Court Opinion

ID: 5447588
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:13:32.492366+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:15.241215
License: Public Domain

Harrison, J.
Defendants entered into a lease with C. P. Lolor, bearing date August 3, 1885, by the terms of which he hired and demised to them a certain lot of land in San Francisco, for the term of six months, at the monthly rent of thirty-one dollars, payable in advance on the third day of each and every month during said term. The instrument contained a clause giving to the defendants the option of purchasing the demised premises at any time during the term, by paying the sum of three thousand seven hundred dollars and all the rent accruing under the lease. The defendants had been in possession of the land, claiming to be owners thereof, for several years prior to this time, and had mortgaged it to Lolor to secure an indebtedness to him of three thousand dollars. Lolor had commenced an action to foreclose the mortgage, and while that action was pending the defendants executed to Lolor a conveyance of the lands, and at the same time took from him the aforesaid lease. After its execution they paid all the rent which accrued, according to the terms of the lease, prior to April 3, 1891. Lolor died in December, 1890, and, in March, 1891, the plaintiffs were appointed his executors. The defendants not having paid any rent after their appointment, the plaintiffs, on the 12th of February, 1892, served upon each of them a written demand for the payment of the rent, stating the amount then due, or that they deliver possession of the demised premises This demand not being complied with, the present action was brought. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, and the defendants have appealed therefrom and also from an order denying a new trial:
1. The plaintiffs were authorized to bring this action. “Actions for the recovery of any property, real or personal, or for the possession thereof, and all actions founded upon contracts, may be maintained by and against executors and administrators in all cases in which the same might have been maintained by or against their respective testators or intestates.” (Code *112Civ. Proc., sec. 1582.) In Martel v. Meehan, 63 Cal. 47, it was held that the provisions of this section do not apply to an action brought, under the provisions of section 1161 of the Code of Civil Procedure, against an executor of one who in his lifetime had been a tenant of the plaintiff, for the reason that the section authorizes such action only when the tenant continues in possession, “ in person or by subtenant,” and that the executor is not such “ person” or a subtenant; and that a judgment against an estate in the nature of a penalty of three times the amount of the rent should not be given unless expressly authorized by statute. These reasons do not exist in the case of an action by executors. The section expressly authorizes them to bring actions for the recovery of any property, in all cases in which the same might have been brought by their testator; and while they are engaged in the administration of the estate the executors are to be regarded as the “ successor in estate of the landlord,” for the purpose of giving the notice authorized by section 1161, and enforcing against a tenant who is guilty of an unlawful detainer the remedies authorized by that chapter.
2. The complaint sufficiently states a cause of action against the defendants. The terms of the lease were alleged, and also the period during which the defendants had been in default in the payment of the rent prior to the date of the demand. The rent was payable in advance, and the averment that the amount in default covered a period which extended beyond the date at which the demand was made, or beyond the date when the last installment accrued, was merely surplusage. It was alleged that the demand was made February 12, 1892, and within one year after the rent became due. It was not necessary to allege the manner in which the notice to pay rent or surrender possession was served. The fact of the service is distinctly alleged, and upon a general demurrer this allegation will be construed to include every thing necessary to constitute a sufficient service.
*1133. The nonsuit was properly denied. Upon proof of the execution of the lease, and the default in the payment of the rent provided therein, with the admission in the answer that the defendants held possession of the demised premises, the plaintiffs were entitled to judgment. It was alleged in the complaint that “ said defendants unlawfully hold over and continue in the possession of said premises,” etc. The denial of the defendants that they “ still continue to hold or occupy said premises, or any portion thereof, as tenants of 0. P. Lolor,” is an admission that they were in possession, but merely a denial of the tenancy. It was not necessary that the defendant Bridget Murphy should acknowledge the lease in order to be bound by its terms.
4. The defendants alleged in their answer that the conveyance by them to Lolor on the same day that they executed the lease was merely by way of security for the payment of their indebtedness, and that the deed, although absolute in form, was only a mortgage, and was executed upon the agreement on the part of Lolor that, upon payment of the sum of three thousand seven hundred dollars, and interest at the rate of thirty-one dollars per month, he would reconvey the premises to them; that they did not enter into possession of the premises under the lease; and that they were induced to sign the lease by reason of certain false and fraudulent representations by Lolor to the effect that the lease was intended only as additional security for a payment of said indebtedness.
The court instructed the jury very fully and explicitly, that if they should find that the defendants were induced to accept the lease from Lolor through fraud or deception practiced upon them by Lolor, the lease did not create the relation of landlord and tenant, and that they must find for the defendants. The verdict in favor of the plaintiffs established that the lease was not entered into by the defendants by reason of any fraud or deception on the part of Lolor. It was immaterial, for the purposes of this action, whether the deed from the *114defendants to Lolor was absolute or by way of mortgage. The question of title was not involved, and the defendants could not avoid the obligation assumed by them by reason of the lease, by showing that Lolor did not have the title to the premises which he demised to them. Upon their failure to sustain the averments of fraud and false representations the presumption arose that the lease is to be construed and to have effect according to its terms. Even if it had been admitted that the deed and the lease were both executed merely as security for the payment of the indebtedness, the defendants would still be subject to the obligations consequent upon their entering into the lease, one of which is the right of the lessor to a judgment for possession in case of their default in payment of the rent. Their contention, that inasmuch as they were in possession of the premises at the time they entered into the lease, they are not es-topped from disputing the title of the lessor, is inapplicable to the present case. In Tewksbury v. Magraff, 33 Cal. 237, and in Franklin v. Merida, 35 Cal. 566, 95 Am. Dec. 129, it was held that in an action of ejectment, where the tenant did not enter into possession under the lease, but was in possession at the time of the lease, he was not estopped from disputing the title of the landlord. This rule, however, was held in Mason v. Wolff, 40 Cal. 246, to be inapplicable in actions of unlawful detainer, for the reason that in these actions the question of title is not involved, and cannot be raised. (See, also, Felton v. Millard, 81 Cal. 540.) The expression in Davidson v. Ellmaker, 84 Cal. 21, to the effect that, in such action, the tenant is not estopped from disputing the title of the plaintiff, is to be construed in connection with the claim set up therein, that the tenant was induced to accept the lease by reason of the fraud of the lessor, which, as was said in Johnson v. Chely, 43 Cal. 305, destroyed the relation of landlord and tenant, and removed the estoppel. In the present case, however, the very circumstances under which the lease was executed preclude the defendants from invoking the rule *115laid down in Tewksbury v. Magraff, supra, and estop them from questioning the title of their lessor; for, if the deed and lease were executed as a security for their indebtedness, their lessor would have the right to avail himself of all the remedies afforded by law for making that security effective, and to enforce against them the surrender of the possession, which, by virtue of their lease, follows their default in the payment of the rent. Under the same principles, the value of the property at the time the lease was executed was immaterial, and the court did not err in excluding evidence of such value.
5. Evidence that the defendant Bridget Murphy had tendered to Lolor the amount of the indebtedness in November, 1885, was immaterial in this action. If the tender was made by virtue of the option clause in the lease it did not release the defendants from their obligation to pay the rent, unless they should in some manner have sought the enforcement of this agreement on the part of Lolor. So long as they retained the possession of the premises they could not escape their obligations to pay the rent. The subsequent payment of rent by them was to be regarded as an abandonment of their exercise of this option. If this offer of payment was intended for the purpose of extinguishing their indebtedness to Lolor it did not have that effect, unless they kept the tender good. (Civ. Code, sec. 1500.)
6. The issues upon the execution of the lease, and whether there was any fraud practiced by Lolor upon the defendants, were very fully and fairly presented to the jury by the court. The expression in the charge, that the “ execution” of the lease was admitted, could not have misled the jury. The signing of the lease was admitted by the defendants in their answer, and their signatures to the instrument when it was offered in evidence were not disputed. The issue before the jury was whether this signing was voluntary, or had been induced by fraud. While the execution of an in*116strmnent includes more in legal contemplation than merely signing, these terms are often used interchangeably. In another portion of the charge the jury were told that the plaintiffs, to sustain their case, had offered in evidence this lease signed by the defendants, and the payment of rent thereunder. The contention of the appellants that in this statement the court declared that the defendants had paid rent under the lease, whereas this was one of the issues before the jury, is not sustained by an examination of the charge itself. In this part of its charge the court was merely stating to the jury the course that had been taken at the trial, and not the effect of the testimony that had been offered. The defendants did not dispute the fact that they had paid money to Lolor by reason of the agreement between them, and that they had taken receipts from him in which this money was stated to have been paid as rent. Their denial in the answer that the money was paid under a lease was coupled with their denial that they had executed a lease; but, when the lease was produced in evidence, and it was shown that the defendants had paid rent to the lessor, this payment, in the absence of other testimony, would be presumed to have been made under the lease.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Garoutte, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.