Williams v. Nall

420 P.2d 988, 4 Ariz. App. 416, 1966 Ariz. App. LEXIS 507
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 2, 1966
Docket1 CA-CIV 271
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 420 P.2d 988 (Williams v. Nall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Nall, 420 P.2d 988, 4 Ariz. App. 416, 1966 Ariz. App. LEXIS 507 (Ark. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

MOLLOY, Judge.

This is an appeal from judgments rendered in plaintiffs’ favor in an action arising out of a lease and sale of certain properties situate on the Colorado River, just south of the Parker Dam.

Prior to August 24, 1962, the defendant Williams and another person were the lessees of certain real property owned by the United States of America, situated between the Colorado River and State Highway 172, lying between Parker, Arizona, and the Parker Dam, on the Arizona side of the river. The possession of the property was under a land use permit from the United States of America. The agreement with the United States of America provided for an annual rental of $300. On August 24, 1962, Williams and his co-owners sold all interest in the buildings, improvements and furnishings located upon this property and subleased the real estate to the plaintiff Nall and another person. The purchase price of the chattels was $32,000, payable $6,000 down, with the balance to be paid “$288.67 per month, or more, which sum includes interest payable every other month beginning oh October 24, 1962.” The contract further provided:

“ * * * that Buyer may compensate Seller for overdue payments within six (6) months of their due date.
“Should Buyer fail to cure said defaults within said six (6) months, Seller may retain all monies paid to him by Buyer.”

There was no express provision in the contract for retention of title in the seller or for possession of the chattels on default.

Prior to the termination of this litigation in the trial court, all interest in the subject properties had been assigned to Williams by his co-owner as had the interest of Nall’s co-owner been assigned to Nall, so that for the purposes of this appeal, Williams and Nall are the only parties in interest.

The written agreement between the parties provided that the seller leased to the buyer the “* * * exclusive possession * * *” of the subject real estate. The *418 annual rental of $300 was payable on the same date. as the annual rental under the master lease with the United States Government. The seller agreed to do everything reasonable and necessary to secure an extension of the master lease and to cause same to be issued upon renewal to the buyer providing that the,buyer had made payments in accordance with the agreement.

Electricity was supplied to the subject property by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, an agency of the Department of Interior of the United States of America. Under the regulations of this agency, only the lessee under the master lease was entitled to a contract for electric service. This fact was known to Williams but unknown to Nall at the time the sales contract was executed. At the time of Nall’s taking possession of the subject property, Williams agreed to continue the electric contract in his name, it being understood that Nall would pay the electric bill.

There . was a boat dock on the subj ect property,'and subsequent to taking possession, Nall subleased one of the buildings upon the property and the boat dock to the plaintiff Stefano Gallina and another person, for the operation of a pizza and beer parlor, and for the sale of gasoline to itinerant boats. Subsequently, the other sublessee assigned all interest in this sublease to the plaintiff Gallina.

By a series of amended complaints, the plaintiffs charged the defendant Williams with wrongfully, willfully and maliciously causing the electric current to the subject premises to be shut off by the Bureau of Indian Affairs on June 9, 1964, for a period of three days, of doing the same thing on November 13, 1964, for approximately one month, and of dispossessing the plaintiffs from the subject property on November 17, 1964.. The complaint asked for compensatory and punitive damages and for injunctive relief. ■

. There was. an answer and counterclaim. The answer was substantially a general denial. The. counterclaim alleged that the written agreement * * provided that in the event of buyers’ default, buyers should have a- period of 6 months in which to cure said default,” that Nall had failed to make the payment due on May 24, 1964, under the sales contract, and that Nall had made no further payments prior to the retaking of possession of the subject property on November 17, 1964. The counterclaim prayed for judgment granting defendant possession of the property and for the defendant’s costs. The reply to the counterclaim denied that the contract was in default more than six months on November 17, 1964, and alleged that prior to the expiration of the six months default period, Nall had tendered payments on the agreement which were refused by the defendant.

The record discloses no pretrial order, and we assume that the case went to trial on the pleadings. The case was tried to the court without a jury, at the conclusion of which findings of fact, conclusions of law and a judgment were rendered favorable to the plaintiffs, awarding both compensatory and punitive damages and injunctive relief. The findings of the court are to the effect that Williams willfully and maliciously caused the electricity to the subject premises to be disconnected on two occasions at a time when the plaintiffs were not delinquent in payment of electric bills and that Williams wrongfully dispossessed the plaintiffs from the property in November of 1964, at a time when the plaintiffs were not in default under the written agreement with the defendant.

On appeal, Williams concedes that $1,154.63 received from Nall on May 21, 1964, paid the May 24, 1964, payment under the subject contract. With this concession, the only facts pleaded in the answer filed herein to-justify the talcing-of possession on •November' 17, 1964, are negated, and judgment below is sought to be upset, on other grounds.

The first attack made upon the judgment is that there being multiple delinquencies in payments under the contract, a tender made .of two months payments on November 24, 1964, was inadequate, and therefore, the *419 •court should have decreed that Williams was entitled to possession of the subject property. During the trial it was established that on November 24, 1964, Nall tendered to Williams $577.34 for the June and July payments under the contract. This money was returned to Nall, not for the reason that the amount was inadequate, but rather because the agreement between the parties had been “ * * * rescinded by Mr. Nall’s failure to perform * * The letter of rejection stated that Williams would “ * * not accept .any further payments on the agreement.”

Appellant’s argument that all payments must be brought up to date under a contract such as this when making a delinquent payment is unsupported by citation of authority. However, even assuming that this contention were correct, the judgment below is supportable under the facts; and on appeal we are constrained to approve of the trial court’s decision if it is supportable under any theory within the pleadings and an interpretation of the facts favorable to the judgment. Ensign v. Bohn, 1 Ariz.App. 386, 403 P.2d 321 (1965); Phelps Dodge Corp., Morenci Br. v. Industrial Com’n, 90 Ariz. 379, 368 P.2d 450 (1962).

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Bluebook (online)
420 P.2d 988, 4 Ariz. App. 416, 1966 Ariz. App. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-nall-arizctapp-1966.