Waln v. Howard

196 So. 210, 142 Fla. 736, 1940 Fla. LEXIS 1453
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 10, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 So. 210 (Waln v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waln v. Howard, 196 So. 210, 142 Fla. 736, 1940 Fla. LEXIS 1453 (Fla. 1940).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This case comes before this Court upon writ of error to the Circuit Court of Orange County. The parties to the litigation will hereinafter be referred to as they appeared in the court below namely: plaintiff in error will be designated as defendant, and defendant in error as plaintiff.

In September, 1937, defendant wrote to one Carleton relative to securing a house in the City of Winter Park for the approaching winter season. Carleton contacted a real estate broker, Raymond Green. Green wrote to the defendant describing several houses listed with him, including one owned by George Howard, husband of the plaintiff. A series of communications followed and the defendant, by letter dated October 3, 1937, accepted the terms offered. A lease was forwarded to her in due time, and, by letter of October 10, 1937, she objected to certain provisions contained therein. However, she later signed a lease of the premises, which lease bore date of October 12, 1937. Ella Howard signed this lease but her husband, George Howard, the owner, did not. George Howard died October 16, 1937. The lease embraced a period of time beginning November 1, 1937, and ending May 1, 1938. Defendant transmitted one hundred dollars ($100.00) as the initial payment on the lease — the balance of seven hundred dollars ($700.00) to be paid: (1) three hundred dollars ($300.00) upon occupation, and (2) four hundred dollars ($400.00) on February 1, 1938.

Defendant arrived in Winter Park November 20, 1937, and immediately moved into the house which had been leased *739 to her. She vacated the premises November 22, 1937, without notice. The aforementioned payment of one hundred dollars ($100.00) is the only remuneration received by the plaintiff.

On the 24th day of March, 1938, the plaintiff filed praecipe for summons and on the 4th day of April in the same year filed her declaration seeking damages in the amount of the unpaid balance due on the lease of her homestead to the defendant for the winter season of 1937-38. Defendant’s demurrer to the declaration' was sustained. Subsequently, plaintiff filed two more declarations based on the same instrument. Demurrer to each was sustained. Finally, a declaration was filed on the statutory count for “use and occupation” (Sec. 4314 C. G. L., subsection 9), and, defendant, after attack upon this declaration, entered the plea “that she never was indebted as alleged.”

Upon a trial of the case, plaintiff offered in evidence, over defendant’s objection, the letters of communication between defendant and Green, which showed an agreement by defendant to lease the premises for the season for $800.00. Also, there was testimony of an oral agreement as to the length of the “season, as being from November 1st to May 1st, 1938.” At the close of the case the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of seven hundred dollars ($700.00), plus interest and costs. Defendant took writ of error.

The foregoing is a brief outline of the transactions between the parties and the disposition' of the litigation in the circuit court. It is true that the lease itself is not a part of this action, the real issue being on the statutory count for “use and occupation,” but the remainder of the facts serve to throw light upon the issue formed on that count.

A study of the record in this case reveals sufficient uncontroverted evidence to justify the conclusion of the trial *740 jüd'ge that the defendant was ' liable for the payment of rent for the entire period covered by the lease provided the' court properly interpreted the law applicable to the above stated facts.

In view of the fact that some of the evidence was oral and that there was no lease in writing signed by the lessor, the occupancy was, as defendant contends, a tenancy at will only, under Section 5431, C. G. L. 1927, which was Section Lof Chapter 5441, Acts of 1905. Defendant further contended at first that Chapter 15057, Acts of 1931, repealed Section 5431, supra; but in the case of McCord v. Connor, 132 Fla. 56, 180 So. 519, Section 1 of Chapter 15057, supra, purporting to change Section 1 of Section 5431, C. G. L. was held to be unconstitutional. Therefore, Section 1 of the original Act which appears in C. G. L. as Section 5431, is still in force.

Defendant is correct in her contention that Section 5433, C. G. L. 1927 which was not attempted to be repealed by said Chapter 15057, relative to notice in cases of tenancy at will, is not strictly applicable here. Section 5433, designates specific periods of time in which a lessor may by giving notice for certain periods in advance, terminate a tenancy at will. There is no mention in the statute of any periodic measurement of time called a “season.” However, this is of little or no importance in view of the fact that plaintiff was given no legal notice whatever that the premises were to be vacated or surrendered. Surely the statute means that a tenancy at will can only be terminated by the giving of reasonable notice thereof. In this contention see 135 C. J., p. 1134, Section 369.

There is uncontradicted evidence that defendant occupied the house for two days, that she paid the one hundred dollars ($100.00) previously agreed upon, that she made no objection to the condition of the premises at the time of assum *741 ing occupancy and that a six months period was to be regarded as constituting the length of the “season.” The only evidence .as to the vacation of the premises is the testimony of the defendant and her two servants that they left the premises two days after taking possession; and, defendant’s statement in answer to a question relative to the keys to the place that: “They were in the hands of Mr. Ray Green and I never had the keys at all.”

Thus from the foregoing it clearly appears that the judge was correct in deciding there had been no legal surrender of the premises, and defendant was liable for the full term of the parol agreement, unless, as defendant contends, the action on the common count for “use and occupation” is limited to the term of actual physical occupation of the premises and may not be held to cover the entire period designated as the “season'.” The defendant in support of this position cites Carroll v. Finnagan, 1 Cranch C. C. 234, 5 Fed. Cas. 2453.

We cannot accede to this view of the action on the common count for “use and occupation.”

Professor Crandall in his Florida Common Law Practice, Section 150, page 215, speaking of this statutory count for use and occupation, says;

“When this count is available is well explained by Judge Daniel in Lloyd v. Hough, 1 How. (U. S.) 153, 11 L. Ed. 83, in the following language: ‘Whenever the action’ of assumpsit for use and occupation has been allowed, it has been founded, and would seem necessarily to be founded upon contract, either express or implied. The very term assumpsit presupposes a contract. Whatever, then, excludes all idea of a contract, excludes, at the same time, a remedy which can spring from contract only, which affirms it and seeks its enforcement. To maintain the action for use and occupation, therefore, there must be established the rela *742

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 So. 210, 142 Fla. 736, 1940 Fla. LEXIS 1453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waln-v-howard-fla-1940.