205 Cal. 751, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 604 (Cal. 1928).

Opinion

*752 PRESTON, J.

Plaintiff corporation sued defendant to quiet title to certain real property upon which is situated a plant to manufacture the by-products of milk. Ownership, possession, and right of possession were alleged, to which the defendant replied by admitting ownership and possession but denying the right of possession in plaintiff and setting up a written indenture of lease between the parties as the basis of his claim to the right of possession. Defendant also cross-complained in an action in ejectment, again setting up said lease and alleging that plaintiff wrongfully ejected him from the premises on the twenty-eighth day of December, 1925, and praying for restoration of the premises to him, together with damages at the rate of $500 per month for the time said premises had been withheld from him. Plaintiff answered said cross-complaint, ad-¡ mitting that it resumed possession of said property on' the said date, denying that it forcibly or unlawfully ejected cross-complainant, denying the claim for damages and al leging that on the thirteenth day of November, 1925, cross-complainant was in default with respect to the obligations undertaken to be performed under said lease in the sum of $155.50, this item relating to earthquake insurance on said plant as provided in said lease; that on said day said cross-defendant gave cross-complainant written notice of said default and made demand for the payment of said amount; that same was not paid or any part thereof and thereafter and on the twenty-second day of December, 1925, notice was given the cross-complainant of the cancellation and termination of said lease and thereafter and on the twenty-eighth day of December, 1925, cross-defendant re-possessed said premises in accordance with the terms of said lease; and praying that cross-complainant take nothing by the action. Cross-defendant, also as a part of its said answer, alleged a counterclaim against said cross-complainant for the sum of $182.34, which amount included said item of $155.50 above referred to, and for the further sum of $659.75 on account of taxes which said cross-complainant had agreed to pay by the terms of said lease, making a total claim of $842.09. The prayer of cross-defendant was that cross-complainant take nothing by the answer and that it have judgment upon its counterclaim for the said sum of $842.09.

*753 The court below, after a trial of the action, made its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and gave its judgment, all of which were in favor of plaintiff, both as to its title and right of possession and as to said counterclaim. The court found, among other things, that on the thirteenth day of November, 1925, cross-complainant was in default as to said item of $155.50; that written notice was on that day given of said default; that thereafter, said default continuing, plaintiff did on the twenty-second day of December, 1925, give written notice of the cancellation and termination of said lease; that thereafter and on the twenty-eighth day of December, 1925, plaintiff repossessed said property in accordance with the consent of defendant and cross-complainant and after said resumption of possession on said day, plaintiff occupied and still occupies said premises and the whole thereof. The court made a special finding to the effect that said re-entry was by consent and as a result defendant suffered no damages and that said re-entry was not made with malicious intent. From said judgment defendant has appealed. The complaint was filed on June 26, 1926, and the cross-complaint on September 27, 1926.

The appeal is determined by a proper construction of certain provisions of said lease of July 30, 1925, the material portions of which provided that the term of lease was to be for a period of ten years beginning August 1, 1925, and ending July 31, 1925; that the rental for the first year was to be only payment by the lessee of what are called “carrying charges,” this term including all taxes, insurance, water rates, repairs on buildings and machinery, improvements, and all up-keep of the properties; that as rental for the second year, said carrying charges were to be paid and in addition the sum of $2,400, and for the succeeding years, other amounts of money were to be paid in addition to said carrying charges. Said lease then contained the following provision: “Time is hereby made of the essence and if default should be made with regard to any of the covenants, terms, conditions or agreements provided to be kept, performed and observed by the Lessee, then and from thenceforth it shall be lawful for the Lessor to re-enter the said leased premises and to remove all persons *754 therefrom and to repossess and enjoy the said premises as in its former estate, after giving said Lessee thirty days written notice of said default.”

The record discloses the further facts to be that defendant resided at Los Angeles; that he was a dealer in leases and was not familiar with the operation of a plant such as the one here involved and he evidently had in mind a sale of the lease without any intention on his part of operating the plant. In other words, it was as to him a pure speculation. Between August 1, 1925, and December 22d following, he made no effort to operate the plant and visited it only about five times during that period. He hired a caretaker, who was a witness in the case, at $75 per month; he then reduced his salary to $25 per month; then he refused to pay him anything, offering him as compensation the use of the house on the property as a residence, saying that if that was not satisfactory, he was to surrender the keys and move from the place. Defendant in reality did not pay the caretaker all the sums due him; he failed to keep the water-tanks for fire protection in proper condition and also failed to keep the stand-by power on, as required by the lease, same being shut off at times because of his failure to pay the necessary charges therefor. Moreover, defendant has never paid or offered to pay any of said carrying charges called for by said lease. Neither in his answer nor in his cross-complaint does he make reference to this failure on his part nor did he at any time or place offer nor does he now offer to pay any of said charges. He wrote, admitting his inability to perform his covenants under the lease and admitted a practical abandonment of effort to do so. As a part of his plea in his cross-complaint, however, he prays for the sum of $500 per month, without so much as giving credit on the amount so claimed far the charges due from him by the terms of said lease during the time he was in possession of the property. In short, he has done nothing entitling him from a moral standpoint to any consideration whatsoever. He nevertheless asserts his technical eviction and his consequent claim to restoration of possession, even though it is but to admit him to the back door that he may be expelled through the front gate.

*755 The contention offered is that the right to possession could only be terminated by supplementing the other notices with the three-day notice found in section 791 of the Civil Code, incorporating the provisions of sections 1161 and 1162 of the Code of Civil Procedure: that a failure to give this notice left the lease still subsisting and the measure of the rights of the parties. This assumption is based upon a misconception of the lease and a consequent misapplication of legal principles.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 P. 745, 205 Cal. 751, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/universal-milk-co-v-wood-cal-1928.