Upton v. Toth

98 P.2d 515, 36 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 771
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 1940
DocketCiv. 2437
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 98 P.2d 515 (Upton v. Toth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Upton v. Toth, 98 P.2d 515, 36 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 771 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

This is an action for damages for eviction. The Rugby Land Company, a corporation, owned the farm lands in question. In 1933, this land was leased by a written lease to Ora Upton. An assignment of this lease to respondent Henry Upton, although disputed, is claimed. ■ By the terms of the lease it expired November 15, 1937, but it contained a provision for termination in the event of a sale. The Rugby Land Company sold the land to Joe Toth and Charlie Toth, appellants, for $5,000 cash in May, 1937. They went into possession, and planted a crop of barley, which was matured in May, 1938, at the time of trial. Respondent Henry Upton had plowed the 375 acres of tillable land in March and April, 1937. He claims that in March, 1937, before he plowed, he had requested a written lease for a term of years on the property and that Mr. Baker, secretary of the corporation, had promised a written lease. This lease *681 was not given. Respondent also claimed that he had another conversation with Mr. Baker early in May, 1937, the date of which is not fixed, but which appears to have been after May 3, 1937, the date of the opening of the escrow on the sale to Joe and Charlie Toth, and prior to May 20, 1938, the date of the closing of the escrow.

When Upton learned of the pending , sale he made an unsuccessful attempt to buy the land. The Toths offered to pay him for the plowing, but he did not accept. About June 23, 1937, he was notified not to trespass, and he filed suit alleging eviction as of that date. He recovered judgment against the new owners, Joe and Charlie Toth, and their father, Steven Toth, for the net value of the grain crop, fixed at $3,665.61.

The trial court found that on June 23, 1937, plaintiff ‘‘ was in possession of said land pursuant to the written lease of December 20, 1933, the term of which was extended by the oral lease found” and that on said day “the defendants did unlawfully and without right evict plaintiff from said parcel”; “That it is true that on or about the 10th day of May, 1937, the plaintiff and the Rugby Land Company, which was then the owner of the said parcel of land, did enter into a further lease of the said parcel, the term of which was from the 15th day of November, 1937, to the end of the crop year of 1937-1938, and until on or about May 9th, 1938.” (Italics ours.)

It is claimed first that this finding as to the oral lease is unsupported by the evidence. By respondent’s own testimony an extension was necessary, as the lease would run out before the crop was harvested. In order to support a judgment for the net value of the grain crop respondent would have produced during the 1937-1938 season, it was obviously necessary to establish a lease extending until the end of that season.

Respondent was the only witness who testified that there was such a lease, and his testimony referred to two conversations with Mr. E. V. Baker, the secretary of the Rugby Land Company. His testimony was without any corroboration and was flatly contradicted by Mr. Baker. Conflict in the testimony is not the point, however. The point claimed is that respondent’s own testimony does not support the finding and is contrary to the finding in several respects.

*682 The conversation between Mr. Baker and respondent is claimed by him in reference to any oral lease or extension of the written lease herein to be in part as follows:

“Q. (By Mr. Clay to Mr. Upton) : What was the subject of that conversation (of March, 1937) ? A. I told Mr. Baker that my boys was ready to start plowing on his ranch, and that in order to protect me on the crop following, I would have to get an extension of the lease; that our present lease would run out before the crop was harvested. Q. What did he say? A. I continued and said, ‘Do you want us to go ahead and farm the property ? ’ He said ‘ . . . yes; go ahead and farm it. What ... do you think I keep it for?’ Q. Was anything else said on that occasion about this matter? A. I asked him to have his attorney draw the lease and send it over. Q. What did he say? A. He said he would. Q. What did you do then? A. We went ahead and plowed the land . . . Q. Did you have any further conversation with Mr. Baker? A. I did. When was that? A. The first week in May, 1937. . . . Q. What was said? A. I asked him why he didn’t send the lease over. He said, ‘Well, I might sell that property. I want to sell it’. He said, ‘Wait until after harvest; possibly we might get together.' But in the meantime I said, ‘I want the lease.’ Mr. Baker said: ‘I would rather not tie up this property for a long period of time. I want to sell it. I will only lease it to you from year to year. ’ Q. What did you say? A. I said, ‘That is fine with me. I can get my crop off there within a year if I cut it for hay.’ . . . Q. (By Mr. Ford) : In March you had a conversation with him, you say? A. Right around the first of March, yes, sir. Q. And in that conversation did you ask him for a written lease? A. I asked him to renew the lease. Q. For what period of time? A. Two to four years, either one; either two or four years. Q. He said he would do it? A. No; he didn’t say at that time. Q. What did he say in March when you asked him for a two or four year renewal ? A. He said, all right, he would go ahead and renew it; but he did not say whether for two or four. Q. Was this conversation in March, 1937, the first conversation you had had with him relative to any extension or renewal or further leasing ? A. That was the first conversation pertaining to an extension of the lease in any manner. The Court: What date was that? A. Around the first of March. I don't know whether the first *683 or second or third, but around the first of March. Q. And that was not a one-year lease that was mentioned at that time? A. No. At that time I was under the impression I would either get a two or four, whichever was his option . . . Q. (By Mr. Ford): In your conversation with Mr. Baker on the second occasion, when you say you had not received the desired lease for two to four jmars, and discussed the lease for a year, was the term or expression ‘crop season’ used? A. Yes, it was. Q. What did you say and what did he say in which the term ‘crop season’ was used? A. I wanted it to extend a sufficient length of time to protect me for the crop season. Q. Not what you wanted, please. What expression was used by you and by him? A. Well, he said he did not want to tie up the property for too long a period of time, but would rent it to me from year to year. I said, ‘That is OK with me. That will protect me on my crop.’ Q. Was the expression ‘from year to year,’ or the expression ‘crop season’ used in that conversation? A. ‘From year to year’ at that time, ‘from year to year’.”

It is quite apparent from the record that respondent had little if any confidence in his claim of an oral lease as of May 10, 1937. By his own admission he subsequently suggested to Mr. Baker that the lease be put in writing, and called on his attorney for an opinion whether a written lease, made after the deed to the Toth Brothers had been signed, would sever the oral lease, and the attorney stated it would be of no effect as far as stopping the sale of the land was concerned. Tie thereupon employed his attorney to write a letter to appellants dated May 18, 1937, in which the attorney stated:

“We are advised by our client, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
98 P.2d 515, 36 Cal. App. 2d 679, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upton-v-toth-calctapp-1940.