Volpert v. Papagna

433 P.2d 533, 83 Nev. 429, 1967 Nev. LEXIS 308
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1967
Docket5263
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 433 P.2d 533 (Volpert v. Papagna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Volpert v. Papagna, 433 P.2d 533, 83 Nev. 429, 1967 Nev. LEXIS 308 (Neb. 1967).

Opinion

*431 OPINION

By the Court,

Thompson, C. J.:

This is an appeal by lessees [Volpert and Murray] from a summary judgment for lessors [Papagna and Rott] in an unlawful detainer case. The predicate for suit was the lessees’ failure to pay rent. A three-day notice to pay or quit was served upon them before suit was commenced. The lessees answered, pleading affirmative defenses which were later stricken by the court. The lessors were restored to possession by temporary writ, and subsequently moved for summary judgment which was granted. The judgment awarded rent, damages, costs, attorney’s fee, and cancelled the lease.

The main issues are the legal sufficiency of the notice to pay rent or quit; the propriety of striking the affirmative defenses; and the validity of the judgment forfeiting the lease without allowing the lessees five days within which to cure their default. Subordinate claims of error also are advanced. Two other lawsuits involving these parties are alleged to bear upon the case at hand. For the reasons hereafter expressed it is our opinion that summary judgment was properly entered.

This case concerns improved property in downtown Las *432 Vegas known as the Cinnabar Cocktail Lounge. It is owned by Papagna and Rott and is near the Mint Hotel. In 1962 the owners leased a portion of the building to Mazzucca for a restaurant. The maximum monthly rent specified was $400. In January, 1964 the owners sold their bar business to Atol and, in connection with that sale, leased to him the entire premises reserving monthly rent of $1,400. The premises provided parking for the customers of Mazzucca and Atol. The Atol lease acknowledged the prior Mazzucca lease and granted Atol all rents therefrom. It also provided that should the Mazzucca lease terminate, Atol’s rent obligation would be reduced pro tanto until another tenant was procured for the restaurant.

In June, 1965 Atol sold his business and assigned his lease to Volpert and Murray. The new lessees took possession in August. They paid rent for two months. They have not paid rent since. In September they sublet the parking lot to the Mint Hotel without the lessors’ consent and in violation of the lease. This prompted the lessors to commence an unlawful detainer action which they later voluntarily dismissed before answer, since the Mint had, by then, terminated its sublease. In that case the lessees filed a cost bill for $2,162.34. Mazzucca closed his restaurant about this time, apparently because the parking sublease to the Mint had impaired his business.

Soon after the first unlawful detainer case was voluntarily dismissed by the lessors, the lessees filed suit against the lessors and 33 other defendants, claiming huge damages ($300,000 actual and $15,000,000 punitive) for a conspiracy to obliterate their leasehold interest. That suit remains pending. Issue has not been joined.

Once in February and twice in March, 1966, the lessors caused to be served upon the lessees a notice to pay rent or quit. Since these notices were not honored this action for unlawful detainer was instituted. We turn to discuss the main issues presented.

1. Notice to pay or quit: Notice was given pursuant to NRS 40.250(3) which reads in relevant part: “When he continues in possession * * * after default in the payment of any rent and after a notice in writing, requiring in the alternative the payment of the rent or the surrender of the detained premises, shall have remained uncomplied with for a period of 3 days after service thereof. * * *” Here, the notice demanded payment of rent in the sum of $6,400 due as of March 1, 1966, (i.e., $1,400 due October 1, 1965, and $1,000 due on the first of each month thereafter — the reduction caused by Mazzucca’s surrender of his lease in October, 1966), or possession. The notice also reserved the right to claim an *433 additional $400 per month rent from November 1, 1965 through March 1, 1966 on the premise that Mazzucca’s surrender was occasioned by the lessees’ breach in subletting the parking lot to the Mint. The lessees contend that this reservation voids the notice since they cannot know the amount of rent to be paid to preclude forfeiture. This contention is not sound.

Unlike California [C.C.P. 1161; Johnson v. Sanches, 132 P.2d 853 (Cal.App. 1942); Dertiman v. Almey, 207 P.2d 615 (Cal.App. 1949); Werner v. Sargeant, 264 P.2d 217 (Cal.App. 1954)], our statute does not require that the amount of rent due be specified in the notice. Indeed, a notice which simply demands the payment of rent or surrender of possession would seem to satisfy our law. Another statute, NRS 40.390, 1 bears on the issue, since its admonition is that substantial compliance with the statutory scheme will suffice. Tested by these standards the present notice is more than adequate.

The Nevada cases of Paul v. Armstrong, 1 Nev. 82 (1865) and Roberts v. District Court, 43 Nev. 332, 185 P. 1067 (1920) do not support the lessees’ contention on the notice issue. Paul merely held that a notice in writing must be given before the landlord has a cause of action for holding over after default in the payment of rent. That notice was given here. Roberts was concerned with a different part of the unlawful detainer statute and, in speaking of the notice requirement for that part, stated that the notice must be “specific and peremptory,” and not “conditioned or uncertain.” In any event, the notice before us is specific and peremptory, and it is not conditioned or uncertain. After specifying $6,400 as the rent due the notice continues: “and the undersigned hereby demand that you pay said sum to the undersigned within three (3) days after the date of service upon you of this Notice, or alternatively, that within the like period of three (3) days, you surrender possession of the above-described premises to the undersigned.” We find it quite impossible to conclude that the lessees were not clearly apprised of their alternatives.

2. The affirmative defenses: Five affirmative defenses of the lessees were stricken before the court ruled upon the lessors’ motion for summary judgment. By specific statutory provision *434 “all matters of excuse, justification or avoidance of the allegations in the complaint may be given in evidence under the answer.” NRS 40.390; see also, Yori v. Phenix, 38 Nev. 277, 149 P. 180 (1915); West v. Edwards, 62 Nev. 1, 134 P.2d 932 (1943). Our task, therefore, is to ascertain whether any of the stricken defenses could establish an excuse, justification, or avoidance of the lessees’ obligation to pay rent.

a.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
433 P.2d 533, 83 Nev. 429, 1967 Nev. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/volpert-v-papagna-nev-1967.