Wald v. Bien

14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 145, 31 Ohio Dec. 582, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 120
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedApril 9, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 145 (Wald v. Bien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wald v. Bien, 14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 145, 31 Ohio Dec. 582, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 120 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Pugh, J.

On October 12th, 1912, the plaintiffs, Richard H.’ Wald and ■Frederick Forchheinier, were owners in common of a certain tenement house in the city of Cincinnati, which was rented out in apartments, from month to month, to some twenty or more tenants. Some of the tenants paid their rents in advance and some at the end of. the month. None of them had written leases.

The. defendant,' under the name of J. Bokmann, on October 12th, 1912, made.an offer to buy the property. This was declined, but a counter-proposition to sell' or. lease the premises to said Bokmann, on certain terms and conditions, was made by the plaintiffs some days later. This proposition was contained in a letter of October 18th, 1912, and was an offer in the alternative, either to sell for $26,000 cash, or to lease for ten years, the lessee to pay $6,000 cash and an annual rent of 5% on $20,-000, and to have an option of purchase, during the term, for said last námed sum. On the same day, the offer to lease was accepted with certain amendments. The offer and acceptance are both in writing, signed by all parties, and are set out in full .in the pleadings.

It is agreed that Julia Bokmann was a mere figurehead, and that the defendant, F. A. Bien, was and is the only real party in interest. This action is brought by plaintiffs against F. A. Bien for specific performance, and the latter, by cross-petition, seeks specific performance from the plaintiffs. Julia Bokmann is not a party to the case. It is unnecessary, therefore, to pass upon the issue whether, prior to November 9th, 1912, the plaintiffs knew the defendant was the real party in interest.

At the time of the execution of the contract the defendant, in accordance with its terms, paid the plaintiffs the sum of $500 as earnest money — the amount to be credited on the $6,000 payment to become due from the defendant on conveyance to him of the premises.

On November 9th, 1912, the plaintiffs tendered a lease in triplicate, drawn in conformity to the contract, and the defendant tendered $6,000 less $500 already paid as earnest money [147]*147and less, also, a certain sum retained by agreement on account of taxes. The mutual tenders Avere properly made and, except as to the matter of time Avhich is in dispute, were in strict conformity to the agreement. The defendant then stated, in substance, that it was understood that the rents Avould be apportioned between the parties from November 9th, 1912. As some of the tenants paid in advance on November 1st, -for the entire month, his claim was that such portion of the rents already accrued as covered the first nine days of the month should be retained by the plaintiffs, and that such portion as covered the remainder of the month should be accounted for to him, and that, as to rents payable at the end of the month, he would account to the plaintiffs for such portion as covered the first nine days of the month and retain the remainder. The plaintiffs refused this proposition and the deal fell through.

The plaintiffs bring this action for a specific performance of the contract, claiming the right to retain all' rents that accrued prior to November 9th, 1912, and offering to account for all rents that accrued thereafter. The defendant, by Avay of cross-petition, asks also for a specific performance, the rents to be apportioned as to time from November 9th, 1912.

The Avritten acceptance of October 18th, 1912, provides specifically for the apportionment of taxes but says nothing whatever as to the rents.

The defendant examined the premises before entering into contract. He kneAV the property was a tenement house, and it is proved that he Avas informed as to the average monthly rental. He says that he did not knoAV hoAV many tenants there were, nor Avhat each paid, nor whether they paid in advance or not, but that he walked through the halls, countéd the rooms an'd calculated Avhat rent the house could be made to produce. These statements have not been disproved, nor does there appear any reason to doubt them.

I. The plaintiffs base their claim to specific performance on the contract, as it appears on its face, and appeal to the rule that, in the absence of express stipulation, there can be no apportionment of rent as to time.

The laAV certainly is that in the absence of agreement to the contrary, rents belong to whoever is OAAmer of the reversion at [148]*148the time they accrue, without reference to whether they are payable in advance or not. The rule is thus stated, I Tiffany on Landlord and Tenant, Section 176:

“Rent is not, at common law, regarded as accruing from day to day as interest does, but it is only upon the day fixed f'or payment that any part of it becomes due. The result of this principle is that, ordinarily, the person who is on that day the owner of the reversion is entitled to the entire installment of rent due on that day, though he may have been the owner of the reversion or rent but a part of the time which has elapsed since the last rent day. Conversely, one who has been owner of the reversion or the rent during a part of such period can claim no portion of the installment unless lie is such owner at the time at which the installment is payable by the terms of the lease. The general rule in this regard is ordinarily expressed by saying that rent can not be apportioned as to time.”

The decisions in Ohio on this subject are no.t very satisfactory, In re Sturgis and Behm, 8 N.P.(N.S.), 486, is the nearest in point, and it was there held that rent falling,due and paid in advance to a life tenant, who dies before next rent day, should be apportioned as to time between his estate and the remainder-man. No authorities are cited for this ruling and, as reported, the 'decision is contrary to the almost unanimous opinion elsewhere. It is not impossible that circumstances appeared in the testimony which warranted the decision, but they do not appear in the reported opinion.- In the ease of Capelle v. Wieman, 9 C.C.(N.S.), 412, it was decided that, when a life tenant dies between rent days, neither the remainderman nor the executor of deceased’s estate could recover rent from the tenant for the rental period during which the life tenant died: This is old common law and has never been changed in Ohio. The rule is peculiar to life tenancies and has'been changed in England and some states by statute. Hence, where, in such case, the rent had been apportioned between the parties, the remainderman, though owner of the reversion when the rent accrued, could not recover from the' executor the amount received by the latter. - The-'circuit court did-say in that case that the apportionment was just' and equitable. But it had been done by the parties themselves- ■ — not by order- of Court, and the decision rests on the ground [149]*149that, though the defendant had no right to the rent, neither had the plaintiff.

The great weight of authority, outside of this state, is contrary to the defendant’s contention. The cases of Whittaker v. Gee, 61 Texas, 217; Dexter v. Philips, 121 Mass., 178, and Condit v. Neighbor, 13 N. J. L., 83, decide the same question as was involved in In re Slur gis and Behm, supra, and are contrary to it.

It is true, as claimed, that the rents in question here are those of tenants holding from month to month and not of lessees holding under formal written leases.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 145, 31 Ohio Dec. 582, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wald-v-bien-ohsuperctcinci-1913.