Welsh v. Faivre

159 P.2d 502, 61 Wyo. 511, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 23
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1945
Docket2307
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 159 P.2d 502 (Welsh v. Faivre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welsh v. Faivre, 159 P.2d 502, 61 Wyo. 511, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 23 (Wyo. 1945).

Opinion

*516 OPINION

Per Curiam.

Proceedings in error bring this case here to review a judgment of the district court of Laramie County, rendered upon the verdict of a jury, in an action wherein Margaret Rice and Edythe Faivre were plaintiffs *517 and Jay E. Welch and Elizabeth Welch were defendants. The plaintiffs being successful in that court they are the defendants in error here and the defendants who have sought this review are now the plaintiffs in error. Hereinafter the parties will usually be designated as they appeared in the district court or by their respective names. The action was one for damages alleged to have been suffered by plaintiffs due to their asserted wrongful eviction by the defendants from certain premises claimed to have been leased by the former from the latter. The verdict and judgment aforesaid was given and entered for the sum of $2,000.00.

The material facts to be considered as presented by the record before us are in substance as follows:

The defendants are the owners of a three-room apartment consisting of a living room, bedroom, kitchen and bath, with a rear and front private entrance located in a building situated on the north 88 feet of Lot 4 in Block 366 in the City of Cheyenne. The plaintiffs, during the years 1940-1943, inclusive, were engaged as teachers in the school system of said city. On or about September 10, 1940, plaintiffs orally leased this apartment from the defendants for a rental of $50.00 per month. The leased premises were, to some extent, supplied with furniture owned by the defendants and are referred to in the record as a “furnished apartment”. However, plaintiffs had their own linens, cooking utensils, electric lamps, coffee tables, and radios. The defendants also furnished light, heat, water, and gas for cooking in the apartment, these being all mentioned in the testimony as “the utilities” and will be so designated herein.

The plaintiffs found the apartment so satisfactory that it was orally agreed between them and defendants that during the summer months of June, July, and Au-' gust, the plaintiffs might procure tenants for the apart *518 'ment who would pay the required rent of $50.00 a month directly to the defendants and .thereafter by the first of September relinquish the rooms to plaintiffs for their use during the ensuing nine months school year. Plaintiffs agreed to pay any rent not paid by the tenants they thus procured. This arrangement continued between the parties until September, 1942.

On August 29, 1942, the plaintiffs returned to the apartment, the summer tenants thereof having shortly before moved out of it. Upon talking with Mrs. Welch they were informed by her that the rent for the apartment would thereafter be $65.00 a month. Plaintiffs strongly objected to paying this increased amount but it was finally orally agreed that if they were unable to find another apartment after October 1st, 1942, they would pay defendants the larger rental. About the 25th of September, 1942, plaintiffs placed two checks, each for $25.00, bearing that date, payable to “Mrs. Jay Welch”, one checking being signed by Margaret Rice and the other by Edythe Faivre, plaintiffs herein, in defendants’ mail box together with a note stating that plaintiffs were enclosing the September rent for $50.00 and that on October 1, plaintiffs would send Mrs. Welch a check for $65.00; that plaintiffs had “found no place to live” and that they were not giving up their lease. The following morning plaintiffs received a communication reading:

“ Sept. 25th
Miss Rice & Miss Faivre please vacate the apt. by Sept. 30th.
Mrs. Welch
P. S. My son & family coming to Cheyenne to reside and need quarters.
E. W.

These two checks were never endorsed or cashed by the defendants. The plaintiffs continued to retain the apartment as before during the period between the re *519 ceipt of this notice and October 1, 1942, taking no steps whatsoever to remove their personal property from the rooms thus occupied.

Early in the afternoon of October 1, 1942, the defendants entered the apartment and finding the plaintiffs’ property still there packed a portion of it in boxes and cartons. These, and all the remaining property of the plaintiffs, defendants removed from the rooms where they were located, carried them out the rear door of the apartment and placed them on the back porch or on chairs set there for the purpose. Some of the property was set out in the yard back of the apartment. After thus accomplishing the removal of plaintiffs’ chattels from the rooms the defendants locked the front door of the apartment from the inside, leaving the key fastened in the lock, and placed a padlock on the back door. All this was done while the plaintiffs were absent and engaged in their duties as teachers in the city school system.

Late that afternoon the plaintiffs returned to the apartment and found matters in the condition above described. They took an implement from the automobile owned by one of the plaintiffs, broke the glass of the front door, reached in, unlocked it, and entered the rooms. They then proceeded to the back door and pried the padlock off of that and thereupon moved their property back into the apartment. On the afternoon of October 2, following their return from school, they discovered that defendants had disconnected the utilities — all except the cold water and that was cut off later. Thereupon the plaintiffs commenced removing their property from the apartment and finally left it the morning of Monday, October 5. In a day or so thereafter defendants’ son and his family moved into the apartment where they were at the time this cause was tried in the district court.

*520 October 17, 19^2, the plaintiffs instituted this action. Their amended petition contains three stated causes of action, the first of which makes a joint claim on behalf of both plaintiffs for the alleged breach of the terms of an oral agreement, asserted to have been 'made between plaintiffs and defendants, leasing to plaintiffs the apartment above described from September 1, 1942, to August 31, 1943, the rental for the month of September to be §50.00 and thereafter the sum of §65.00 per month. The facts as set forth in the paragraphs above and preceding this one are alleged with considerable particularity. Damages on this cause of action are asked in the sum of §275.00. The second cause of action presents a separate claim against the defendants by the plaintiff, Margaret Rice. The allegations of the first cause of action are incorporated by reference and it is asserted that injury to her personal property resulted from the removal thereof by defendants from the apartment, as hereinbefore described, in the sum of §125.00, and §12.50 necessary expenses in moving her effects off the premises of the defendants. Damages are also asked in the sum of §1,000.00 for mental pain suffered and humiliation, as well as punitive damages in a like sum.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 P.2d 502, 61 Wyo. 511, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsh-v-faivre-wyo-1945.