Wrubel v. Muth
This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 173 (Wrubel v. Muth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This case is here upon petition in error. Suit was brought by Fanny Wrubel v. George V. Muth, in the court of common pleas in this county, in which the plaintiff set out that she made a lease in 1891 to one Abraham Acnovich, of certain real estate in this city for the period of five years at a rental of $40 per month, payable monthly in advance; that George V. Muth indorsed upon that lease these words, and that that was a part of the contract, “ I hereby guarantee the payment of the rent within stipulated for the entire time of the lease and further guarantee the performance on the part of the lessee, his heirs and assigns of all the conditions herein expressed, but it is expressly understood that if the said Abe. Acnovich lassee, should violate the obligation of this lease or if the said lessee, Acnovich fails to sell other beer, than the goods produced by George V. Muth as long as the same is marketable, then [174]*174this lease shall be null and void as far as said lease is concerned and the said George V. Muth shall have full control of the same and the said Muth alone being bound and being held as lessee.
George V. Muth.”
These words are not exactly the words intended. Muth did not mean to say that if he “ fails to sell other beer than the goods produced by George V. Muth”; he meant to say if he did sell other beer than the beer manufactured by Muth,-tha-t- then he should not be bound; then Muth says “ this lease shall be null and void as far as said lease is concerned, and the said George V. Muth shall have full control of the same.” Clearly the word should be “lessee” instead of “lease,” and the parties treated it as meaning what I have suggested.
Muth’s answer to this petition admitted that the lease was made to Aenovich; that he, Muth, entered into this contract guaranteeing the full performance on the part of the lessee of the conditions of the lease to be performed by the lessee, that the lessee discontinued the use of the premises long before the expiration of the term — perhaps after a year or so — ; that he, Múth, placed other tenants into the occupation of the premises; that they paid a less amount than had been agreed upon in the lease, but whatever they did pay, he paid over to Fanny Wrubel, lessor, and later the premises were entirely abandoned because they became unfit for occupancy.
The case went to trial to a jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, Fanny Wrubel, who is also plaintiff in error for $146 or thereabouts.
The amended petition on which the case was tried, sets out, that Muth abandoned the contract, repudiated the contract so far as he was com cerned, and he in his answer gives certain reasons therefor, and says it is true he repudiated the contract.
Evidence was introduced on behalf of 'the parties, the bill of exceptions does not undertake to set out all the evidence, but simply to show how the claim of error arises. It sets out that evidence was introduced tending to show that the allegations of the pleadings were true, and'the contract of lease was offered in evidence.
The plaintiff further offered to show that in April, 1893, the premises having been vacated by the defendant, she placed one George Barnard in possession, who in turn later placed others in possession, trying to get all the rent she could out of the property. The plaintiff also introduced testimony to the effect that she refused to receive the key for said premises till April 15, 1893.
The court charged the jury concerning the measure of damages for failure to comply with the contract to make repairs, and also the measure of damages for the failure of defendant to comply with the contract of lease so far as failure to pay rents was concerned; and the jury found that the defendant made said contract of lease and failed to comply with it.
The,court charged the jury that the measure of damages on the lease, in case there should be a recovery, would be the rental agreed upon per month in said lease, to wit, $40 per month. Contrary to the exception of plaintiff, the court also charged the jury that in case the verdict should be found in her favor, that only damages for failure to comply with the covenant concerning repairs set forth in the lease, and the rental which accrued prior to the time of the filing of the petition in this case in December, 1892, could be recovered. This was the limitation of the time for the recovery.
The plaintiff duly excepted'to this portion of the charge, and claimed error on account of the same. Tbe court would seem to have made that charge upon the idea that, suit was brought for rents, and that suit could be brought and maintained month after month, for rents as they accrued, treating this as a continuing contract, and not a suit brought for damages because of the repudiation of the contract on the part of the defendant.
We think there was clearly, en;or in that charge of the court. We think it is clearly a case where a -¿shit could be brought for damages because of the repudiation of the contract by the defendant; that a single suit for the breach of that contract, no.tpnly could be, but was the proper suit to be brought, and therefore tlie court' should not have limited the damages simply to that which accrued by reason of the failure to comply with the covenant of repair and the rents which accrued up to the bringing of the suit, but should have allowedfthe jury to inquire what were the entire damages of this plaintiff fot ffe- breach of that contract. The petition is broad enough to justify tharjyui-d the court should have allowed the jury to consider that question. We think that is the question, and this question was decided by the suileiii court of this state in James v. Allen County, 44 O. S., 226, wb er^ufjjfeas brought by James v. Allen County, for wages under a contractwnereby^James undertook to superintend the erection of a court house at lijna for-'the county of Allen, and at the end of two months from the time discharged from his employment he brought suit for two months’ 'wages. He maintained that suit and recovered a judgment for the wagfe? for ¿he period sued for.
He subsequently brought another suit for wages claimed to have accured after the two months fop whicp he had already obtained judgment. Our Supreme Court in that case,, in a very elaborate opinion, held that he could not maintain the new-suit; that he should have brought his suit in the first instance for -the -entire damages to him by reason of the breach of the contract on part of the county; that he could not maintain the suit brought later. The opinion goes on to reason that multiplicity of actions would result,. and it would encourage him in holding himself all the time in readiness to go on with that work. It seems to us that this plaintiff must have brought her suit as she did for the entire damages sustained by reason of" the repudiation of the contract on the part of the defendant. She ought not to have held, and she did not hold that property all the time ready for this defendant to occupy. If she had done so she would have failed t<£ make it earn what it could earn. In Sutherland on damages, section '108, to which our attention is cited by counsel the same position is taken. It is -there said that in such cases as this the damages may all be sued'for .infohe action, and.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 173, 11 Ohio C.C. 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrubel-v-muth-ohcirctcuyahoga-1896.