Wood v. Longyear

242 P. 932, 197 Cal. 723, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 279
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1925
DocketDocket No. L.A. 7327.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 242 P. 932 (Wood v. Longyear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Longyear, 242 P. 932, 197 Cal. 723, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 279 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This appeal is by the defendant and cross-complainant, E. J. Longyear, from a judgment in the plaintiff’s favor for the recovery of rent, with interest and costs, amounting to the sum of $5,503.83, claimed to he due said plaintiff upon a lease by him to the defendants of *725 certain premises occupied by and used as a rock-crushing plant. The complaint, which was filed on October 30, 1917, sets forth in substance that on or about April 14, 1916, an agreement in writing was entered into between said plaintiff and the defendants, W. A. Boland and E. J. Longyear, whereby the said plaintiff leased to said defendants the premises described therein for a period of three years from and after said date for a stipulated rental of $400 per month for the first year of said lease and of the sum of $725 per month for the remainder of the term, payable quarterly; that said defendants paid said rental up to and including the quarter ending May 31, 1917, excepting a balance of $210.30 on account of said last quarter, but that they failed and refused to pay the rental due for the quarter ending August 31, 1917, and also for the quarter ending November 30, 1917, amounting to the sum of $2,175 for each of said quarters, and for the total of these sums, amounting to $4,560.30, with interest, the plaintiff brings this action. The defendants appeared to said complaint and united in an answer thereto and also in a counterclaim in the same pleading and in a cross-complaint in a separate pleading. In the first count in their second answer the defendants, while admitting the making of said leasing agreement, aver that the said lease contained an express warranty that the rock-crushing plant upon the leased premises had a capacity of 100 tons per hour and that the defendants relied thereon in agreeing to enter into said lease; and that by reason of the fact that said rock-crushing plant did not have any capacity in excess of thirty tons per hour, the terms of said warranty had been violated by said plaintiff; and that on account of such warranty and of the plaintiff’s said violation thereof, the said defendants had on or about the 24th of August, 1917, rescinded said leasing agreement and surrendered possession of all of the premises described therein to said plaintiff; and hence that no sum whatever was due or payable to said plaintiff from the defendants or either of them. By the second count in their said answer the defendants set forth that by a clause in said leasing agreement it was provided that if said rock-crushing plant upon said premises should be destroyed by fire, flood, or other unavoidable accident so that operation of the same must be suspended for a longer period than one week, the said lessees *726 should not be required to pay rent during the period of such suspension; and that owing to the fact that on or about April 6, 1917, war was declared between the United States and Germany, and as a result thereof and of the general conditions arising therefrom, and particularly of the requisition by the United States government of all railroad facilities and means of transportation, it became impossible for said lessees to get cars or transportation facilities for their output, by reason of which the suspension of operations of their said plant became necessary and the same were in fact suspended and continued to be suspended during the remaining term of said lease, the said lessees were thus absolved under the foregoing provision in said lease from any further payment of rent for said premises or the use thereof.

The third count in the defendants’ said answer contains their counterclaim based upon the breach by plaintiff of the express warranty referred to in the first count thereof and of the otherwise faulty and defective construction of said rock-crushing plant whereby the said defendants were unable to adequately or profitably operate the same, but, on the contrary, were put to large expense in attempted repairs thereon and to great loss and damage in its attempted operation, amounting to the net sum of $4,667, for which they seek recovery in the way of affirmative relief. By the fourth, fifth and sixth counts in the defendants’ said answer they further amplify the extent of the injury and damage which they allege themselves to have suffered from the unsuccessful operation of said rock-crushing plant due to the plaintiff’s breaches in his aforesaid warranties and to his misrepresentation as to its working capacity; the aggregate of which they allege to be the sum of $85,000, for which they seek recovery. By their separate cross-complaint the said defendants repeat substantially the averments of their foregoing answer and counterclaim and pray for substantially the same amount of recovery by way of affirmative relief. To this cross-complaint the plaintiff presented an ■answer wherein he denied the existence of any express warranty in said leasing agreement as to the capacity, of said rock-crushing plant and also denied the making of any representations as to the working capacity of said plant as *727 an inducement to the entering into said lease by said defendants; and denies any defectiveness in construction or working conditions of said plant which was not repairable by said defendants as provided for in said lease, and denies any right in the defendants to work rescission of said lease upon either of the foregoing grounds; and, generally speaking, otherwise denies specifically the averments of the defendants’ said answer, counterclaims, and cross-complaint.

The cause came on for trial before the • court without a jury upon the issues as thus framed on November 25, 1918. At the opening of the trial, counsel, who had theretofore represented both of the defendants, suggested to the court that the defendant W. A. Boland had died in the state of Michigan on September 15, 1918, and on the basis of that suggestion objected to the further progress of the trial upon the ground that the defendants having been sued jointly and having also appeared jointly by their answer and also in and by their cross-complaint, the court had no jurisdiction to proceed with the trial until the representatives of the deceased defendant had been brought before the court. The court overruled this objection and, upon the insistence of the plaintiff, directed the trial to proceed in so far as the defendant Longyear was concerned. The trial then proceeded with the introduction of much evidence, upon the conclusion of which it was submitted to the trial court for decision. Thereafter the trial court made and filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, wherein it found that the leasing agreement had been entered into as alleged and admitted and the premises duly delivered to the defendants thereunder, and that there remained unpaid to the plaintiff the sums due as rent therefor according to the averments of the complaint. The court further found that there had been no proof presented in support of the averments of the defendants’ answer as to any interference with or suspension in the operations of the said rock-crushing plant upon said premises by reason of the state of war existing between our government and Germany or of the conditions which prevailed in consequence thereof, and that the operation of said plant had not been suspended upon that account. The court further found that it is true that said leasing agreement contained the following words: “Together with one *728

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P. 932, 197 Cal. 723, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-longyear-cal-1925.